UNI
DAILY KANSAN
'OLUME XIII.
PROFS. IN AD DEFIANT
NUMBER 127
Small Band Still Holds Classes Overtime and Indends to Continue
UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS, MONDAY AFTERNOON, APRIL 3, 1916.
SEVERAL REASONS GIVEN
One Instructor Says Dishonest Whistle Causes Trouble
Professors who insist in holding classes over time seem to have banded together in the Administration Building. They have been asked to explain why they hold classes overtime and liregard all senate regulations. Here is what some of the accused professors sav:
"NOT GUILTY"—BOYNTON
DAVIS FOR REFORM
Prof. A. J. Boynton says, "I am not guilty. Students who register kicks, should have their names published along with the professor kicked. Most of them are the sliver-headed ones who pull flunks. I seldom hold class over time for more than an hour expect a lesson. My teacher makes my lesson. I believe that the ten minutes are for that purpose as well as for making the next class."
"I am an advocate of the reform," says Prof. W. W. Davis, "and if I frequently hold my classes over time it is because I fail to hear the whistle. believe that the lecturer in class is as quickly as possible when the whistle blows and at the student should refrain from pell mell scramble for the door. I not jack up my students for being to class and when I see them at the hour to close the lake expect the aureate court in return."
SEND CLASSES AWAY
"I should not be on the black list," says Dean T. Wynn, "for when the whistle blower I send my class out flying. Sometimes I finish a sentence but never hold them over ten seconds. I think the kicker is that they get scared. The students who squirrel and wiggle around in their chairs the last five minutes of the hour and disturb the whole class are also at fault. I am in sympathy with them, so for one to cheer the professors who are cheerful holding class over."
BLAMES POOR WHISTLE
A certain professor who refused the use of his name, a privilege of the kicker, lays the blame on the whistle, "If we had an honest whistle," he says, "half of this troubles us, and half of it arrives from two to five minutes every hour it is hard to gauge a lecture accordingly, and the professor or student who is worth its salt wants the final point, though I may be on his list, I must care, for any professor is just a minute overtime when necessary."
IT'S A PROFESSOR'S RIGHT
"I emphatically advocate the right if every Professor to briefly finish his picture after the whistle blows, and until soon he ruling, such as upon off our ears, is passed, I expect to use the customary half minute do so," says Prof. C. A. Dykstra.
"I know that every second seems a minute but if the student is interested he will not mind. Professors of the department of history are the worst violators of this rule, because their objectives are such that they not permit an intrusiveapping. We are justise taking these few seconds just as journalism students are justified in their tardiness to class, for when they start a story they also must finish it regardless of the whistle."
TEN MINUTES ARE STUDENTS
Chancellor Frank Strong when he interviewed this morning regarding the exact ruling. University Students years ago decreed that no students should have ten minutes streeen classes. To obey this rulning all professors should dismiss promptly time and should take over the course. During my four years in Yale I never saw but one student come into class late."
Speaks to Polity Club
John Mez, former secretary of the investigation 'Committee', spoke to the International Polity Club at their meetings Friday and Saturday evening at the Kappa Club. He discussed Friday night Mr. Mez discussed the book, "The Great Biasion". Saturday night's meeting was in the form of a smoker and Mr. Mez talked on the international situation. Mr. Mez talked about the universities throughout the country. He spoke at the University last spring.
Food Factories
Accompanied by Miss Hazel K. Allen, instructor in the department of Home Economics, twenty-three women in that department spent Saturday visiting several of the largest factories in Kansas City, which included the City Market, Armour's Packing Plant, Smith Bakery, National Biscuit Company and the Baltimore Hotel.
J. B. McNaught, 16 College, took large of the 433 class in aesthetic dancing Wednesday, during the absence of Dr. Alice Goetz.
Food Factories Visited
SOPRANO FROM WAR
ZONE HERE APRIL
Dean Harold L. Butter of the School of Fine Arts announces a recital by Nellie Bryant, prima donna soprano, from the Royal Opera, Ulm, Germany, in Fraser Hall, Friday, April 7th, at 4:30. This recital will be free to all students of the University.
Miss Bryant, who is a well known soprano, was singing in Germany when war was declared, and upon the closing of the opera house in New York, she opened to America by way of Holland. Miss Bryant has been concertizing throughout the country with great success. She will be assisted at the piano by Willie Anna Sweeney of the Fine Arts piano学会. Her program will appear later.
COOK OR WASH POODLES
University Women Do Various Tasks To Get An Education
The task of self-support among the women students of the University of Kansas includes everything from cooking for harvest hands to washing little white dogs while in school. About the most common method in practice is doing housework for faculty ladies. One woman who is especially anxious to get along with financial aid, works for 'college' family in school and her vacations helping the farmer's wives cook for harvesters.
The woman who can do good stenographic work is in great demand by the professors on the Hill. Women also do a great deal of typewriting for other students. A few furnish themselves with a little pocket money by playing the piano for gym classes. Another solved the problem of making money last vacation by making pendants for trains by Fe railroad. Two women who wanted to decorate their room but lacked the funds, have been giving a little white dog a bath once a week, netting them two dollars a month.
Earning money, however, is not the only way the women help themselves through school. Many of them merely save money. One group of women split their board and room bill in half and use that amount to pay for their own housework and cooking-Many of the women on the Hill save dressmaker bills by doing their own sewing. Those who are particularly successful with their own clothes often make some pin money making from sales of clothing. Thus economy is almost as important a factor among the women as the mere making of money.
POLICE RAID CO-ED
ROOMS ON VEST HUNT
But Oscar Keeps Date
Now what does a college woman want with a man's vest, a new vest at that, with seven buttons on it, a size 40? Think of it, size 40. Think of it, size 40.
A whipper-snapper of a newspaper paragrapher has punned on the poise -avoiduроids -of Kansas' college women, but Dr. Goetz says that interviewers should be a size 40 vest. You couldn't call Ocasan that though. He knew.
Having just brought the new suit, in its nice green box and tissue paper from Ober's to the boarding club, having laid it on the davenport—that's where the girls always sit—and then having gone to dinner, well it's conclusive is it not? Who could have taken the vest but the girl? And Oscar wandered last night when he be called. That made it bad. He couldn't search the girls' rooms himself for the electric irons, chaffing dishes, hat pins, high heeled slippers, and perfume bottles there. But a policeman could
A trip to the police station, search warrant, and the "law" turned the trick. The gris consented to the earl, while Oscar, clinging to the right arm of the law's dishes, wiped plus, high heeled slippers, and perfume bottles, slipping with nervous hands.
Baffled and disappointed, Oscar withdrew behind the "law." In the hallway hung a coat. Women sometimes wear them. Just to even up things, Presto! It's Oscar's. But he rent the date. Who has his vest?
Stages Zeppelin Raid
Seventy students attended the War Frolic given by the Epworth League of the Methodist Episcopal church in Myers Hall Friday night. It was a take-off on the present European war. A Zeppelin raid in which a toy baloon was used was very thrilling. A confrontation was held. Harpy Food, William Jennings Bryan with his dove of peace, Theodore Roosevelt with his big stick, and several noteworthy persons took part in
The Kansan maintains a conscience department.
Laws Will Defy Senate For Uncle Jimmy's Sake
NOW IT'S SPLASH PARTY;
OUT
'Splash! Bubble!...and the party is on!'
Hazel Pratt and Miriam Jones,
swimming instructors in the department
of Physical Education, have
issued invitations for a "Splash
Party" at Robinson Gymnasium
thursday, April 6 at 7:30.
This is an unusual party at the University though it is quite common in the east. A water-pole tournament was held here and a New York hotel in New York gave a full ten course dinner in the swimming pool.
The invitations to this party are decidedly novel. They bear "Daddy-long-leg" sketches, suggestive of diving; the wording and printing is original and striking. R. S. V. P. adorns the lower right corner.
HENRY ALLEN IS COMING
Wichita Editor to Deliver Baccalaureate Sermon Here June 4
Henry J. Allen, editor of the Wichita Daily Beacon, will deliver the commencement baccalaureate sermon, Sunday, June 4.
Henry Allen was born in Warren County, Pennsylvania, September 12, 1868. He came to Kansas with his parents in the early days and secured his education at Washburn College and Baker University. He was granted the Master of Arts degree from the latter institution.
He started his newspaper career in 1894 when he became editor of the Manhattan Nationalist. Since that time he has owned an operated a bookstore where the state previous to his becoming editor of the Wichita Beacon.
He was president of the Kansas State Board of Charities for five years and is a trustee of Baker University. While Henry Allen is a graduate of the Methodist college active part in church work until he "hit the trail" during a revival meeting conducted by Billy Sunday in Wichita several summers ago. Since that time he has taken a vigorous part in church affairs and among other things organized a Wichita memphis which has done much work on the southwestern part of the state.
Mr. Allen has been a leader in Kansas politics and was candidate for governor on the Progressive ticket in 1912. He has also been a candidate for Congress. He is considered one of Kansas's most brilliant orators and one of her best wittiest speakers. He is an extemporaneously on any subject and has the power to hold his audience.
According to University authorities Henry Allen won the national reputation that he holds largely by means of the speech which which he delivered at the National Convention at Chicago in 1912. It was delivered before the split came in the Republican ranks and was an eloquent plea for harmony. It is considered a masterpiece of oratory. The other commencement speakers
MANY FRESHMEN PADDLEI
The day of woe arrived for numerous freshmen, otherwise designated as the Devil's Daughters.
Perhaps it was the April fool joke spirit that was in the air or maybe it was because that four months of capelessness had made them bold, but the fact remains that more people had paddled this morning. At noon the count was over ten with the Law's leading with six victims. The chemicals were a close second but the lack of reports from the engineers will be hard to find, and will at least take second place to the Laws when the final list of the day's casualties is in.
Sounds of Sharp Whacks waffed Over Mount Oread
send the Daily Kansan home to the
l. n.
Perhaps the most luckless victim and the one who caught it the hardest was the fresh nabbed near the Law building, but not on his head. Not only was the cap confiscated but the fresh went down the hill moaning in agony.
The other commencement speaker have not yet been engaged but will be announced by the Extensions Division in a short time.
James R. Elliott, who was graduated here in '14, and has just received his degree from the college is guest at the Phi Beta Pi house for a few days.
Members of the School of Law will promeditately and with malice aforethought absent themselves from all classes Wednesday, contrary to the recent rulings of the University Senate statutes made and provided.
"The reason for this unprecedented decision to neglect the opportunity to drink in legal knowledge at the feet of Eddie, Doc and Hig is the fact that seventy-four years ago Tuesday, James W. Green laid the foundation for the subsequent celebration of his natal day.
According to the leading Laws, the observation of Uncle Jimmy's Day has become so firmly established in Green Hall that it is past the stage of being subject to the whimsical deliberations of the University Senate. They point out the fact that various members of the College faculty have, on divers occasions, appointed faculty officers; the fact that the University has no traditions, and that these same College faculty members, plus an occasional Engineering representative, solemnly met and soberly attempted to legislate out of existence a sacred tradition the School of Law has been a decade in establishing. Neither students nor faculty members of the University have taken action was taken, nor was any expression of sentiment from Green Hall secured.
In view of these facts, the Laws are disposed to treat this decree as ultra vires, and have determined to take individually what has been denied them as a school. They cite as justification for their action the fact that after twenty-seven weeks of carrying daily to class numberless ponderless volumes, waxing floors for Engineers in order to improve the directivity with which a representative of this school comports himself on all occasions, a day of absolute rest from these arduous duties has become an absolute necessity.
As a certain justice from Missouri was heard to remark, "The Laws have obediently abandoned their one-time-smoking room, have consented to discourage the predominate tendency toward ankle watches, but submit to the abolition of Uncle Jimmy's Day? 'No-suh! by Gad, suh—nevah!'
PIGEON TROTTING A LA MOLASSES Engineers Do Not Like It.
Wanted-By the management of the Engineers' dance, one expert detective, preferably a student and used to Sherlock Holmes and Scotskie work but no pay except the fun that the applicant gets out of the case.
With regard to the threatened walk-out, Wednesday, Chancellor Frank Strong said this morning that the rule made by the University Senate last year, to discontinue the different school holidays was under consideration by that body. The Engineers' petition for their annual day has been granted and the Chancellor believes that the Law School Day celebration does not interfere with classes in other schools. It is thought by certain senate members that the present muddled status of affairs rescinds or at least makes ineffective the former motion of the senate.
The managers of the Engineers' dance are pondering and piecing together the scraps of information that may lead to the discovery of the persons who tried in vain to delay the Marvine's dance Friday night.
Senate to Reconsider
One of the principals concerned with the pouring of molasses on the floor of Robinson Gym before the dance was seen by a janitor. He is described as being rather restless. When he came in, the assistant. When he was feeling past the Administration building and over the administration to the north.
The management of the dance refused to blame the laws for the added entertainment of getting down on hands and knees and scrubbing the floor before activities could commence. The engineers are not backward in believing that this unexpected feature of the event was of legal origin.
The clues that can be worked on in finding the guilty persons are: That one was seen, and that there must have been at least two in the raiding party; that they had not been women who were poured has not been found; and that the culprits gained entrance through the women's entrance to the gym.
The Carce Francais met Wednesday to hold a conversation in French. At the next meeting, Mrs. A. De Marre will give a talk on Paris. As Mrs. Marie has spent several weeks there she relate has many interesting experiences to her.
WICHITA HIGH STUDENTS
HEAR DAIN'S WAR LECTURE
Dr. F, B. Dains, professor of organic chemistry, gave a lecture recently to the high school students at Wichita on the subject of "Ancient and Modern Warfare." The lecture was one which Dr. Dains has given here and follows the development of implements of warfare and fortifications from the earliest Roman wars to the present day. The lecture is illustrated with slides. Among other slidesDr. Dains has one of his first works on the gun consists of a tube on the end of a stick with an arrangement of levers. A match is held on the end of the lever and the gun is discharged by letting the match into a hole of the tube when it ignites the powder.
HOP TICKETS TO SELL
Manager Dyer Says Sophomore Girls Will Pay Their Dues
Tickets for the Soph Hop will go on sale Tuesday, April 4, and will be sold for four weeks thereafter by a committee of eighteen students, according to an announcement made this morning by John Dyer, chairman of the Hop finance committee. During the progress of the campaign, the team will endeavor to reach every socially inclined student in the University.
EXPECT NO TROUBLE
"I don't anticipate much trouble in selling tickets," said Dyer this morning. "The girls are going to pay their dues this year, I understand; and that he an addict is active and full of useful duties. One prominent sorority has notified me that all members who have dates will pay their own dues; and I am quite certain the others intend to do likewise. The college asks that their party as much as it is the men's." Tickets for the Hop cost $2.50 anyone connected with the
Tickets for the Hop cost $20 a person connected with the [University map attn]
Following are the students who will sell receipts: John Dyer, Harry Morgan, Jesse Kobe, Agnes Hertzler, Don Davis, Burke Vale, ch, Don Davis, Burke Vale, ch, Paul Bril, del, Byron Hehl, Mehlin Klock, Frank Miller, Bill Allen, Raymond Rockwell, Harry Montgomery, Dix Edwards, Francis Guy, and Francis Fisher.
the committee on the Semi-Centennial Anniversary discussed plans for the coming anniversary celebration, which will be held some time in October, at a meeting in Fraser Hall Friday afternoon. The election of Prof. U. G. Mitchell as secretary and the passage of a motion providing for the selection of an executive committee, consisting of seven members, of the committee on the coming celebration constituted the transactions of the committee. The personel of this committee will be announced in a few days.
DISCUSS ANNIVERSARY
FACULTY FAVORS EVENT
Faculty Members Speak For Semi-Centennial Celebration Next October
Speeches strongly favoring the holding of a celebration and urging that it be planned upon lines that are worthy of a great anniversary were made by Chancellor Fruit Strong, Prof. E. F. Engle, Prof. J. N. Vander Vries, Dean Harold L. Butter and Dean F. W. Blackmar.
GET MEN OF BENOWN
Prof. E, F. Engle advocated that a special effort should be made to get the alumni back for the celebration. The idea that the event take on the nature of an exhibition of the work done by a prominent pianist at the University was suggested by Prof. Van der Vries, who favored something along the lines of the exposition held at the University three years ago. Dean Harold L. Butler promised the co-operation of the department of Fine Arts in working with the university to important advances made during the history of the institution and in working up special music for the occasion. A new note was struck in the suggestion by Dean Blackmar that a special effort should be made to preserve the experience of nown in the field of education at the celebration.
It is the present plan to have the celebration last three days, ending on a day when a big football game is scheduled here. The football celebration, if possible, out an new proposed team or quire an outlay of from $1,500 to $5,000.
Mrs. H. J. Duvall returned to her home in Hutchinson Friday after spending a week with her daughter, Agnes, T. College. Mrs. Duvall has Lawrence several times and has a very good impression of the University.
J. PLUVIUS STOPS GAME
First Varsity-Freshman Battle Broken Up Saturday Because of Wet Grounds
McCARTY HUNTS SWATTERS
Hitters Are Lacking on Jay hawker Squad This Year
And that rain deprived McCarty's men of a couple of practices which they hated to lose. Possibly the men were willing to lay off a day or so but McCarty hated to miss the practice when the season starts so soon. Several positions on the squad were open and the coaches wanted to see the applicants for these jobs in action before the initial game.
Jupiter Pluvius visited in Lawrence and surrounding community Friday and Saturday and proceeded to stick around so long that the first big battle of the season between the Varsity and freshman baseball squads had to be called off. The big battle was scheduled for Saturday afternoon and now the freshmen can say that the work of Jupiter was all that prevented him from winning, worked in the initial battle. Of course, the teams will meet this afternoon but that would not make up for the big Saturday affair.
IRST GAME WEDNESDAY
The greatest weakness which McCarty will have to overcome before the Ames bunch arrives Wednesday is in the batting eye of the squad. None of the numerous candidates seem to be able to locate the pill consistently and the small critical group of on-lookers are struggling to get grounds for speculation while arguing about the batting average for the team. The novices in the Jayhawker line-up are the ones that are worrying McCarty most. Groft, Deaver, Gibbens, Woltmert and Webber are holding down the defensive side of the pitcher's arm for fear of the big stick they can only chop the air. But then the veterans are not doing much better. Wood landed a home run in a practice game with the tyros Friday night but that was the only burst of hitting seen. Wandel, Chinney and Smee are locating the pitcher's target during past seasons which, by the way, is better than most of the Kansans are doing.
LINEUP NOT CERTAIN
Just what the line-up for the Ames game Wednesday afternoon will be is only a matter of speculation at this early date. If Mac gets hold of a good slugger between now and the time when the "Ump's" yells "Play Ball!" this hat swinger is liable to get too many hits and misses in time. The batteries for the opening game on the Kansas side will doubtless be Craig and Weltmer.
ELECTION PETITIONS
MUST BE IN TONIGHT
Dean F. J. Kelly of the School of Education attended a meeting in Topeka Saturday of a committee in charge of the continued school survey, a movement started here at the beginning of last month. Dean Kelly is chairman of the committee. The other members are supt. M. E. Pearson, of Kansas City, Kansas; Supt. L. A. Lowher, of Emporia; and Principal A. C. of Topeka. The community is planning a continuous school survey of the city schools of Kansas which will extend over a four year period of time.
The petitions for the general election of the W. S. G. A. to be held April 6, are to be in by tonight. University women running for class representatives need not have their petitions in as soon, but the council wishes that they be in for the regular meeting, Tuesday afternoon. They wish to know as soon as possible the names to send to the new president of the Women's Student Council will be sent as a delegate to the annual Women's Student Government held at Lincoln, Neb., the last of April.
Plans Permanent Survey
The Weather The forecast; Unsettled tonight with rain Tuesday in southeast portion.
MORNING PRAYERS
Week April 3-7
Leader—Rev. N. S. Fletcher
Subjects (Nothing about the war):
Monday "The House Was Filled"
Tuesday "I'll Be Home"
Tuesday: "Peter Continued Knocking." Ats JX. 16.
Wednesday; "And Behold, Four Horus." Zach. I. 18.
Thursday: "When His Eyes Were Opened He Saw Nothing." Iace, IX,
Friday: "Simon Peter Saito Unto Them," 1 "go a fishing." "John XXI, 8.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Official student paper of the University of Kansas
EDITORIAL STAFF
Chas S. Sturtevant...Editor-In-Chief
Miles W. Vaughn...Associate Editor
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REPORTORIAL STAFF
MORTON
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Harry Morgan
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Cargill Sproull
Charles Sweet
Gregory Gwee
Vernon Moore
Subscription price $3.00 per year in advance; one term, $1.75.
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
thirty minutes after publication,
variety of Keransi, from the press of
Kansas, from the press of
Address a., communications to
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Lawrence, Kansas.
Phone, Bell K. U. 25.
The Daily Kansan aims to picture the undergraduate life of further than merely printing the students' University hold; to play no favorites; to be clean; to be cheerful; to be gracious; to leave more serious problems to wiser heads, in all, to satisfy the students of the University.
MONDAY, APRIL 3, 1916.
THE OLD MAN AND DEATH
An Old Man cut some wood, which he
did to the table. He then hilted
Him grew threep and so he put down his
knife on the table.
"Oh, if Death would only come"
"Do you know what it means?"
"I here am, what do you want?"
"The Old Man was fighted, and
I up my bundle."—Loe Tsoiτω—
Aesop.
"PLAY BALL," CALLS HIS UMPS
Get out that old glove you stuffed into the bottom of the trunk when you started off to Lawrence last fall. Hunt up a ball, you Hash House Lenguers, and then start to limber up that arm of yours.
The Great American Sport is on deck!
The Hush House Busball League intends to start right off the bat, playing its first game next Saturday. That won't give you any too much time to get in practise for the first game either. Remember what you did last year, when the score was a tie? Knocked the ball over the center fielder's head for a three baggger when there were two on. That was some wallon you gave that ball.
But you'll have to practise up the old batting eye if you expect to repeat.
If you like to play baseball, but haven't the time to try out for the Varsity, get into the Hash House
The present season will be the fourth for the league, and those behind its resuscitation want to make it the best, too. But sixteen teams will compete, so that a better class of ball will result. If your club hasn't made definite arrangements to enter the race for the pennant, appoint someone tonight to attend tomorrow night's meeting. A definite schedule and plans for the year will be made at that time, and your club should be represented.
Be at the meeting tomorrow night at the Kansan office.
HEY YOU FRESHMAN!
Today the freshman cap makes its debut before 1916 society. It is not a sign of degradation as some of the first year men seem to feel. Every senior who leaves Mt. Oread, with a degree tacked to his name was at one time a freshman, and wore the diminutive headgear.
Get out that cap, if you have not already done so, for upperclass men have a peculiar function to perform in relation to its being worn.
THE SPHERE OF WOMEN
Even to the modern, up-to-date woman the business of being a woman is becoming an increasingly difficult problem. And when the reformer comes to the front with such statements as "woman's field is not in the line in which she has been travelling for the past hundreds of centuries," she is at a loss to know which to believe, her natural instincts, or the reformer.
For hundreds of years woman has
seen cooking, mending, cleaning and home-building. Her natural inclinations lead her to this work. Now comes Mrs. Martha Beusley Bruere and says that this is not woman's sphere; that her real sphere is in politics, government, civic improvement and economics. She even goes so far as to write a series of articles on "Why Girls Should Not Be Taught To Do Housework." Mrs. Bruere insists that modern improvements are taking care of woman's former work and reducing it to a minimum, leaving time for all these various other occupations. It is foolish therefore, to take time to teach domestic science to women, she says. The vacuum sweeper is taking care of the cleaning, modern machinery is taking care of the mending and dish washing, and cooking should be done through community work.
Which may be true. But there are various questions that enter into this problem of being a woman. In the first place such a state of modern improvement has not reached the great majority of women who will need to know a little of domestic science for a good many years to come. In the second place woman's natural instincts lead her to home building, and the various duties that enter into it. The vacuum cleaner will be hailed over the world with great delight as well as the patent dishwasher and mender. But there will be many thousands of women who will not care to swim in a sea of political aspirations and economics. They will not care to rear their children in community nurseries or any new patented greenhouses, nor will they care to have their meals prepared in the community kitchen.
It is a difficult and dangerous task to wean individuals away from natural tendencies. The vast majority of women are interested in civic improvements and willing to help carry on the work. But they are not willing nor able to give up the instincts with which they were endowed. Perhaps for these few hundreds of thousands it might be well to continue the teaching of domestic science.
As we see it Omar Khayyam is a synonym for anything from a cigarette to a Turk fighting at the front in Europe.
KEEPING UP WITH SPRING
Now that the rain has brightened up the entire campus, has set buds to bursting, grass to sprouting and caused the iliac shoots to portent their mass of blossoms that are to come out, why can't things be kept spic and span? A professor says that he counted nearly a hundred empty tobacco cans between Marvin Hall and Green Hall, and anybody who walks about the University grounds cannot help seeing the empty paper sacks, the handbills and crumpled wads of theme paper which are scattered carelessly over the lawn.
Why not get the dress-up habit and make the University a little more beautiful for the rest of the year?
Robert Louis Stevenson, the son of a lighthouse engineer, was born at Edinburgh in 1850. He studied in the university of that city and became a lawyer, although he never practised. On account of ill-health he went to Samoa, where he lived with his fami- ness, most of his literary work. He wrote:
THE RUBAIYAT OF OMAR KHAYYAM
The following verses are extracts from the Fitzgerald version of Rubaiyat, with its philosophy, is used to some extent in "Omar, The Rubaiyat, with its philosophy is used to some extent in "Omar, The Tentmaker" which appears at the Bowersock this evening:
I sometimes think that never blows so red
You have been so willing to help the girls of the senior class with their Sings through your news stories, editorials, etc., that I wondered if you would like them to sing along to the words of some of the best K. U. songs in the Kansan. Every girl isn't a copy of the book of K. U. songs or of the Engineers' Song书, which by way is a splendid collection, but so many do read the Daily News on the same day along the good work. Take, for example the song "Take Life at K. S. U." by W. H. Carruth. This song is really beautiful and luckily also "catchy" but has been neglected later, and it can't be brought into the student. It has been my experience that the average person likes to sing when he has the opportunity, especially among a congenial group of fellow-students. I heard it suggested that the junior band should be for commencement singing. Wouldn't that be a fine thing? Here's to the Sings! N. K.
The rose as where some buried Caesar bled;
That every Hyacinth the Garden wears
Dropt in its Lap from some once lovely Head.
Under the wide and starry sky,
Dig the grave and let me go.
And I laid me down with a will.
This be the verse you grave for me;
Home is the sailor, home from the sea.
And the hunter home from the hill.
A REQUIEM
Editor of the Daily Kansan:
If there be no other signs than this,
Spring is here.
CAMPUS OPINION
THE CIRCUS ARRIVES
It murmur'd– "Gently, Brother, Gently, Pray!" *
* * * * * *
"Brutus," the most unintelligent (deleted by censor, but though to be freight hustler), in captivity will trumpet his views on preparedness to the world "in the most stupendous sea of canvass ever known to mankind." In addition, the world's "great and most stupely showing" will have unique aquamarine colors show shiny clumy acrobats, red (censored again) and the roughest gang of tent pitchers and stake drivers ever found out of captivity.
All Winter the "pachyderms"—meaning elephants—have been grown larger and larger in the press agents' minds, and now, as last year, they've become trained elephants' the world ever saw. A few days ago a band of artists directed from the wilds of New Jersey started work painting spots on the tigers and stripes on the leopards, and by the time the circus arrives they are too big for them to be the "are the most ferocious man-eating beasts in captivity."
POET'S CORNER
communications must be signed as evidence of good faith and published without the writer's permission.
For in the Market-place, one dusk of Day,
I watch the Potter thumping his wet Clay;
I look up at the sky.
Oh, Moon of my Delight who Know's no wane,
The Moon of Heav'n is rising once again:
How oft hereafter rising shall she look
Through this same Garden after me—in vain!
Oh, come with old Khaymay, and leave the Wise To talk; one thing is certain, that Life flies; One thing is certain, and the Rest is Lies; The flower that once has blown forever dies.
Probably the most distinctly American institution—excepting pie, is the circus, with its menagerie, its city of tents and its gaudy colored wagons. In New York the Tribute recognizes the evil, and its descent upon us with: a plague as unwelcome to school at vacation will come to New York on April 6, bringing fever, famine, balloons, and red lemonade with it. In other words, the circus is going to visit the "village," and only "for a short and limited engagement." The menagerie's most inter-operative agent arrived yesterday with his usual load of optimism and free tickets.
And when Thyself with shining Foot shall pass Among the Guests Star-scatter'd on the Grass. And in they joyce Erand reach the Spot Where I made ooze an empty Glass! (TAMAH SHUD)
The Moving Finger writes; and, having writ,
Moves on: nor all the Piety nor Wit
Shall lure it back to cancel half a line,
Nor all the Tears wash out a Word of it,
Ah Love! Could thou and I with Fate conspire
To grasp this sorry Scheme of Things entire,
Would not we shatter it to bits—and then
Re-mold it nearer to the Heart's Deside!
At Miami University, Oxford, Ohio, the following has been adopted, and must be written out and signed by each instructor on his quiz or examination. In lieu of the instructor; "I have neither given nor received any help of any kind during this examination, nor have I seen nor have or receive aid in this examination."
The University of Ohio has recently made an innovation in the way of a faculty gym class which, according to the university's Athletics department, has proved to be a great success.
Senior men at the University of Texas are to carry canes and wear full dress collars and bat-wing ties on Mondays and Thursdays.
The department of engineering of Robert College in Constantinople has sent a letter to the University of Illinois asking the dean there to furnish three men to fill the following positions: professor of electrical engineering, assistant professor of civil engineering and instructor in mining and chemistry. All these are offered are attractive and in addition travelling expenses each way will be paid, no one has made application for any of these positions.
A fire airing a damage of £200,000 destroyed the engineering building of the Michigan Agricultural College on Sunday. Practically all of the mec-
trical equipment and physical laboratory equipment of the college was destroyed by the fire.
The University of Minnesota has adopted an honor system of personal supervision to keep professionalism out of athletics.
Iowa State Agricultural College professors are making plans for a model farm house to be built on the campus. The model farm at Zumwalt next spring.
Plans to make Columbia University a national industrial research center are fast taking shape. Two sites have already been offered. It is planned to erect research inboratories and to develop new equipment. The entire project calls for an ultimate endowment of from $2,000,000 to $5,000,000.
Colonel J. G. Battelle, president of the Columbus Iron and Steel Company, has given to Ohio State University a fund of $1,000 the interest of which is to be used for "annual rewards to officers in the University regiments for excellence in military scholarship."1
The senior class of Syracuse University has adopted a class budget of $500. It is proposed to use a part of the budget to recast the Crouse College Chimes.
Students of the University of California talked over the long distance telephone this week to students of Columbia University in New York City.
WANT ADS
WANTED - Student washings. Excellent work and reasonable prices. Phone 2178J. 1237 New Jersey. Mrs. Mary Walls. 125-3*
LOST-On the campus Tuesday, a small gold brooch with a borque pearl in the center. Reward for return to post office in Fraser. 125-3*
LOST-Waterman fountain pen near
literary Finder please return to
kaini library
KEELERS' BOOK STORE . 329 Mass. St. Typewriters for sale or rent. Paper by the pound. Quiz books for 10c. Pictures and Picture framing.
CLASSIFIED
ED. W. PARISONS, Engraver, Watch-
line, Jewelry.
Bell phone 711, 717, Mass.
ESTINa Vaughn
CHINA Vaughn
MISS ESTINA Vaughn
UPHILA Vaughn
RUBIN Vaughn
GAMIA Vaughn
carefully handled, bagged,
boxed, and phone
contact information.
Book Store
Jewelers
Plumbers
K, U. BISHOP SEE for best Pantentulum it is
K, U. BISHOP SEE for best Pantentulum it is
**Mumbers**
PHONE KKNNNNE LUMBING CO. 257
Phones Mazda Mazda Lamps. 325
Messas Mazda Lamps. 325
From Other Campuses
B, H. BALLE, Artistic Job Printing
Both rithen 228, 1027 Mass.
FORNEY SHOP SHOP, 1017 Mass. St.
Don't make a mistake. All work
is done.
MIGS M. A., MORGAN IBF1 Tennessee,
taboring IBF1 Tennessee, very reasonable
taboring IBF1 Tennessee, very reasonable
PROFESSIONAL CARDS
DR. H. L. CHAMBERS. Office over
Sources a studio. Both phones.
HARRY BEDING. M. D. Eve, ear-
cure, F. C. Lester, F. C.
Foe, F. C. Uldg. Phones. Boll $15;
Boll $45; Uldg. Phones.
G. W. JONES, M. A. M. D. Diseases
college of Medicine, University
college ofiology 1218 Ohio St. Phonus Heli-
lal-1218 Ohio St. Phonus Heli
J. R. BECHET, M. D. D. D. O. 283 Mus
Bathroom. Both phones on ceil
and residence.
A. C. WILSON, Attorney at law, 748
Mass. St. Lawrence, Kansas.
DR. H. W. HUTCHINSON, Dentist. 3018
Perkins Bldg. Lawrence, Kansas.
C. E. OREILUP, M. D. Dick Bldg. Eya
H. B. McKinney. Guardian. Successor to
D. Herman guaranteed.
"UNSETTLED"
So Says the Weatherman
But this much is settled, there are
20 Days 'Till Easter
Just
Only 17 of these are shopping days
WHY WAIT LONGER?
Remember Where
MRS. McCORMICK, 823 Massachusetts
THE EASTER HAT SHOP
Arrow Shirts—guaranteed fast color Sold exclusively by Johnson & Carl
Bell 621 Flowers of Quality 825 $ _{1/2} $ Mass.
THE FLOWER SHOP
It's Fun to be Thirsty when you can get Coca-Cola
There's the fun of quenching the thirst with the solution offered if the thirst quencher to give you double pleasure. But you don't even have to be thright to enjoy a Coca-Cola as a treat, what ever your reason for drinking it.
Demand the genuine by full name—nicknames, encouragement, substitution.
THE COCA-COLA CO.
Atlanta, Ga.
120
It's Fun when you can get to be Thirsty Coca-Cola
Football practice 10 o'clock Saturday morning. Coach wants more men. —Adv.
—We sell tooth paste, powder, and soap. Tooth brushes, too.
Can you imagine such a thing as a well dressed man or woman with yellow teeth?
"DRESS UP"
Evans Drug Store 819 Mass.
EXPERT BARBERS
Corona and Fox Typewriters
At Your Service
are sold exclusively in Law rence by
College Inn Barber Shop BURT WADHAMS, Prop.
F. I. Carter,
1025 Mass. St.
We have machines for rent and a full line of supplies.
"THE BEST AMERICAN MAKE"
an Doncaster
ARROW
COLLAR
2 for 25¢
Cluett, Peabody & Co., Inc., Makers
"THE BEST AMERICAN MAKE"
CITIZENS STATE BANK
We are handling all University accounts, and we solicit your business, deposits guaranteed.
707 Massachusetts St.
PROTSCH
The College Tailor
Watkins National Bank
Capital $100,000
Surplus and Profits $100,000
The Student Depositary
Conklin Fountain Pen
Non-Leakable and Self-Filling Sold in Lawrence at
Sold in Lawrence at F. B. McColloch's Drug Store 847 Mass, St.
See Griffin Coal Company for Fuel.
UNIVERSITY WOMEN!
UNIVERSITY WOMEN!
We do Fancy Tailoring and Remodeling.
MRS. EDNAH MORRISON,
Bell 1154J. 1146 Tenn. St.
At 900 Tennessee RAYMOND'S PRIVATE DINING ROOM
For parties, banquets, committee feeds, etc., call 92 on the Bell for reservations. Let us prepare your next picnic lunch.
STUDENTS
SHOE SHOP
R. O. BURGERT, Prop-
1107 Mass. St., Lawrence, Kansas.
Work and Prices Always Right.
Wanted to help in the Arts.
b u n i
a d l a m s
t a s t s t t t t t t t t t t t t t t t t t t t t t t t t t
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
THEATRE VARSITY
TONIGHT ONLY
NANCE O'NIEL IN
"THE WITCH" BASED ON SARDOU'S
"The SORGERESS"
aye, aye,
captain!
To Arms!
"Now listen, girlie, you've been wondering what makes me feel so good lately; whence this store of quivering energy; this keenness of brain; this sparkle in me eye. My dove, there could be but one answer —
Tuxedo
The Perfect Tobacco for Pipe
"Tux" touches the spring that releases the punch—the live wire energy—the get-there spirit. Smoke "Tux" for solid enjoyment, too—for the mellow richness and delicate fragrance of choice Burley, freed from harshness and "bite"
by the original "Tuxedo Process." You can smoke "Tux" all day long, if you like, and get a new pleasure and satisfaction out of every pipeful.
YOU CAN BUY TUXEDO EVERYWHERE
Convenient, glassie wrapped,
mature-proof pouch 5c
Famous green tin with gold
lettering, curved to fit pocket 10c
*In Tin Humilidors, 40c and 80c*
*In Glass Humiliders, 50c and 90c*
THE AMERICAN TOBACCO COMPANY
PATTerson'S
Juxedo
TOBACCO
SPECIALY PREPARED
FOR PIPE & CIGARETTE
SENIOR "BIDS" OUT SOON
Orders for Commencement Invitations Taken in Fraser Hall
"seniors who are taking degrees this spring, and graduate students we'anex another pair of letters to their names should decide before Friday April 8 just how many Commencement Invitations they are going to order," said E. F. Cress, chairman of the invitation committee today.
Such invitations are always somewhat of a nuisance, because if one doesn't consider his friends carefully he may not secure a sufficient number to fill his demands. The advice is not to order too many—no one will do that. He should invite an invitation to commencement to send to all of your relatives and friends whom you consider close enough to appreciate the sentiment.
The invitations this year have several original features, still following, however, a number of traditional K. covers, with the exception of covers is of exceptional quality. Only 550 orders for leather covers will be taken, the total number furnished at the contract price—beyond this the price will be greater because of the war.
The paper bound invitations contain the same printing matter, and are tied with red and blue cord and tassel. No orders can be received in this manner. The committee cannot advance any of the sum themselves, or risk the refusal of invitations ordered and then not taken. Leather covers will cost 35 cents, or three for one dollar. Paper covers may also be received at the check stand in Fraser next week, and next week only (April 3rd to 9th.)
Giving quizzes is a greater effort than taking them, according to the practice teachers who are just finishing their nine weeks' work at the training school. "It's very disconcerting to realize, in looking over your class notes, that you are and how little you have taught them in spite of all the hard work and planning," one young woman was heard to remark.
Vernon H. Frank, '18 College, lea-
th Thursday night for his home in Jewell
for a few days visit. Rumor has it
that he has a birthday soon and
is taking the trip as a "safety first"
precaution.
ANNOUNCEMENTS
English Club will have its next meeting in Room 213, Fraser Hall, at 4:30 p. m., Wednesday, April 5. Reports upon journals devoted to English scholarship will be given by Dr. Jenkins, who is a graduate interested are welcome. A special invitation is given to the graduate students of the department.
the meeting of the K. U. Anti-Cigarette League will be held Monday night at 7:00 instead of 7:30 as originally announced. The meeting will be in Room 110 Fraser, John A. Traver, Secretary.
The Sigma Xi banquet will be held Thursday night, April 13, at I. O. O. F. Hall. The members, as well as the officers, may even be present unless the case may be) will be there.
The English Club will meet Wednesday, April, 6 at 1300 p. m. in room 213 Fraser Hall. Papers will be read by Dr. Duniap, Dr. Burnham, Mr. Wattles. All interested are invited.
Meeting in:
kappa Sigma. Sign on to Tuesday
meet at: BK Hand. Be on hand.
Registrar George O. Foster will speak on the subject, "College Friendships" at the meeting of the Y. W. C. A. Tuesday afternoon at 4:30 at Meyers Hall. Mrs. Florence Butler will give a reading.
The second senior women's "Sing" will be Thursday, April 6. The girls will gather on the golf links at six o'clock and have a picnic supper. Vanetta Hosford says, "We don't go to practice before going to practice behind the scenes before making our second appearance in public.
The Quill Club initiation which was to have taken place the first week in April has been postponed a week.
I will pay two and a half cents for each copy of the mining edition. Professor Terrill.
Kansas Publishers Have Opportunity to Hear Newspaper Men of National Repute
Have you read the tip to high school seniors from the Dean of the Summer Session? It might be of interest; Read it now.—Adv.
Black Helmets meet at the Kappa Sigma chapter house Tuesday evening at 7:30. Be there!
PREPARE FOR EDITORS
WILL MEET MAY 1 TO (
Send the Daily Kansan home.
Courses in Cost-Finding and Salesmanship Will be Given
Some of the greatest newspaper editors and publishers in the country will participate in the Newspaper Association's journalism at the University of Kansas from May 1 to 6. The indications of a successful conference exceed those of last year, when 251 Kansas officers in addition to 40 others, attended.
Arthur Brisane, editor of the New York Journal, Roy W. Howard president of the United Press; Chester S. Lord, managing editor of the New York Sun from 1880 to 1913; Courtland Smith, president of the American Press Association; Mark Miller, member of the New York Tribune; and Ivy Lee, of the Rockefeller Foundation, are a f·r of the big speakers of the week.
Among others who will appear upon the program are Hugu MeV, of successful Farming; G. L. Caswell, field secretary of the Iowa Press Association; Marc Morrow, of the Caper publications; E. K. Whiting, of the University; Michael Mickle, secretary of the Nashville Printer's Club; Strickland Gillian, author of humorous stories and a lyceum lecturer of note; and Joe Mitchell Chapple, editor of the National Magazine. Irvin S. Cobb has said that he will attend unless prevented by the stress of other circumstances.
IRVIN CORR MAY COME
The first three days of the Newspaper Week will be taken up by the sessions of the Missouri Valley Cost Congress and Thursday and Friday will be devoted to the short courses. The meetings of the Kansas Editorial Association will be held Friday afternoon and Saturday.
MOVIES A FEATURE
Moving picture lectures will be one of the innovations of the year's meetings. The Donald Thompson war pictures, obtained through the efforts of the Capper Publications, will be general in its appeal. A film of the merchandising department of the Chicago Tribune will be of particular interest to Kansas editors who have established the Central Bureau with the same object in view. The Strathmore Press will announce the third reel. These moving picture lectures are especially noteworthy, because an effort has been made to get away free on the purely technical and mechanical side of newspaper life.
Invitations have been extended to other noted newspaper men and their acceptances will be announced from time to time as they are received.
TO GIVE SPANISH PLAYS
Romance Language Students To Put on Roaring Comedies
Two roaring Spanish comedies to be staged in Green Hall April 29 are under way now, "La Muela Juicio," (The Wisdom Tooth), and "Los Pantalones," (Trousers), are farces by well known contemporary Spanish playwrights. Both have been given successfully on the stage. They represent geno chico or smart chico or little purely literary merit. They are interesting because of their humor of language and situation.
The plays are being directed by Prof. Mark Skidmore of the department of romance languages. Professor Skidmore directed the same play in 1910. The plays there were given by the Spanish club. Owing to the fact that forty members of this club were of Spanish extraction and spoke Spanish fluently the problem of staging the plays there was a major burden than it is here where almost all are beginners in Spanish.
Herman Lorenz went to Norman, Oklahoma Thursday where he referred a gym meet between the Uni-
lizons and Texas and the University of Oklahoma.
"The students here must be taught to pronounce as well as to interpret their parts and that makes the staging of such plays much more difficult." He explained. The last Spanish play that was given here was "El Senor Cura" (The Village Priest). It was staged two years ago in Robinson Gymnastium. The acoustic properties of the gym, however, made the staging of a play there so difficult and the exhilaration stage there was so great that Professor Skidmore decided this year to give it in Green Hall.
As Forbes-Robertson's "Hamlet" appealed to the students of English literature so the joint recital of Ossip Gabrieliowitch, the distinguished Russian pianist, and Mme. Gabrieliowitch, American contralto and the daughter of Mark Twain, is expected to appeal to the students of music with the given at the Bowery theater, Wednesday evening, April 5.
GABRILOWITCH RECITAL
ATTRACTING ATTENTION
Josie Trinkle, Eva Robinson and Mrs. Soxmann gave a spread Thursday night in Neva Watson's honor. Those present were Iva Scott, Fressa Baker, Blanche Lorimer, Amy Kincaud, Beth Kincaud, Luella Varner, Ethylin Green, Eva Robinson and Josie Trinkle.
M. Gabilowitch is of the school of Anton Rubenstein and has acquired fame both in America and Europe. He is considered by many critics of the musical world to have few equals.
Mme. Gabrieliowitch (Clara Clemens) is the only living member of the actress of the great humorist. She has been accused of being among the foremost of Lieder singers.
WHY PRESS IS UNTRUE
Prof, Thorpe Tells Why Press Cannot, Should Not, Dares Not Tell Literal Truth
THERE ARE 57 REASONS
It is Difficult To Do More Than Approximate the Truth
Prof. Merle Thorpe, head of the department of journalism, declared to his class in newspaper I Friday morning that newspapers cannot, should be printed at home or for almost as many reasons as there are Heinz varieties. Chief of these reasons were that so long as editors and writers are human and must deal with a rapidly changing newspaper can rise but little higher than the temperament of its readers.
"All of us are biased as a result of heredity, environment, religion, politics, or society and we see events that transpire through our eyes and not through the eye."
MEN LIE DIFFERENTLY
"If as reporters we do not see the events that make up the day's news, we must accept the opinions and statements of others. In newspaper work we must deal with the factors with which we have to deal. Johnny-on-the-spot reports exist only in fiction. No two people see the same thing in the same way. And even were that possible we would not press what we saw in the same way."
WHY NEWS IS OFTEN CHANGED
Quoting Robert Louis Stevenson that the majority of persons should not be allowed to use the English language because it is used so miserably. Mr. Thorpe showed how easy it is to express entirely erroneous ideas by using identical facts and expressing them in different words.
"Often new matters must be suppressed or changed in order to tell the truth." Here was cited a class scrap, at which time a student was struck over the head with a bottle bottle. Had not the reporter changed the fact of a bottle bottle to that of an ordinary bottle, the impression would have gone out that it was a simple matter to reach down in the dark and pick up a meter of face on the campus. (As a matter of face on the campus, quite often had gasoline in it.) The impression would have been entirely wrong and misleading.
"While it is true," he said, "that nine hundred and ninety-nine of the stories that are printed are accurate accounts of the day's happenings, the one story that appears that is inaccurate causes all the grief. The nine hundred and ninety-nine stories that give accurate and truthful impressions of life, one which gives an impression that is inaccurate and untruthful."
**WHYIF! VERIFY! VERIFY!**
"It is necessary that newspaper men acquire early the habit of verifying and verifying and verifying, and make the impressions intended, even if later quotes have to be changed to convey the truth that was intended to be expressed.
VERIFY! VERIFY! VERIFY!
"In spite of the difficulty of presenting the truth newspaper men work far into the night trying to approximate the truth."
Second Lenten Organ Recital
Professor Skilton will give the secu-
rence of his blenst organ recitals at
Fraser on Friday, June 4; 3:00, Prof. Joseph A. Farrell will assist. The public is invited. The followi-
ng program will be given:
Chorale in a minor...Cesar Franck
Andante from Fourth Symphony
Second Lenten Organ Recital
(Known as the Clock Movement)
Aria from "The Magic Flute". *Mozart*
"Within this hallowed Dwelling*
AMERICAN COMPOSITIONS
Prelude and Fugue in F minor.
...Archer Gibson
Persian Suite (new)...Stoughton
The Garden of Iram
The Courts of Jamah
The Garden of Iram
Allegretto from Organ Sonata
... Horatio Parker
Melody...
Fanfare... Harry Rowe Shelley
The third recital will be given
Wednesday instead of Tuesday, and will be
held at Mrs. Herman
Olcott will assist.
Allegretto from Organ Sonata.
TEACU MINING BY MAIL
Department of Mining Obers
Correspondence Course
Mining engineering is the latest subject to be taught by correspondence from the University. The department of mining engineering has developed a circular announcing several courses that will be given to students by mail.
The courses were prepared some months ago by Prof. Richard L. Durham and hurt but been available since the thief has not yet been widely advertised.
The courses that are offered are:
General Mining, Ore Dressin, Explosives and Explosions, Ventilation of Mines and Coal Mining.
The correspondence work that is offered in mining is such as will appeal to miners who want to better their positions. An offer is made to send an instructor to hold local classes where there are twelve or more enrolled in the work from one place.
Have you read the tip to high school eniors from the Dean of the Summer session? It might be of interest, lead it now.—Adv.
An old joke on Chancellor Frank Strong was revived recently. When Evelyn Strong was quite small she was asked why she did not take her problems in arithmetic to her father by telling them. She answered, "Oh, father can do short division alright, but these are problems in long division."
On account of the Shostac recital the K. U. Debating Society did not attend the program Thursday night. The debate must be staged at next week's meeting.
Senior invitations at check stand in Fraser, April 3-8. Get them eary. —Adv. 125-5
THESIS BINDING
Engraved and Printed Cards
L.S.Brightly
Aren't some life insurance companies like some automobiles in using up too much fuel in merely turning over their own machinery?
A. G. ALRICH
Typewriter Paper 744 Mass. St.
Indestructo Trunks Bags and Suit Cases Sold Exclusively by Johnson & Carl
SHARP DUCKS
"I'M SATISFIED"
"Whether it's peace, politics, prohibition, or profit,
there's nothing like keeping at it."
Everybody doesn't agree with Billy Bryan—and I'm strictly "neutral," but everybody who ever bought a suit of clothes from me is strong for me. Better call today and see my new exclusive Spring and Summer collections, then you a suit of clothes that brings out your own individuality to advantage. Prices like you like to pay.
SAMUEL G. CLARK, 707 Mass.
Original Superb New York Cast and Massive Production
Bowersock Theatre MONDAY NIGHT, APRIL 3 Guy Bates POSTINOMAR The Tentmaker
The Season's Supreme Spectacle! CURTAIN 8:15
A sumptuous Persian Love-Play, by RICHARD WALTON TULLY, Author of "The Bird of Paradise." Original Superb New York Cast and Massive Producer
Coming Direct from the Shubert Theatre in Kansas City
PRICES:
Boxes $2. All parquet $1.50, First 3 rows balcony $1, next 5 rows 75c, all second balcony 50c.
Tickets on sale at theatre box office afternoons and evenings beginning Monday, March 27. Bell phone 10.
High School Senior
Here's a Tip!
How much is a year worth to you? Would you like a chance to save that much time in your preparation for life?
You can do it by attending the University 46 weeks in the year instead of 36. You can, by attending three summer sessions, graduate in June, 1919 instead of June, 1920.
And you must add to your saving the "summer-
resort" pleasures of a ten weeks' stay in Lawrence.
Why not enter this June?
Mail a post card for a Summer Session catalog today.
The University of Kansas LAWRENCE
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Trench Coats
Some Stylish Spring Coats for Hill Wear
Smart Sport Coats Checks,Striped White Boucle NavySerges,Poplins,Corduroys As low as $5.00 and up to $25.00
Several New Suits in White Chinchilla and Yama Cloth Coats, at $13.50,$15.00,$16.50
Tack Tar Middies—Compare them with any other
Onnes, Bulline & Hackman
TOURNAMENT LOST MONFY
Secret Girls' Games Cost Athletic Association Heavy
The lack of girls' games in the recent high school basketball tournament proved costly to the K. U. athletic association according to figures recently announced by C. A. Rancho, secretary, secretariat of the women's games were played in the tournament but were open only to women spectators.
Although having twice as many teams entered as in the 1915 tourney the total receipts this year amounted to only $472.25 compared with $599 last year. The great decrease in attendance is blamed directly on the ruling that made the girls' games secret instead of being played as a regular part of the tournament as in former years. Because of it, the shrinkage in the number and the fact that many high schools protested the ruling, the K. U. athletic authorities hope to be able to return to the conditions of former years in holding next year's tournament or else abandon the project.
Of the total receipts of $472.25 taken in this year about one hundred dollars will go to the athletic association leaving the remainder to be pro-rated among the fifty-five teams competing. The amount each team received was determined by the railroad fare.
WILL HAVE STUDENTS' DAY
S. C. to Make Arrangements for Annual Student Rights Day
Plans for Students' Day are to be taken up at the regular meeting of the Men's Student Council next Tuesday day evening according to the statement of Leland Thompson, president. This day is a yearly tradition of the University on which the students of the various schools are allowed to get together and "air" their grievances or make comments on the way in which matters are conducted at the University.
One student speaker from each school is either appointed by the president of the school or elected by the school and he makes his plea at the chapel as representative of that body. At this meeting the faculty has no authority to judge and the student Council is given complete charge of affairs. The faculty is, however, earnestly invited to come to the meeting and hear the abuses of which students may think they are guilty.
Albert Wilson, '19 College, was unexpectedly called to his home at Klinley. Thursday on account of the flu, he and the experts to be back early this week.
Have you read the tip to high school seniors from the Dean of the Summer Session? It might be of interest Read it now.—Adv.
ARE ACTIVE IN POLITICS
K. U. Grads Fill Many County,
State and National Offices
If dots on the map of the United States indicated places where K. U. men were actively engaged in politics the face of our nation would look like a small box in the case of smallpox. Of course the breaking out would be greatest at home where at least fifty counties have K. U. graduates filling the office of county attorney besides a store or a store or a score or more of other county officials.
As far as state positions are concerned we are not so well represented at the present time. The only grads now holding state offices, with the exception of about a dozen members of the state legislature, are the two governors of Arkansas and J. Wilson, and C. F. Paley, a member of the public utilities committee. Considering the number of graduates and the difficulties a western man has in attaining a national office, a great number of K. U. graduates have been a place in national political politics. The number of these at the present time is Senator William E. Borah, of Idaho, who holds the distinction of being the only graduate from this University to ever reach the Senate. In the House the University has been more educated than its seats in that body; at present Dudley Doolelland and D. R. Anthony are the only two from Kansas.
Work on McCook Field Cinders Will Start This Afternoon
K. U. men also have a custom of making good in the politics of other states. The most noted example in this field is S. V. Stewart, '89 Law, who is now Governor of Montana. Other well known names that may be added to this list are: John Rush, John Warnock and Dewey R. E. Campbell, '94 Law, district judge in Oklahoma; and ex-governor Hadley of Missouri who it is suggested will come out as a candidate for U. S. Senator.
May 6 Kansas state high school root, or Lawrence
OUTDOOR TRACK STARTS
April 29 Annual K. U. interclas meet on McCook Field.
May 13 Missouri dual meet at Columbia.
April 23 Drake Relay games at Des Moines.
May 19 Kansas Aggie dual meet at Manhattan.
May 5 Nebraska dual meet at Law-
rence.
WORK FOR DRAKE GAMES
May 20 Annual high school invitation meet at Lawrence.
1916 TRACK SCHEDULE
Relay Men Preparing for Des Moines Trip
Track practice on McCook Field will start in earnest this afternoon. For a week the cinder artists have been enjoying a nice vacation but the call for the outdoor work has been issued. This means that the tracker must travel 20 miles to track clothes under their arm and journey to McCook this afternoon.
May 27 Missouri Valley Conference meet at Columbia.
June 3 Western Conference meet at Chicago.
Bonnie Reber, Lotte Martin and Joyce Brown visited the latter's parents Saturday and Sunday in Olathe,临家 home town. In spite of all the rain and snow which prevented their picnic, the picnic report a delightful trip.
Starting outdoor practice at this time will give the two relay teams three weeks in which to get in shape before entering the Drake Relay Games in Des Moines April 22. This will be long enough for the men who play each team to track. In those three weeks Coach Hamilton expects to look over the ten or twelve men he has in the distances and from that number pick eight men who will look the best for a couple of relays in the big northern meet.
FAVOR MILE RELAY
Just what two relays Kansas will run at Des Moines has not been determined. The only one that is sure is the one mile. Every Kansan will admit that Hamilton has anice one mile relay squad after their performance in St. Louis and this same squad will get to face Missouri on Sunday. Another team, the relay team Coaches Hamilton and Patterson will have to do some close figuring. A four mile relay team—each man run a mile—could be picked that would best any team in the Missouri Valley. But whether these four men would match up with Minnesota, Wisconsin and Illinois is a different question. Rodkey, Grady, Sproull and Herriott have records as good as any other team. But doubtless make a winning team for this section of the country.
Then there is a two mile combination which Kansas could win some points with. Rodkey again would be the anchor man. in this relay with Fiske as the other star. Grady, Harriot, Marquis and Groene will enter the race for the other two places. Besides that some of the quarter milers may be able to repeat in this event. In either case Hamilton can pick a team of four men from this number that will average under the man. If you do that the Drakes could eight minutes flat for the two mile relay will have to fall.
MAY GO TO PENN GAMES
AY TO OPPEN GAMES
Behind the Des Moines trip is a greater stimulus. If a good showing is made by either of the two or three relay teams at Des Moines Coach Hamilton will take that team to the Penn Relay Games in Philadelphia the following week. This is the time to prepare for the new working and the practices of the next three weeks will show that the men want the long trip.
The track man in events other than the relays will start work today also. The first meet in which they will enter will be the dual meet with Nebraska on McCook Field May 5. The meet with Oklahoma was refused definitely because the Jayhawker schedule was too full.
A number of the graduates of the School of Fine Arts at the University have achieved more than ordinary success in the musical world. Harold Henry, one of the most noted of concert pianists, is a graduate of the University and makes his headquarters in Chicago. Two weeks ago he played his third annual concert in New York. Miss Agnes Lapham is another concert pianist who has headquarters in Chicago.
MUSICIANS GAIN RENOWN
Many Fine Arts Graduates Are
. of Nation Wide Repute
"We are making history, and the University of Kansas is the beginning of it," said Prof. H. E. Slaught of the University of Chicago in a letter to Prof. J. N. Van der Vries. "I am printing a preliminary state report about Kansas University meeting the Marques of the American Mathematical Monthly."
History Begins Here
Genevieve / Lichtenwalter is the most widely known teacher of piano in Kansas City, John Manning, who was a successful teacher of piano in Boston for twenty-five years is now located on the Pacific coast, where he
Nina Kannaga, who was graduated last spring, has recently gone to Conception, Chile, where she is teaching high schools for girls in South America.
Louise Lewellyn, who was a student for some time in the School of Fine Arts, is constantly before the public in art recitals as a singer and in costume. Miss Lewellyn is the daughter of former Governor Lewellyn.
Mildred Hazelrigg is organist of the First Christian church at Topeka, and is supervisor of music in the Topeka schools. She was organist one summer at the Fifth Avenue Pressbysterian church in New York.
The Kansas section of the American Mathematical Association which held a meeting at the University two weeks ago, now has a membership of thirty-five professors of mathematics representing all except the seven members of the State. The membership of the National Association, organized in December of last year, has now grown to over 850 members.
Karl Krueger, a graduate student, was recently appointed organist and choremaster at St. Ann's Episcopal church in New York.
Have you read the tip to high school seniors from the Dean of the Summar Session? It might be of interest. Read it now.—Adv.
RAGS ORIENTAL MUSIC
Siamese and Javanese Airs Played by Prof. Ogden in Testing Native Music
The musical scales of the Javanese and Siamese are used by Prof. R. M. Ogden in his psychology lectures that refer to hearing and to musical tones and noises. In these experiments, in which Professor Ogden plays the national air and a dancing song, he uses soundscapes from the native psychologist, Stumpf, who has copied the scale from the native instruments of these lands.
The purpose of the use of these scales is to show the wonderful exactness with which these primitive people who have no laboratory and who have not yet been taught of tones measure the interval between tones. The scale of the Javanese is divided into six notes, each tone having exactly the same interval between it and the next higher and the next lower. These are exactly identical instruments with finely differentiating instruments. The scale of the Siamese has eight notes, each separated from the next note by an equal interval. These people have perfected their instruments with no other tone measuring instrument than their ears and can compare favorably with our own.
The musical instruments that these people use are of four kinds, ananklong, which is a series of suspended bamboo rods that are struck with a heavy stick, a large gong piano that is circular in shape and so large that the player sits within the center of it, a crude zither that has only three strings, or a metalophone, popularly made in the form of a crocodile which has in some cases wooden plates and in others metal plates like our own.
The music is purely melodious and rythmical and there is no harmony to it, as we know the word. Only one note may be struck at a time on one instrument, but the main instrument is accompanied by the clapping of hands, the rhythmic chanting, or the pounding of drums. The other instruments would moods except warfare feelings and the pleasure of the dance. It can in no way compare with ours, although there is a possibility of our scientists advancing this music far beyond the point at which it now stands.
Hilda Brady, of the Horner Institute of Fine Arts of Kansas City, was the guest of Viola Jones, "17 Fire Friday" and Saturday. Miss Brady attended the Sigma Nu spring party. Friday night.
Dean F. W. Blackmar has been appointed by Governor Carper as a delegate to the National Conference of Indianapolis, to be held in Indianapolis, May 17.
Principal H. L. Steeper of Leavenworth is on the Hill today. He is here interviewing prospective candidates of the Leavenworth high school.
Mrs. C, W. Ellis, of Medicine Lodge, has been spending the past two weeks with her daughter, Marjorie, freshman College at 1135 Tennessee.
TO STUDY PROHIBITION
Send the Daily Kansan home.
Local Class of Nat'l Organization to Meet Twice a Month
In order to train students for leadership in prohibition campaigns the local branch of the Intercollegiate Prohibition Association decided last night to take up the study of the question for the rest of the year.
The class, which 'will probably be conducted by Gordon Thompson, student pastor of the Methodist school, will meet at Myers Hall two Tuesdays of the month. The study will be based on the book "Social Welfare and Liquor Traffic."
D. Leigh Colvin, president of the national organization, will be in Lawrence soon. He will talk over the work with the local branch and make various suggestions. It is hoped to book him for channel one morning.
It was definitely decided at last night's meeting to send a delegate to the state convention at Salina, March 30 and 31.
The K. U. branch of the Association was organized in November and the following elected officers: Willard King, president; Homer Heerrliot, president; Paul W. Hardley, treasurer and Aaron Pienspurger, secretary.
ROOM FOR MORE TEAMS
Hash House League Is Still Open For Additional _lubs
Several additional baseball teams can be admitted to the Hash League. Any boarding club that wishes to enter should telephone John Gleissner, Home or Bell 297, at once, as the order is considered in determining membership.
All teams should send representatives to the meeting in the office of the Daily Kansan tomorrow night at the New York games will be played this week.
Cecil Kiulh, a senior in the School of Pharmacy last year, spent the last of the week at the Phi Kappa house. Kuhl is now working in Hilton's Drug Store in Cottonwood Falls, his home town.
Send the Daily Kansan home to the folks.
CHORAL UNION TO SING
Churches Will Close Palm Sunday for Religious Chorus in Gymnasium
The Oratario of Gounod, directed by Prof. Arthur Nevin, of the School of Fine Arts, will be given by the Lawrence Choral Union at Robinson Gymnasium, on Palm Sunday evening. The choir will perform 8 'oclock'. All churches will close.
The participants in the oratorio will be 125 students and townpeople
Among the students who will have prominent parts are Cora Reynolds, Clara Scheuer and Ray Gafney. Many of the quartettes and choruses have not been assigned yet. There will be no entrance admission.
The oratorio was one of Gounod's later works. It deals with the suffering of Christ, during the last week of his life. It is lighter and more popular in character than most of the Passion Plays. Gounod divided his energies between opera and religion, but he also wrote a life he became a religious mystic, and the Oratorio was produced while he was in this mood
One freshman hopped out of bed and hurriedly threw on his clothes when he heard the fire-whethle about 2:30 Friday morning, only to go disappointed back again after central law enforcement rushed Lincoln street, North Lawrence." At home, he explained, everybody goes to the fires.
Send the Daily Kansan home to the folks.
RUSH MEDICAL COLLEGE
THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO
wiches which is amitilated
DUSK UNIVERSITY
PUBLIC LECENCE
Offers courses in the medical branches leading to the degree of M. D. The courses offered in the Summer Quarter correspond in character and value to those offered in the Fall.
Summer Quarter, 1916-
11th Term June 19 - July 30
2nd Term July 27 - Sept. 1
LAW SCHOOL
Offers three-year course leading degree of
Circular of information will be sent upon
THE WILMING DENN
THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO
YOU WILL ENJOY SEEING
Blanche Sweet
"THE SOWERS"
play the role of a "real lady" in Henry Seton Merriman's story of Russian political life—
This Jesse L. Lasky production will be shown at
The Bowersock
TOMORROW ONLY
Four complete shows 2:30-4:15, 7:45-9:15
Get your Racket or Glove at Allie's and warm up. New goods await you.
CARROLL'S Girls see our $1.50 racket
Girls, see our $1.50 racket
DRESS UP!
READ UP!
SMOKE UP!
Get your clothes where you will — Ober's, House', Winey's, Skofstad's, Johnson & Carl's—they are all good and will treat you right. BUT, when it comes to getting the LATEST and BEST in
READS AND SMOKES
There is but ONE place to consider seriously, and that place is
827 Mass. St.
GRIGGS'
827 Mass. St.
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VOLUME XIII.
IT'S TIME FOR HIKES
Nature is Going to Invite You Out Into the Open Soon
FEEL A TUG TO RAMBLE?
NUMBER 128.
Some Pretty Spots Just Six Miles From Campus
The hygienic effects of hikes are somewhat overestimated," said Dr. Alice Goetz, when commenting upon the advisability of hiking. "People so often call these three mile strolls out to Cameron's Bluff with a frying pan in one hand and a handle of wienies in the other, hikes. A hie keeps out at three or four miles, a heke keeps up this rate for two or three hours. This is good exercise from a hygienic standpoint.
STROLLS WORTH WHILE
"The little strolls are certainly worth while, however. The breath of country air, the jolly companionship over campfires, and that feeling of freedom are things which enter in and make holidays enjoyable."
NATURE WILL INVITE SOON
Miss Hazei Prall also favors the idea of hiking. "One thing about these country walks—they can be just as useful as walking." The exercise is so general that everyone can take part. If dressed properly in clothing especially adapted to walking, the exercise, if you go fast enough, will be good from a physical standpoint."
Nature's urgent invitation, for a hike to the country will soon be answered by the student body. The day, girl, and lunch basket combination, providing each ingredient is an ideal way to warm up before worry exterminate. There is scenery in a six mile radius of Mount Oread, unequaled in other parts of the state. When trees and spring verse markers get stuck in every student gears that call to ramble.
WHERE TO GO
Where mother nature displays her most appealing charms is always the most satisfactory sport to hike for. The rugged terrain of the south of Mount Oread is full of such enchantments. Some of the most beautiful description in Margaret Hill McCarter's, "Wall of Men" is woven about this historical stream. The fact that horses were a popular story, now called Horsesee Lake, is only a few miles east of Lawrence.
Cameron's Bluff is probably the most popular hiking place among K. U. students. It is best accessible by the river, but a good walker may oneeti, two-tie, telegraph-post-most. The bluff is rich in cave-like little nooks suitable for campfires and has a spring of real Adam's Ale.
TED IS A DADDY NOW
Blue Mound which can be seen from the campus about six miles to the south-east is a rich hunting ground for arrow heads. But if this is too long a hike, Lake View is a pretty place with a good lunch and then an accommodation Santa Fe train comes along at the right time on the track for home.
Journalism Assistant Makes Im
Important Announcement Today
Ted Cronemeyer, assistant in the department of journalism, came up to the office this afternoon wearing in short to his usual apparel, a broad smile.
"It's a ten-pound boy," he remarked.
When he reached his office this afternoon he found his desk covered with newspapers and babies clipped from Sunday newspaper pers in the journalism library.
He brushed them off contempt
uously.
"My youngster has them beaten a mile," he said.
To Tell of Germany
Prof. H. O. Kruse, of the department of German, will deliver an illustrated lecture on "Germany and the Germans," this afternoon at 4:30 in Fraser Hall, room 318. The lecture will be in English of the Deutsche Verein and is open to the public. The lecture will be in English instead of German.
"Spanish Gypsies" Postponed
Work on the "Spanish Gypsies," the operetta which is to be given by the Girls' Glee Club, is progressing well. The first date set for this production was April 19, but this date is now taken by the senior, play. Owing to the fact that it is imminent, the time before the Easter Vacation, the operetta has been postponed until the last of the month.
In spite of the fact that Germany is engaged in such a fierce struggle, the number of women students at the twenty-two universities shows an increase of 445 this summer over the previous summer.
OUR INDEFATIGABLE FAC.
MEETS 3 TIMES TODAY
UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS, TUESDAY AFTERNOON, APRIL 4,1916.
Three faculty meetings are scheduled for this afternoon. A meeting of the Administrative Committee of the School will be at 1:30 in the office of Chancellor Frank Strong. At 3:30 a general meeting of the faculty of that school will be at 4:30. The regular meeting of the University will convene at 4:30 in Fraser Hall.
The following out of town members of the faculty of the School of Medicine will be here today: Dean S. E. Crumbine, Dr. M. T. Sudler, Dr. F. E. Murphy, Dr. D. C. Guffey, Dr. R. H. Major, and Dr. J. Curran.
Want More Applications
Application for scholarships for women students should be made as soon as possible. At present, but many applications have been received by committee scholarships, both gift and loan fund, will be granted next year. All applicants should give a transcript of their grades to some member of the committee in charge: Miss Gallo, Wilson, Miss Oliver and Dr. Hyde.
LELAND GOES PI PHI
GIRLS ALL TICKLED
Pledged His Trunk Too
"Ring Ching Ching
Ho Hipy Hi
Arrow Arrow
P: Beta, Phi"
*
The Pi Phis sang dancing around their latest pledge, Leland, Sunday afternoon.
The acquisition of Leland was a considerable surprise all around even to Leland. It all came about through a belated April fool joke which originated among the few dateless Phi Pis loafing around the house Sunday afternoon.
Leland and company had just returned to the Pi Pbi house from their Sunday afternoon stroll and were resting quietly on the shady veranda when shrieks in treble came from inside. The room was rushed in and fainted straight to Morpheus. His own trunk with his name painted on it, stood end up on the perfor floor with half of the contents scattered about the room. Hastily he grabbed the socks, shirts and sundry other unremenonables, and stuffing them back into the trunk he suit with a bang and sat down on the lid.
But the excitement had aroused the house and since Leland's trunk was already there, the Pi Phis decided to pledge the owner.
A few minutes later he hurriedly retired to 1140 Louisiana where the mystery of how the trunk had been sent over during his absence and smugged into the house, was exchanged by him. He called up the Pi Phi house to get the new pledge's name, late Sunday afternoon.
TWO-BIT DANCE APRIL 15
Big Crowd Needed To Make It Pay Out
At last the placards are out announcing that the Student Council is going to give that long talked of twobit dance. It is scheduled for Robinson Gymnasium on the evening of April 15, and two pieces from Kansas City—Harley and a violinist—will furnish the music.
There will be a program of sixteen dances and the whole thing will cost only two bits a couple. It will take a good crowd in the Gymnasium to make the dance pay out, but Edward Tanner, Chairman of the social committee of the council who finally gave the reason of the dance to please the dance, says, that he feels that the students will stand behind this dance as they have stood behind all of the others that the council has given this year.
Owing to illness, Miss Nelle Bryant, who was to have given a recital in Fraser Hall Friday, April 7, will not be able to sing. Dean Harold L. Butter hopes that at some later date Miss Bryant will be able to give a recital.
Howard Laslett, '19 College, who has been carrying his arm in a sling for the last eight weeks, at last has that member out. Although his friend is still weak, he expects to be fit for training of the football team next fall.
A Correction
...
Miss Bryant is a well known soprano from the Royal Opera, Ulm, Germany. She came home to the United States when war was declared and the opera house at Ulm was closed. Her concerts in this country have been given with great success. The concert here was to have been given free.
...
OUR HYMN ACROSS U. S.
"Crimson and Blue" Will B Sung From New York to Frisco
A VERSE FOR EACH CITY
East and West Alumni Will Meet Over Telephone Wire
Members of the faculty who wish to attend the transcontinental reunion should get their tickets tomorrow at the Alumni Office. Any tickets remaining are sent to the seniors who ask for them.
"Oh, East is East, and West is West.
And never the twain shall meet." But Kipling wasn't thinking of transcontinental telephony when he said it; for representatives from the east and the west of the Alumni Assoc will hear each other's diversity of Kansas will hear each other's voices. Saturday night, April 8, aver a transcontinental telephone.
"The Crimson and the Blue" is to be sung from the Pacific to the Atlantic—the first verse by the New York audience, second verse by Lawrencisco, third verse by Lawrencisco. The roar of the Pacific accompanied by motion pictures in New York is to be another feature of the program. The University of Kanaas will be represented by Chancellor Eleanor Baird and Professor K. U. Glee club will sing for a transcontinental audience. Hundreds of graduates all over the United States will hear this program by peo-ler William York, Lawrence and San Francisco.
EACH TO SING A VERSE
The program is to be preceded by a reception and dinner in the various cities interested. At 9:00 o'clock, the transcontinental line will be opened and Mr. E, C. Alder in New York will exchange greetings with Chancellor Frank Strokn in Wawrence and Prof W. H. Carruth in San Francisco.
OPEN LINE AT 9 O'CLOCK
WANTS FLYING TAUGHT
Scientific Study of Aeronautics Urged by Augustus
Post
That aeronautics is of the utmost importance to the present day world and that the universities and colleges over the country should be the first to help boost it along is the opinion of Augustus Post, with the "Omar, the Tentmaker" company at the Bowers last night.
A VIGOROUS AERONAUT
And Mr. Post, not Gay Bates Post, but Augustus Post, speaks as one having authority. He was secretary of the Aero Club of America for four years, was aide to Allen R. Hawley in the balloon that won the Gordon-Bennett cup, several years ago. He was the thirteenth man in the United States who has been an enthusiastic and vigorous promoter of the future of air machines.
He quotes a man who has just come back from France as saying that he had worked in government plant near France part of an effort for 14,000 aerplanes. He also says that France now have 2,000, England 1,800 and Germany many more than that, with factories working in every place, but turning out as many as possible.
Mr. Post not only believes thoroughly in the future of flying, but has the figures to prove that right now it is a very important factor in the life of nations, and especially belligerent ones.
Mr. Post even went as far to predict that in a very short time, mail would be carried from New York to San Francisco by air lines. Sixty hours of flying time would be sufficient.
"Just to show you that this is not all in the realms of fancy," said Mr. Post smiling behind a black moustache that would do credit to even a Guy with a bachelor's degree, centently with Postmaster-general Burleson, who has advertised for bids for carrying mail in Alaska by airship, the government spends annually $80,000 for mail carrying, making the delivery cost about one dollar a pound."
Alfred G. Tritt, a former K. U. student, now coach of the Larned high school basket ball team, was much perturbed over the loss of one of his stars Thursday evening. However, the star was found in care of a freshman on the Hill a few hours later.
Right here in the United States, Mr. Post goes on to say, the Curtiss factory employs 1800 men and has many nurses for aeroplanes, most of them for the army.
ORDERS FOR $13,000,000
"HOW.
TO MAKE-UP”
Leading Principals in "Omar the Tentmaker" Explain The
Advise a Study of Costumes Be fore Portraval
TALK TO EMBRYO ACTORS
"Art Behind the Footlights" or "How to Make-up" might have been the title of an impromptu performance staged by two leading memoir writers. Uates Post company yesterday afternoon Through the kindness of Miss Louise Grassler, leading lady of "Omar the Tentmaker" and Mr. Gerold Pryng, second in importance to Mr. Post himself, the class in dramatic art was made up of learning the secrets of make-up as employed by leitimate actors.
Demonstrated THE ART Both Mr. Pryng and Miss Grassier brought in "Owen the Wren" to work with them costumes worn by them in "Owen the Wren" illustrated the art of transformation. For many members of the class it was the first opportunity to meet real actors, and become acquainted with the means they employed in their art. After they had explained the make-up of the characters in the play Mr. Pryng and Miss Grassier talked with members of the senior play and advised them to the make-up for the different characters of "Coping the Grapes."
"Each character must be well studied in order to convey the correct impression," said Mr. Pryng. "An actor must study the costumes of the people of the day that he is portraying, as well as social conditions and historical situation to the character. And then each actor has to study his own face in order to know how to make-up. Each actor's face presents a different facial expression method of make-up employed by one actor would not do at all for the next."
IT'S UNCLE JIMMY'S DA'
Laws Will Celebrate With Banquet At Eldridge House Tonight
Subjects for the speakers at the Law school banquet tonight at the Eldridge hotel in honor of "Uncle Jimmy" were announced this after noon by Edward Boddington, manager of the affair.
the banquet will start at 8 o'clock with Fred F. Whitten acting as toastmaster. Chancellor Frank Strong first on "The Part and the Whole."
"The Law School and the State," will be the subject of Senator James A. Troutman's speech. Judge Henry F. Mason of the Kansas Supreme Court will present his System, and Dr. William L. Burdick will speak on "The Inaccessible Goal."
The three student speakers representing the different classes will be John DeVine, who will speak on "Senator Lore," Alton Gumbiner of the "middlers" who will speak on "As It May Have Been." Francis Gray of the juniors has chosen "Stop, Look and Listen," for his subject.
Dean Green will be the last speaker. No subject has been assigned to him, although it is expected he will answer some of the praise heaped on the guest of honor on the eve of his seventy-fourth birthday.
"Practice for 'Coping the Grapes' is coming along fine," said Alton Gumbiner this morning. "The men and women have nearly all learned to really getting along better than any home talent company I have seen."
One hundred and fifteen Laws will enjoy tonight's affair which is the most glamorous event of the season.
COPPING THE GRAPES
DATE MOVED TO MAY 2
The date of production has been changed from May 19 to May 26 because of a big road show that will be in Lawrence on the former date.
"But," said Mr. Gumbiner, "I, for one, am rather glad of this change of date. It will allow for the construction of some special scenery which we are planning, and will also give the cast another week for rehearsal."
A. R. Lamb, Law '09, football '08-09, was in Lawrence Sunday visiting friends. He is practicing law in Coffeyville.
Send the Daily Kansan nome to the folks.
Hash House League meeting,
Daily Kanson office tonight,
7:30. All teams send representa-
tions for the competitions for
several more new teams.
Plain Tales from the Hill
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Many old grads have come back to the Hill telling their undergraduate students when college dances were given, or they harness Shop or in other obscure places.
In a decade or so the students of today can come back and recall the nights when they "tuck the lumber with kathers" in the Praterial Ai Hall.
The last dance has been given at the Fraternal Aid and carpenters are tearing up the old dance floor and remodeling the room for office suites.
As he was going home from his supper the other evening, Tom Walz, '19 College, accidently dropped a dime and two pennies out of his pocket. It was quite dark so he did not try to get it back; he resolved to get up early the next morning to them. He awoke early the following morning and looked out of his window to the spot where he had dropped the coins. But to use his own words "Two negro women were stooping over and onto the spot." Walz gave one sickly groan and lay back in his bed resolved to sleep until morning.
Sigma Nu announces the pledging of John Osborne, junior Pharmic.
A gym class went out the other afternoon for a two mile cross country. Most of the men were recruits lately added through an effective method of Dean Templin's. The first quarter was dashed off at a good pace and was finished with a pile. Most of the squad were on the wagon of turning back when a wagon was sighted a few rods ahead. The farmer gladly loaded them in and the mules jogged on. The farmer's pipe was passed around and a few songs inhaled in as the tracksters rode along the course, while the bunch sprumbled up to the gym the instructor complimented them upon their good "time."
The new Summer Session catalogs for 1916, have made their appearance. They are at the Registrar George O. Foster's and Dean F. J. Kelly's office.
Between band concerts, practices, and special occasions such as football rallies, games, track meets, and parades, Director J. C. McCandles may be seen riding his little boy around on a bicycle.
Funston reports two aerial planes lost in Mexico, two in the repair shop, two with the army, and one on the border. The plane developed the traditional nine lives?
Prof. F. C. Dockerer will teach the classes in general psychology this week in the place of Prof. R. M. Ogden who is out of town.
Hubert Cox feels that there is foundation for his claim of being the luckiest freshman on the Hill for one week. He has just received three large-size boxes of cake, candy, and chicken as birthday gifts. "The follows in the story we have eaten it all up," he said, "so it's no use for any one to come around."
Miss Marie Davis, district president of Kappa Alpha Theta, will be the guest of the Kansas chapter during the coming week. Several social functions are being planned in her honor.
Marion Joseph, '18 College, went to Kansas City Wednesday to see her brother Donald Joseph, '15 College, who came up from his home in Whitewater, to attend to some business in Kansas City.
Professors C. A. Haskins, C. C.
Young, and J. E. Welker spent Thursday
and Friday in Fredonia testing
the soil to determine if the pearl
really recently located by the city.
Jo D. Berwick, former cheerleader
at the University, spent Thursday
in Lawrence friends. Mr. Berwick
is now in the employ of the Santa Fe
At Topeka.
Hubert Cox and Ira Sturtevant both '19 College, discovered unexpectedly one day last week that a relationship existed between them, unknown to either previously. The fact came out when both claimed the same university in a dinner-table discussion at the Ellison club at 1131 Tennessee.
W. H. Twonhoefl, professor of geology, has a class that automatically runs itself when he is away on trips over the state. Sherwin F.-Kelly, 17 Engineer, takes charge of the class at those times and does all the work of a professional—all except giving quizzes.
The Oread High School debating team composed of Ewing Stum, Lawrence Lamb and Louis O. Fink, which recently won a unanimous decision over Lawrence high school on the question, "Resolved, that the United States Should increase her armenment," have challenged Leavenworth, Hutchinson, Manhattan, and Ottawa High Schools to a debate on the above question. Oread will debate on either side of the question.
Send the Daily Kansan home.
IT'S A MANLESS SHOW
K. U. Beauties Will Have No Matinee Idol in Passing Show
ONE PERFORMANCE TODAY
Pi Phi Orchestra, and Kitty Kutt Ups on Deck
'It's to be a pippin. Come and see the unusual feat of a show, staged, produced, and managed entirely by women—not a man in it! Come, See, Convicted that it is the best thing that has been attempted this year.
E everybody's going to "The K. U"
Binson gymnastium. April 4th at Robinson
Gymnastium.
1. "Monstere Parmenteruki and his work, famous Cuisinehip hairy women," Cuisinephilip "The Toy Shop" Featuring Itasca Hislman as the wax doll. "Chi Omega 3. "Kitty Kutt Ups," Kappa Alpha Theta Part I "The Synchro Skin Hall, Katherine Kaiser, Ida Perry, Vimma Brethreaton, Helen Robinson, Emma Mae Rummel.
The program follows;
Part II. "The Futurist Fantasy"
4. H-"The Einsteinian Fiction Panic Tour."
5. "Bernard's Hardcover Toon."
5. Sextette From Africa ... Ada Dykes
Kappa Kappa Gamma
Julius. Ruth Foster
Cleopatra. Helen Clark
Mark Antoy. Morton
"Madam Flipjant Fodit"
Westminster Hall
Lindsie Blackman, Fabel MacNaughton,
Lucille Calvert, Margaret Jaffred
Siever, Edith Banks, Lenore Maughan,
Edhin Phenice, Margaret Young.
Marie Lowe, Barbara W.
8. Whirlwind Chorus;
8. Whirlwind Chorus;
“When the Right Girl Comes Along”
Marie Buchanan and Chorus
“In Time of War, Prepare for Peace”
Margaret Davis and Chorus
Two of a Kind
Marie Buchanan, Jane Parmenter
“The Girl on the Magazine Cover,
Marie Buchanan and Chorus
“Seaddick-Moech.”
Jane Parmenter, Mary
Chorus; Grace Windsor, Margaret Fitch, Josephine Martin, Lois Murhey, Margaret Davis, Victoria Burrow, Josephine Gillett, Dorothy Miller, Mildred Light, Dorothy Button, Josephine Lamborn.
Tickets on sale at Fraser check all day every Tuesday. Twenty-five cents checks are valid.
"WHISTLE IS ACCURATE"
"The whistle does not vary," said Charles Griffith, chief engineer of the power plant, "a clock regulates the whistle and by keeping the time with it you can find that the mechanism is never off time enough to make it noticeable.
Electric Clock That Measures
Hours Varies but Little
"We have nothing to do with the setting of the clock. This is left to the mechanical engineers in the department and when the clock is found to be working, which is very seldom, either Protégé or one of the engineers from his office some that the mechanism is corrected. The clock is very accurate I find and only possible difficulty comes in the hinging of the brass pegs that complete the circuit. The charge that the cable could be off as much as five minutes before it happens, the pegs are off that much they will blow at all. Either the whistle blows accurately with the clock or it doesn't blow at all and it usually blows."
H. V. Cadwell, who was custodian of the chemical stores last year, was back on the hill Monday morning. Mr. Cadwell is now in Kansas in the inpatient Company, for whom he has been traveling since leaving the University.
Mrs. G. H. Ballentine of Kansas City has taken the place of Mrs. J. E. Forseer as chaperon at the Alpha Delta Pi house. Mrs. Forseer was forced to give up her position because of ill health.
The weather Rainy tonight and probably Wednesday. Not much change in temperature.
MORNING PRAYERS
Leader—Rev. N. S. Elderkin.
Week April 3-7
Leader—Rev. N. S. Elderkin.
Subjects (Nothing about the war);
Wednesday: "And Behold, Four Horns." Zach. I. 18.
Thursday: "When His Eyes Were Opened He Saw Nothing." Acts, IX,
Friday: "Simon Peter Saito Unto Them, 'I go a fishing.'" John XXI, 3.
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Official student paper of the University of Kansas
EDITORIAL STAFF
Miles S. Sturtevant...Editor-in-Chief
Chases W. Vaughn...Associate Editor
Raymond A. Fagan...News Editor
Raymond Clapper...Assistant
BUSINESS STAFF
William Cady...Business Manager
Michael Merritt...Manager
Chloe D Whitesside...Circulation Agent
DEPOTTODIAL STATE
Paul Brindel Guy Scrivener
Don Davis Cargil Sproull
Ralph Ellis Charles Sweet
John Gleiss Glenn Swoger
Morgan Bogan
Subscription price $3.00 per year in advance; one term, $1.75.
Entered as second-class mail mat-
tained by the US District of Cayman,
office of lawsuits, Kansas, under the
U.S. Copyright Act.
Published in the afternoon five
versaries from Kansas from the press of
varsity. Samhai from the press of
varsity.
Address a. communications to
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Lawrence, Kansas.
Phone, Bell K. U. 25.
The Daily Kansan aims to picture the undergraduate life of the student than ever before; printing the student's University holds; to play no favorites; to be clean; to be cheerful; to be courteous; to leave more serious problems to wiser heads, in all, to help students who enjoy the students of the University.
THE LION AND THE FOX
TUESDAY, APRIL 4, 1916
A Lion, growing old, was unable to coexist with animals, and so intended to live by crowding them. He lay down there, and pretended that he had seen his dragon, and he ate up those that went into den. The Fox guessed the trick. She stood at the entrance of the den, and
"Well, Lion, how are you feeling?"
The Lion answered:
"Poorly. Why don't you come in?"
The Fox replied:
I said reutilize.
"I do want to in because I see by the tracks that many have entered, but none have come out."—Leo Tolstoi.—Aesop.
THE SENIOR MEMORIAL
The senior memorial is creating spirited discussion—both favorable and otherwise. Each class, as it is graduated is ambitious to leave a better memorial than the class preceding it.
The question of what to leave to the University, is becoming constantly more and more difficult. The campus needs beautifying, but it does not need the cluttering bird wallows, the concrete seats, and other senseless campus "beautifiers" that have been suggested.
Visitors coming to the campus remark of the natural typography of the land, the famous view of the Wakarusa valley, or the feeling of exuberance due to the climb up the Hill. But how many of them ever remark on the beauty of any campus memorial?
The student loan fund, started by the class of 94 is doing some really constructive good. It helps deserving young men and women of Kansas through school every year. The money given by this class 22 years ago, although but $342.30, has been added to until now the committee has at its disposal a fund of $1,900.
Should each class, as it leaves the University, turn over its memorial fund, whatever the amount, to the student loan fund, the growth of the University would be materially aided. Many students are unable to continue their studies because of a financial shortage. The committee in charge of the loan fund reports but $16.42 on hand at present. The rest is in use by the students of the University of Kansas.
Think of the inestimable good that might result should the present class break away and establish a new precedent.
The $1000 at the disposal of the loan fund committee is helping a number of students, but how many more might be given assistance were the fund doubled, tripled, quadrupled.
HEALTH INSURANCE—USE IT "A stitch in time saves nine" run an old adage.
A visit to the doctor today may keep the sickness away. The University doctors now have regular clinic hours at the University hospital, where they may be consulted.
Prevention is better than a cure. They will be glad to give any student their attention should he show the least signs of illness.
They were sitting down stairs in the fraternity house, talking noisily and boisterously as men often will. The 'phone rang. One of the men sauntered over to answer it.
THE LITTLE THINGS
"DELTA KAP 'OUSE,' he bawled griffely into the mouthpiece.
"Oh, I beg pardon," he continued, modulating his voice to tone it down to the proper point of musical softness. "I really didn't know it was you, you know, when I first answered." It's the little things that count.
PRESCRIPTION FOR ENNUI
Take six heaping-full hours of day,
and from two to twenty people. Add
as many lunch baskets as possible.
Allow this mixture to bake until
thoroughly brown on some country hill
side. Take one dose a week until sys-
tem is completely rid of spring enniu.
Sassafras tea, the nearest rival of
this wonderful panacea, can be sipped
by the gallon, without a single sien-
sation that compares with a good hike
to the country. Let's hike before we
forget that rare flavor of bacon fried
on a rock.
WANTED—LIMERICKS
Are you a poet? Did you ever try to be?
The Kansan wants limericks. It wants you to write 'em. A limerick is a five line verse, rhyming—but everybody knows what a limerick is, or can learn from the dictionary.
It's easy. It may be on any topic you wish—General Funston, the Mexican War, spring, campusology, "dates," hikes, study, loafing, or even on the faculty. Do not make your verse too personal or caustic.
The Kansan will print those it has room for, in the third column of the editorial page. They may be dropped in 'the Kansan box in Fraser.
Bring on the limericks.
Here is a sample:
A beau of the town's social whirl
Was courting a neighboring girl.
But her na. argued-ve.
But her pa, argus-eyed. This swain quickly spied,
And the bull dog spat pants by the barr'.
So cocky a freshman was that He boldly neglected his hat,
Said he "There's no need this injunction to heed." But the paddles came rat-a-tat-tat.
Jayhawk Squawks
The U. S. soldiers in Mexico will soon have a revolution apiece, won't they?
Jessie: "I guess Charley's learning to swim."
Tessie: "Indeed?"
Jessie: "Yes. I saw him coming out of a bank yesterday and he said that they were getting married."
Last week "dress up" week began. And a glance at the length of the ladies' skirts convinces us that advertising pays.
The Y. M. C. A. is planning a whirlwind campaign to raise $800. Personally, financial conditions are so personal that doubt could arrest anything but our hair.
From the few statistics that have come in, we gather that Mexico is about as harmonious as our morning chapel quartet.
An A. B. education usually enables a man to nod just as intelligently when classics are mentioned as if he had read them himself.
In the "Student Option" column, "Senior" complains that the glee club is always practicing but not ever playing. This is actually actuated by humanitarian motives.
Even if it weren't for Pike's Peak we should remember Zebulon Pike for his first name.
Mr. U. B. Wear, the local constable, says that since the girls brought out their spring hair boots, he can't sleep in the morning.
The usual rule is to swear first and then look to see if there are any ladies within hearing.
Once upon a time there was a ragtime song whose words were almost absent.
"We're dissatisfied with conditions in Mexico. We've been trying for two years, and haven't been able to make a pun out of Villa's name" (signed) United Parygrafers of America.
Bob Lindsay wishes it to be clearly understood that dates for girls at his date agency are not free, as advertised, but cost ten cents.
-G. S
Alfred Tennyson was born at Lincollshire, England, in 1809. Tennyson was the poet laureate of England from 1850 until his death in 1892. He has been given a place in Westminster abbey.
On thy cold gray stones, O see! Alas, I have been laid utter "the thoughts that arise in me.
POET'S CORNER
He is now a boy.
That he shouts with his sister at
O, well for the sailor lil' boy.
BREAK, BREAK, BREAK
i. breakfast
ii. breakfast
FOUND IN A BOOK
"Women, sister—there are some things which you do not execute as well as your brother, man; no, nor never will. Pardon me, if I doubt whether you will ever produce a great poet from your choirs, or a Mozart, or a Phiasides, or a Michael Angelo, or a great philosopher, or a great scholar. By the last is meant—not one who depends simply on an infinite memory, but also on an infinity and electrical power of combination, bringing to blinding the four winds, like the angel of the red direction, what else were dust from dead men's bones, into unity of breathing life. If you can create yourselves into any of these great creatures, why have you not?" by Thomas DeQinency in his "Joan of Arc."
O. well for the sailor had
that he singing in his boat on the bay;
O, well for the fisherman's boy.
That, an chefsie, with kis.
A Corner for the Library Browser
To the haven under the hill;
But O, for the touch of a
But O, for the touch of a vanished
And the sound of a voice that is still
"When I think of these things, I want to see America with the best coast defense in the world, with the best army and navy. It need not be the largest army, but it should be the best of all colleges and high school, the drilling of boys and young men, so that if war comes we will be ready."
Irvin S. Cobb, who recently returned from the European battle fields, where he acted as a correspondent, believes in military training for college men. He says:
The following, clipped from the Daily Illini at the University of Illinois, must be about K. U.'s new assistant coach. Here it is:
Will never come back to me.
—Alfred Tennyson.
Poty Clark will help coach the Kansas team that will battle the Illinois eleven in the first game next fall. Although he has not yet signed a contract, he has already said yesterday that he had accepted the position of assistant coach for the four major sports at that University for next year. He may be head coach in baseball. Posey does not in-vestigate coaching a permanent occupation.
THEY CALL HIM "POTSY"
Break, break, break,
At the foot of thy crags, O, sea;
Beat, beat, beat
crang, O, sea)
it the tender grape
that it dead
were come back to me.
Potsy Goes to K. U.
The Co-ed in the modern college is comparatively recent in origin. Mrs. Cape, of New York, tells of her first experience as the only woman to answer the call of the President of Columbia University, for women to enter the college. The New York Times tells of her experiences, part of which follows:
In 1883 President Barnard of Columbia issued a call to the women of New York and vicinity to show their interest in the higher education of woman as offered by him in a course at the university. Emily Palmer, much against the wishes of her family, only girl from the city to respond to the demand that she her there were two other women who evinced an interest in the work
THE FIRST CO-ED
"The two other girls" fathers were college graduates, and procured tutors for them, but I had lost my love of them. As a result, as my people were not interested in my work it was necessary for me to prepare alone. In fact, the greater part of the studying was done at home with neither encouragement or outside help.
"Never shall I forget," began Mrs. Cape, "the day that I first walked through the gate of Columbia at Madison Avenue and Forty-ninth Street—a shy girl longing for a real education. Large groups of boys were lined up for me to pass through, for the newspapers had told them I would eels might be expected. I found Dr. Reagan my enthusiasm for study that I soon forgot my shyness and was telling him how little I knew, how I was hungry to find answers to the many questions I had already found in life. He seemed to think I had a good deal to prepare in the way of entrance examinations in the fall, but was so worried about responding to his call that he not only managed me but suggested methods which might help me in my difficulties.
COLLEGE MILITARISM
Hartley
Copyright Hart Schaffner & Marx
YOUNG men know perfectly well that every clothing store wants their trade; we do.
The reason is, if a man's young he's particular about his clothes, for style, for looks; appearances help young men. And if a man isn't young he likes to dress that way; he watches where the young fellows go; and goes there.
There's only one way we know of to get the young men's clothing business; that is, to have the style they like.
Hart Schaffner & Marx
know what they are; and we've got the goods here to prove it. ,
Suits $18 and up.
Overcoats $15.00 and up.
The home of Hart Shaffner & Marx clothes.
PECKHAM'S
From Other Campuses
Every available place on the campus is being used by the fraternities and hash-houses to get in shape for hosting of the baseball leagues next month.
Marie Buchanan, '18 College, is a busy young woman these days. In addition to having one of the leading parts in the K. U. Passing Show, Tuesday night, April 4 in the gym, Miss Buchanan is buckoning the ticket sale and handling the newspaper publicity for the stunt.
John M. Henry, editor of the 1914-15 Kansas, was a visitor on the Hill Friday. Henry stopped off in Lawrence while returning from a trip to Oklahoma where he went to investigate buying a paper in the oil district.
Crew men at Yale are much worried because ice in the Thames at New Haven has hindered their workouts. With their annual race with Pennsylvania less than a month off, the Yale crew has been on the water but once.
Owing to the fact that Easter comes late this year, students at Baker University voted to have their Saturday classes instead of at the usual time.
Two former Yale men, F. R. Riggs and G. M. Porter, are the co-authors of "See America First," a musical now playing in a New York theater.
Nebraska's new coach, Dr. E. Stewart, arrived in Lincoln Monday to look over the prospects for a success. He said he'd get acquainted with his new location.
Tubbing for discipline and tubbing for hazing are one and the same thing, according to the Student Council of Leland Stanford University, and in the future both will be treated as midemenors. The aquatic reprimand must cease to be the favorite fraternity disciplinary measure.
Book Store
CLASSIFIED
KEELER'S BOOK STORE, 329 Mass.
STEKers for writers or sale or rent,
Buch aun. School Supplies.
Paper by the sound of a whistle,
10c. Pictures and Picture framings.
ED. W. PARSONS, Engraver, Watch
jewelry. Phone 717. 717. Mass
jewelry. Phone 717. 717. Mass
MUSS ESTELLA, NORTHRUP, china
MUSS ESTELLA, NORTHRUP, china
carefully handled. 75.8 Mile. Phone
carefully handled. 75.8 Mile. Phone
Shoe Shop
SHOP and I
K. U. SHOE SHOP and Pantatorium is best place for best results 1428 MA
Plumbers
PHONE KENNEDY PLUMBING CO. 927-
Massa Phones Mazda Lamps. 927-
Massa Phones Mazda Lamps.
B. H. DALE, Artistic Job Printing
Both phones 228, 1027 Maaa
FORNEY SHOP SHOP 1017 Mass. St.
Don't make a mistake. All work
with you.
Dressmaking
MRS M. A. MORGAN 1831 Tannesses
tajoring. Fruits. Very reasonable
tajoring. Fruits. Very reasonable
PROFESSIONAL CARDS
DR. H. L. CHAMBERS. Office over Squires' studio. Both phones.
WANTED - Student washings. Excellent work and reasonable prices. Phone 2178J. 1237 New Jersey. Mrs. Mary Walls. 125-3*
HARRY BEDING, M. D. Eye, ear,
face, face, face, U. Bldg. Phones, Bell 613
face, U. Bldg. Phones, Bell 613
DR. H. W. HUTCHINSON, Dentist 201
Binsk Bldg, Lawrence, Kansas.
Send the Daily Kansan home.
A. C. WILSON, Attorney at law, 740
Mass. St. Lawrence, Kansas.
C. E. ONSLUP, M. D. Dick Bldge, Eva
Bloch, G. D. McClain, Michael,
guaranteed. Successor to
the original guarantee.
G, W JONES, A, M, M, D. D. Pleasen
golgi, cytoskeleton, *Phiona*
Nest, *Phiona* Phiona
J. R. BECKETT, M. D. D. 833 Maa
Phone, phone office and residence.
LOST—On the campus Tuesday, a small gold brooch with a boroque pearl in the center. Reward for return to post office in Fraser. 125-3*
Engraved and Printed Cards
WANT ADS
THESIS BINDING
IOST - Waterman fountain pen near
under please return to Kansan office.
A. G. ALRICH
Typewriter Paper 744 Mass. St.
PROTSCH
The College Tailor
Watkins National Bank
Surplus and Profits 110,000
The Student Depository
Conklin Fountain Pens
Non-Loackable and Soft-Pilling
Non-Leakable and Self-Filling
Sold in Lawrence at.
F. B. McColloch's Drug Store 847 Mass. St.
See Griffin Coal Company for Fuel.
A.
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
THEATRE VARSITY TONIGHT ONLY "THE BALLET GIRL" Featuring ALICE BRADY and Holbrook Blinn Wed.—Bessie Barriscale in "Honor's Daughter"
Arrow Shirts-guaranteed fast color Sold exclusively by Johnson & Carl
Tailored Suits or fancy gowns depend upon not-ness as much as style for their successful appearance. TRYOUR cleaning and pressing
ASK FOR and GET
LAWRENCE PANTATORIUM
Tel. 569 Bell 12. W. Warren
HORLICK'S
THE ORIGINAL
MALTED MILK
Cheap substitutes cost YOU same price.
SHUBERT NEXT WEEK
BEGINNING SUN.
$1 Mat. Wed. and Sat. Night, 25c to $1.50
JEFFERSON
DE ANGELIS
IN "SOME BABY"
CIGARETTE WAR STARTS
Prof. McKeever Wants One Hun dred in Anti League
TRY TO STOP SMOKING
Prof. W. A. McKeever, head of the department of child welfare in the extension division of the University, outspoken critic of the U. Anti-Cigarette League, in his lecture Monday evening, in Fraser Hall. As it was the first meeting of its kind the attendance was small, but enough to encourage the league to make over fifty in all.
FIRST OF ITS KIND
The object of the league is to discourage smoking in the student body; in private as well as public; and further to pledge support to the finer principles advanced by the State Welfare Board of Kansas.
This is the first organization of its kind in the country, and it is hoped by members of the league that it will become a state and nation wide movement. The league hopes to gain enough supporters, by efficient advertising, and by increasing cigarettes, to do away with the use of tobacco altogether on the Hill.
MCKEEMER IS A SPECIALIST
Professor McKeener is a specialist on tobacco and its effects, the facts about the effect of tobacco on minors. He also told of the combined interests of the liquor and tobacco trusts, and their efficient methods of advertising. He said that in his study, he hundred young women of the University to help in this crusade against cigarettes for he believes that the pleas of young women will be heeded sooner by the smokers, than those of the members of the Anti-Cigarette League.
Dr. D. Leigh Colvin, the presider of the Intercollegiate Prohibition Association, will visit the local branze Saturday and Sunday. Dr. Colvin i the author of the *National Pride* Book, New York Lehigh University and is a specialist on the economic governmental and political phases o the liquor traffic. On Saturday after noon he will hold a series of inter views with any students who desire t him to attend, wishing to meet him can arrange for an interview by calling Hugo Wedel.
PROHIBITIONIST WILL MEET K. U. STUDENTS
Story of French Orphans
The story of the sufferings of French orphans of the war will be told Friday, April 7 by Mrs. Oliver H. Martin, of Kansas City, at the home of Mrs. A. D. Weaver, 137 Indiana Street, Chicago, under the auspices of the Association of Collegiate Alumnae. She will endeavor to arouse interest in charity for the French children whose fathers have been killed in the war. The are more than daily invited to hear hear. She will speak at three o'clock.
The Mid-Western Publishing Company has decided to enhance their sale organization at Lawrence. If you want summer employment, see me at Ohio State or Ohio River and expenses paid the right party. E. C. Babbt—Adv 128-5
WHO IS LAWS' PAPA?
Strikers Call Senate "Artificia Feather Heads" Fit to Boss College Only
The Senate is an Artificial Feather
Helded Body fit to rule the College
Only when the Senate meets.
The Laws, when asked whether they were going to take a holiday toorrow, replied that it was a settled fact, and further that no proper authority had yet denied them the privilege.
They will not report for classes to tomorrow, they say, and there will be only Kaw water to drink at the banquet tonight. Tomorrow, Uncle Jimmy is going to Topeka, Professor Humble to the city, and Professor Burdick to see his wife and so of course they all will be in on it.
When questioned, what would be the outcome of it, they replied, "What can be done? We are entitled to so much power." Cut tomorrow, whose business is it? "I cut tomorrow,"
TABBY TO CUT EXPENSES
She May Solve the High Cost of Lighting Problem
Now that Dr. S. A. Matthews of the School of Medicine has offered a market for the stray tabbies and tomines of Lawrence there is a rumor that there is to be competition in this 'jeld.
Story has it that a mechanical genius in one of the western towns of the state has a plan to generate cheap electricity for his burge. Elaborate plans are being worked out whereby a large number of cats are to be chased through and through a long circular tunnel just high enough for the cats to get through. A mouse is first given a good satir; and pussy is first given a good rubbery rubbing on the glass of the tunnel will generate electricity for the town.
It is said that elaborate catteries are being built for the housing of the cats which are to be made to work in relays so as to have continuous power. The problem of supplying food for them and proper medical attention is also included in the plans. It is said that engineers over the country are watching this plan closely but that the usefulness of its success for the kind of "juice" that fur and glass will not flow along wires, at all, being of the static variety. However, it is not well to condemn a scheme before it has been tried.
MANY VISITORS CAME FOR ENGINEERS DAY
Among the out-of-town visitors who participated in the festivities of Chemical Engineers' Day last Friday were:
C. A. Wright, metallurgist in the State Bureau of Mines at Tunbridge, N.J.
Dr. Roy Cross, consulting chemical engineer of Kansas City, Mo.
H. E. Bonnette, head chemist of the H. E. Railway, Heat, Light and Power
Benjamin Brooks, engineer of the International Business Product Bureau of the International City, MI.
L. S. Bushnell, chief chemist of Ar-
mour Packing Co. at Kansas City, Ca
B. W. Smith of the United States
Boyd, N. A. Animal Industry, Kansas
City, Kan.
T. F. Gustafson of the Manua
Training high school in Kansas City Mo.
NORTH SIDERS HELPED
Prof. O. S. Groner of Ottawa University.
Prof. R. H. Needham of K. S. A.
C.
R. W. Titus of the Emporia high school.
E. H. Burth of the Prime Western Speller Co. of Iola, Kansas.
Samuel Adler.
Extension Division Co-operates With Social Workers to Extend Improvements
When students attending the University of Missouri has accepted a automatically make themselves members of the local students' Benedict Colony. North Carolina now has eight married students in this colony.
The next time the Missouri-Kansas game is held in Columbia, the out-of-town people will have the privilege of staying at a new hotel. Subscription amounting to more than $20,000 have the privilege of attending the Club, and this practically assures the project. The hotel is to be called the Daniel Boone Tavern.
A large night school and band concerts for North Lawrence were discussed at a meeting of the Social Service League recently in the city hall. The meeting was a joint session of the League and the North Lawrence Improvement Association, in which he "north siders" set forth a new media model that included the means which they thought would most effectively and cheaply supply these needs. Plans for a recreation hall under city supervision, public playgrounds and musical entertainment were also discussed.
While the movement is primarily for and by the "north siders" several University men are vitally interested in the plan for the social improvement of the north side. Among those who are are lending encouragement to the scheme are Prof. Homer Talbot and Prof. W. A. McKeever of the Extension Division of the University, a department of sociology. Several of the students in the University have also availed themselves of this opportunity to assist in helping these people to help themselves.
MANY WANT NIGHT SCHOOL
Some very interesting facts were brought to the classes, the chief being that pupils who went as far as the eighth grade in school were the ones most eager for the night school. In the lower grades the interest was less keen, and after the boys and girls had passed the eighth grade and gone to work for a year or two the interest was almost totally extinct. Another fact disfavors pupils in one class which finished the sixth grade of Woodawn, only two reached high school.
Interest Shown At Recent Conference Indicates Large Supply of Jobs
TEACHERS IN DEMAND
An unusually large demand for high school teachers was shown by the superintendents and principals who attended the school men's conference here the week of March 17. The conference between prospective teachers and superintendents far exceeded in number and interest any that had been held at any previous convention.
An effort is being made by the faculty of the School of Education to interest the school boards of the state in the conferences offered here with prospective teachers. In this school was partly interested in this year. A Kunlun school boards were represented by one or more members at the conference and one man, who was confronted with the task of hiring an entire new faculty, worked in the office of Pref. W. H. Johnson all day meeting seniors and graduate students who intend to teach next year.
Friday evening he was asked
"What progress did you make in fill
inning?"
"My talks with the students have been very satisfactory," he replied, "and I have obtained enough data today that our school board will have no trouble in selecting teachers for next year."
Professor Johnson expects a large attendance of members of school boards at the annual conference next year as the advantage of seeing the work there and talking over the work with them is rapidly dawning upon them.
Practically all of the 175 students who are planning to teach next winter will be cared for in Kansas. The demand has been quite large and although nothing will be known until after the school elections in April, it will probably only home of the teachers will have to go outside if the state for positions.
If any Lawrence man aspiries to be a detective, he need not lack something to detect. First there is the molasses episode at the Engineers' dance; then there is the mysterious building in one of the school buildings in which nothing but seventy-five keys to lockers was taken. Several students are known to favor additions to the above list of possibilities of acting the Lawrence P.O. office. Then so can be plenty of work for local sherlock Holmes.
A few calls for teachers have been received from neighboring states and a few requests have come from western states. One application for a teacher has been filed at Professor Johnson's office asking for a man capable to coach athletes in a team. Another request asks for a other request calls for a man to teach athletics and mathematics or a science.
Miss Alice Nieman, who is attending the Agricultural College at Manhattan, came down for the Alemannia night as the guest of Marion Joseph.
JAYHAWKER GOES TO
PRESS; ON SALE MAY
All of the copy for this year's Jay-hawker is now in the hands of the printer and the annual will be placed on sale in Lawrence Tuesday, May 2, without fall. K. U. has the word of honor as the bark for this so it must be so. Buseenbark realized that such a promise usually means about May 28, but this time it means May 2, he says, even if he has to go to Kansas City where the Jayhawker is being published and the newspaper is in a freight car with the annals.
The copy was turned over to the Union Bank Note Company in Kansas City Saturday morning. Of the twelve university annuals which he had received, the first was the first to have its copy in. This was not an accident according to Busenbark, for it was sent in early so that the publishers would put their books into the K. U. book beeper and rush of annual copy took place.
There will be 1,000 Jayhawkers printed but only 200 will be on sale when the annual comes out as 800 of them have already been sold.
ENGLISH COSTS LITTLE
Teaching Our Own Speech Ranks Lowest of All Courses for Upkeep
The cost of teaching college English is less than that of teaching any of the sciences according to the data collected by the committee on the cost and labor of teaching English, of Prof. E. M. Hopkins is the chairman.
The committee is making a survey of the cost of teaching English in colleges, secondary schools, and elementary schools for the Modern Language Association of America, and the National Council of Teachers of English. The report on the cost in secondary schools was finished in 1982. The data on colleges has been received and the report of the elementary schools will not be finished for over a year.
Twelve colleges from which data was earlier received, show an average cost of $1.53 per student each year in comparison with mathematics $2.45, history $2.15, Latin $2.94, German $1.75, physics $2.58, botany $5.37 and chemistry $2.88. Although this report is incomplete, Professor Hopkins is sure that later data will not be so misleading. He gives the average number of students in the classes in English as over one hundred to each teacher. In the secondary schools relatively the same conditions were found.
The purpose of the Survey is to bring out clearly the present condition in the teaching of English so that some move may be taken to standardize the method of teaching, improve the school budget. The final report on the survey of colleges will be printed soon.
WANT STUDENTS TO TR
Training Camp Association Desires College Men
An unusual way for University men to spend a portion of their summer vacation is suggested by the Military Training Camps Association of the United States in a circular received by the editor of the Du Kansai Magazine, the circular issued by an admissible on the "Relation of Education to Preparedness" by Henry S. Drinker, president of Lehigh University.
This association will maintain five camps in various sections of the country, the chief one, being at Plattsburg on Lake Champlain and the second to foster patriotic spirit and spread among the citizens of the country some knowledge of military history, military policy, and military needs, and to instill the habits of obedience, discipline, courage, and sacrifice. The camps supply five weeks' outing, with drill, cavalry exercises, field maneuvers, field surveying and field work. During this time one can gain a clear insight into military matters. In addition to training, time is provided for recreation and rest.
Photographs Message
Last week L. E. Whittemore of the department of physics succeeded in taking the picture of a wireless sent aircraft maneuvering in the Gulf of Mexico.
The instrument used in making the negative is an Einthoven Galvonometer belonging to the department of Physiology and is generally used in recording and studying the pulsation of the heart. By focusing the instrument on a needle attached to the receiver at the wireless station a reproducer is placed across the film, which when developed and printed may be easily deciphered by any student of the Morse code.
One hundred and twenty students of the senior class at Yale have earned their way through college, either entirely or in part.
WILL DISTRIBUTE 5,000
TREATISES ON COFFEE
Dean Sayre of the School of Pharmacy now has on press at the state printery at Topeka a treatise of coffee which he will distribute through the Extension department. The paper outlines the work that has been done in investigating the coffees of the world in all times, and both at European and Eastern universities as well as here.
"The University of Kansas," says Dean Sayre, "has led the world in this investigation, and as the results are shown, it is a plente and comprehensive, than any yet obtained. The paper takes up the toxicity of the various coffees and investigates each one. About 5,000 copies of the paper will be distributed.
FOR RENT — Mrs. Davis, 1217 Tenn.
Phone 2007-42, south, electric
Phone 2007-43, 128-3
电话 2007-42, 南电
Ted Crump, a student in the department of mining engineering last year, was back on the campus Monday meeting old acquaintances. He expects to be back in the University next year.
Investigate the merits of tailor made clothing. It's cheaper in the long run. Schulz.-Adv.
Can you think of a better lighting or your room than a good interior in the Northeast?
L. S.Brightly
The University of Chicago
HOME in addition to resident
study is available by correspondence.
For detailed information
29th Year U. of C. (Oh.) Chicago, III.
Michelle Towne
Indestructo Trunks Bags and Suit Cases Sold Exclusively by Johnson & Carl
BANCA LONCE
"I'M SATISFIED"
"Whether it’s peace, politics, prohibition, or profit there’s nothing like keeping at it."
SAMUEL G. CLARK, 707 Mass.
Everybody doesn't agree with Billy Bryan—and I'm strictly "neutral," but everybody who ever bought a suit of clothes from me is strong for me. Better call today and see my new exclusive Spring and Summer collection, which you a suit of clothes that brings out your own individuality to advantage. Prices like you like to pay.
It's Not Too Late Even Now!
What if you did forget to have that suit pressed and cleaned last week. Never mind that—we are still here and
Owen Service
510 Bell or 454 Home
is popular as ever. Find out what you missed by not calling
Pressing tickets on sale at Rowlands' Book Store.
When you give your next
Party
Prices
call and let us figure on the flowers. That's what one fraternity did last week, and we got the order. Why can we give the best
service and quality? Because we raise practically all of our own flowers. We sell them to you direct, thus insuring freshness and cutting out the middleman's profit. Buy your flowers in retail quantities at wholesale prices.
Lawrence Floral Company
1447 Mass.
Bell 55.
Some beautiful Swinsonia in bloom now. 25c a dozen.
IF you were a ruler over millions of people, how would you rule?
You will find the answer in
"THE SOWERS"
an elaborate Jesse L. Lasky production with Blanche Sweet
Blanche Sweet
in the stellar role.
ALSO:—Henry B. Walthall and the wincome Edna Mayo in
episode No. 4 of
"THE STRANGE CASE OF MARY PAGE"
The Bowersock Theatre TONIGHT ONLY
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
RAIN THREATENS GAME
More Moisture May Prevent Opener With Ames To-morning
Rain which was a big contributing factor to last year's Missouri Valley Conference baseball championship won by Kansas, may play havoc with the opening of the 1916 season schedule. Aaron McCook Field with the Ames Agree
The surplus moisture during the past week has already caused considerable worry and inconvenience for it has put the McCook Field diamond in such poor playing condition that not until this afternoon will Coach McCarty's proteges be able to get a ball. This is one reason today the athletic association had a big roller working on the outfield and smoothing down the baselines so that the grounds will at least be in fair shape barring any more rain.
Season tickets for all of the ten home games will be sold at the gates tomorrow afternoon for two dollars making the price per game only twenty cents. Since standadd aid will cost the same from tomorrow all games will be fifty cents. Student enterprise tickets for grandstand are fifteen cents extra.
As far as the team is concerned everything is ready for the first battle with the Iowa Farmers. Red Craig, with his 1915 ever-victorious record, is slated to hurt the opening game with a backhand hit on the mound in the game Thursday.
The probable lineup:
"ce' proable inmeep:
Groft or Weber first base, Deaver
base, Wood short stop, Gibber
third base, Wandel center, Wandell
(Capt.) center field, Smec,
Travis, or W. Weltmter, left field, L.
Weltmter catcher, Craig, pitcher.
Y. M.-Y. W. PUTS ON PARTY
The largest and most satisfactory Spring Party ever put on by the Y M.-Y. W, was held in Robinson Gymnasium, Saturday night, April 1 Over 300 men and women enjoyed the program of eight numbers.
Impersonators of Stunts, Fare and Faculty Please Many
The receiving line had Homer Herriot as Chancellor Strong, Catherine Redding as Mrs. F. E. Brown; J. B. Dall portrayed Dean Blackhurk, an noun character. A. Raymond was Prof. Boynton. These impersonations at once did away with any spirit of formality. The guests were received on the second floor and the refreshments were in two groups on the lower floor.
After the Grand March a farce "Mrs. Oakley's Telephone" was presented by a cast of Y, W, C, A, girls. Bill Weber staged an original laughing stunt which kept everyone in the audience in an uproar. The Varsity number consisted of interesting Estes Park views in Colorado.
The price of chemicals is jumping out of sight and the advance is being seriously felt by the department of chemistry. Bromine has advanced 400 per cent in price, sodium hydroxyl at 400 per cent, mercury over 350 per cent.
This is the last of these informal socials to be given by the Y. M-Y W. this year. They are open to the student body. There will be socials given every month next year. Homer Herriot and Hazel Carson are the chairmen of the social committees of the two associations.
"There are several obvious ways of accounting for these enormous increases in the price of chemicals," he added. "His industry, 'The warring nations are using all of the available bromine in the manufacturing of gas bombs and many of the other chemicals are being extensively in making explosives."
CHEMISTRY DEPARTMENT
FEELS PINCH OF WAR
"The farmers of Kansas will feel the advance when they begin to combat the deadly potato-bug as Paris and New York are counting 12 cents is now selling for 42 cents."
An earthquake of minor importance occurred early Friday morning whose definite location could not be estimated from the readings of the University seismograph. The university was located by the Canadian station located at Victoria, Canada where it was estimated that the occurrence took place within a radius of 300 or 400 miles of Victoria. According to Professor Kester of the department of physics, it is probable that a disturbance placed on the west coast of Canada.
Earthquake in Canada
The primary wave occurred at 5:16:
13 and the main wave at 5:21:01.
The secondary wave could not be discerned. This disturbance is important in that it is the only one recorded during the month of March.
Swimming in Potter lake may begin any time now that the students are interested enough to go down, according to H. A. Lorenz. He was in the over two weeks ago and reported that the water was not too cold.
SECOND SENIOR WOMEN'S
SING ON GOLF LINKS
If rain doesn't scare them away, the senior women will meet Thursday evening at 6 o'clock on the golf links and incidentally include the men and incidents some supper as well.
After feasting on "wienies" and other foods, they will sing old and new KJV verses.
This is the second mixer held by the senior women, and to correspond with the smokers held by the men, they have called their meetings "sings." The former gatherings held about two weeks ago on the steps of Dyche Museum was the occasion for so much enthusiasm on the part of both singers and audience that the women are planning to "mix" often.
DID HE SEE TROUBLE?
Law Student Organized Com
many M Six Years
Ago
Six years ago there was no Company M of the Kansas National Guard. Then a Law student, named Warren Riley, then saw all the present agitation over preparedness and the part the universities of America would have to play, should war ever become a reality or not. That is now Company M of the K. N. G.
From the year 1910 to 1915, the average membership was thirty-three. Now the Company boasts fifty-six, including both officers and privates. The company is also as an efficient company. Every Tuesday night drills are held in the Robinson Gymnasium, under the command of Capt. F. E. Jones. In the summer the company goes to Fort Riley, where he plays in Kansas National Guard is in camp.
SUMMER CAMP BAY
Three teams each commanded by a colonel, three battalions in each regiment, under the command of a major, and four companies in each battalion—one of which is Company M under the command of Captain J. F. H. L. at the summer camp, where the K, N, Gs receive their military training.
SUMMER CAMP DIVISIONS
"As to Mexico—of course we have no plans now," said Captain Jones. "But if the National Guards are called and happen if the U. S. troops get into theaters, we will surely go, and I think the most of us will be glad to go."
K. U. AND LAWRENCE LIST
The following is the list of men of both K. U. and Lawrence, in Company M.: officer, Capt. Frank Jones; First Lieutenant, Edward M. Briggs; Second Lieutenant, Lester Sprinkle; First Stryker, John Bum; Quarter master, Chas. Egger; Sherwin Kiley, Frank Elmhore, H. A. Lorenz, Gail Smith; corporals: Virgil M. Auchard, Chas. E. H. Hart, Leon Decker, Jas. Grinstead, Grant B. Smith, Floyd Livinggood; musicians: Ewart Plank, Chas. Baker; cooks: Aaron Piensburg, Frank Stortz; artificer, David Webb; privates: Ralph Auchard, Milton Bakee, Green Nathaniel Brodie, James Bloom, Fordyce Coe, Hugh Cloninger, Francis Campbell, C. Drake, Frank Farley, Louis Smith, Ernest Groper, Verne Glens, Don Hammond, H. C. Humphrey, Isaae Alydon, J隋 Kirby, Robert Mamning, George Montgomery, Lager, Earl Nikon, Elmer Norrduth, Poor Wilkinson, William Joseph, Don Riley, Boyard Howard Smith, Stanton Smulley, Theodore Smith, L豁 Spangler, Leport Spangler, William Studer, Wint Smith, Kenneth Wright, and Robert Young.
ANNOUNCEMENTS
The English Club will meet Wednesday, April 5, at 4:30 p. m. in room 213 Fraser Hall. Papers will be read by Dr. Dunlap, Dr. Burnham, Mr. Wattles. All interested are invited.
The Sigma Xi banquet will be held Thursday night, April 13, at I. O. O. Hall. The members of the case will their wives or their spouses (whichever the case may be) will be there.
The Quill Club initiation which was to have taken place the first week in April has been postponed a week.
The Forty Club will meet at 121b
Oread Wednesday night at 8 o'clock.
All members are urged to be present
for the coming year will
be elected.
All Men Students are requested to be in Fraser Chapel at 12:30 p. m., Tuesday, April 12, to vote on the proposed cheerleader amendment to the constitution of the Men's Student Council.
Black Helmets meet at the Kappa Sigma chapter house Tuesday evening at 7:30. Be there!
Women students, living west of Tennessee and south of fourteenth street, are invited to a district meeting at 7 o'clock at 1408 Tennessee.
I will pay two and a half cents for the mining edition. Professor Terrill.
Obtain comfort, fit and style in your spring clothes by consulting Schulz—Adv.
Many of Country's Biggest Business Men Once Climbed Mt.
GRADS ARE SUCCESSFUL
Oread
What becomes of the graduates of the University of Kansas?
According to Prof. L. N. Flint, there is hardly a line of activity in New York City, that has not in it a prominent University man. In business for instance, can be found, Wilson Kinnear, A. M.; manager for the York Construction company on a sale of 980 shares to Caldwell of the class of 1922 is an X-Ray expert. In literature, Kate Stephens is one of several. Florence Finch Kelly, who has a son in the University at present, is a book reviewer on the New York Times. Stuart Henry is author of several novels and a successful business man; he is president of the New York State Security Company. In dramatics, Hale Hamilton is a Broadway star who did not graduate from the University, but took work here. In education, Eugene Alder is president of the Aledeh Academy, Brooklyn, C. T. Southwick, A. B., '95, is head of a large advertising agency.
PROF. McCLUNG IN PHILADELPHIA In Philadelphia Kansas is not so well represented, but we find C. E. McClung head of the department of biology in the University of Pennsylvania.
M. Davidson, A. B., '82, is sup-
entant of schools in Washington, D.
G.
In Chicago, Russell Whitman is head of the Audit Bureau of Circulation, the largest advertising concern of newspaper circulation in the country. The University has no great lawyers or doctors in Chicago, the representation being confined chiefly to engineers and business men.
In San Francisco are the more recent graduates, chiefly engineers. K. U. engineers have come to the front on the western coast more than in any part of the country. H. F. Bear, an engineer and a system for Oakley and San Francisco. J. B. Lippincott, son of Chancellor Lippincott, is one of the chief engineers of the Los Angeles viaduct. C. F. Humphrey is a prominent lawman of San Francisco. Several prominent lieutenants in Seattle, Portland and Los Angeles. Rollin E. Feitshams is head of a large furniture company in Los Angeles.
MANY IN THE WEST
In Salt Lake City, Glen Miller is a financier and head of a large investment company. Frank Marrye is one of the best known consulting engineers; Frank Whitzel is head of Bradstreet in Salt Lake, and Geo. T. Hunsen is a consulting engineer and of a large mining machine concern.
In Denver, the prominent University men turn to law and politics. John Hrus is prosecuting attorney, who has been in the heart of the big fight for justice. James Owen was district judge, but has now retired to practice law.
HIGH TARIFF FOR CHEMISTS
Only way to protect Infant Chemical Industry
The only protection for an Ameri can chemical industry, is a high pro protective tariff, believes Clarence Estes analyst of the food laboratories.
"Americans cannot compete with foreign producers, for it is even an economic waste for the American manufacturer to attempt to establish this country under present conditions. We should under the dominating hand of Germany. No sooner does the American manufacturer attempt to produce chemicals than he finds the market glutated by a flood of cheap German products. It is unable to compete in the open market; cheaper for Americans to produce the raw material, ship it to Germany, have it made up and returned to America, than for the American to make it up at home. Our only salva-menta is a high tariff, such as is used for the protection of all infant industries."
In First Journalism Class
Miss Manley, Maigle, '09 College,
teacher of journalism in the Junction
City high school. Visited the last
of the week in Lawrence and attended
the teachers' meeting. Miss Manley
took journalism under Prof. E. M.
Hopkins in 1904, when the first class
was introduced.
In First Journalism Class
"It was only an experiment then and was called the Journalism Division of Rhetoric," she said. "Our class was held in the basement of the library. There were sixteen in the class and I was the only woman." Miss Manley helped start the first high school paper in Junction City. She took journalism here last summer.
Football practice 10 o'clock Saturday morning. Coach wants more men. Adv.
Senior invitations at check stand in Fraser, April 3-8. Get them early.
—Adv. 127-5.
Another Club has been added to the University lists. It has a charter membership of thirty-five persons, who have pledged themselves to promote the welfare of all Lawrence birds.
THIRTY-FIVE JOIN
BIRD WELFARE CLUB
At a recent meeting a constitution was adopted and the promoter of the Prof. H. Douthitt was elected president for Woyah. He planned. The purpose of the organization is two-fold; first, to get birds live with us by making the community attractive to them; and second, to enhance our mutual work with the children of the city.
To attract more birds to Lawrence, the members of the club intend to use every effort in growing more shrubbery in the parks. They also plan to build a house of Lawrence to build bird houses, for wrens, blue birds and martins.
To this end the club will try to get the manual training departments of the Lawrence school to take up the building of bird houses. They will also see that the bird laws are enforced.
WORK IN STATE MINE
Students and Professors Keep Lansing Mine in Good Shape
Nearly every Kansan knows that there is a coal mine at the state penitentiary at Lansing; some know that part of the coal burned at the University and other state schools comes from the mine; but few realize that the mine is in any way connected with the University.
In most senses it is not, for the convict mine workers are not University students, and the University School of Mines does not exercise any sort of control over the mine, but it does entail a series of controls to make every possible way. For mining students the Lansing plant serves as a practice and research laboratory. There have been several these writen by students after a close study of conditions in the mine. One of these, an improvement suggestion dealing with the substitution of electric motor mine machinery for tunnel tunnels, was favorably received by the mine officials, but they have been unable to get the change made.
NEW FIELD INVESTIGATED
Another field which the student miners have investigated and reported to the officials is the washing of coal. Lasing coal runs quite high in ash and sulphur, and with the complete model plant they have made the tests of tests were made and the reports given the superintendent of the mines. Lansing coal runs quite high in ash and sulphur, and with the complete model plant in the mining laboratory, a series of tests were made and the results given the warden of the Pententien mining and coal storage tests are now planned for this spring.
On Friday afternoon, December 15, nine students with Professors Terrill and Grider went to Lansing and were housed in the warden's home at the penitentiary. The object of the trip was to examine a map of a much needed map of the mine. In the evening five a. m., until 11 p. m., Saturday and were down in the mine at 5 a. m. Monday morning. Only a few hours' work are done by the 300 convicts in the mine on Saturday. The work done by the University party with three transits and a plane table was well organized, the prisoners came down in the mines, they reached the working faces Monday forooneon the students had covered the main haulage ways, some of them over a mile in length and were therefore able to carry on their work all of that week and two days of the next without interfering with the coal arriving at the shaft to be hoisted. The penitentiary officials were very much pleased because of this.
working in the mine in six days. The plane table consists of a good telescope attached to a straight edge which rests on a sheet of drawing paper, this paper being supported by a paper bag mounted on a substantial transit tripod.
MAKE PLANE TABLE MAP
By working very long hours each day and with unusual speed Ted Crum and George Sammons succeeded in completing a plane table map of the entire five or six miles of
The map was made in sections, the courses being drawn to scale right in the mine. The sections were pieced over later and with a large pantagraph conform to the scale required by the state law. The use of a plane table is, for an underground survey of this kind, unique and proved to be of very great value when the mutiny curate or the assistant curate as the transit map would have been, but it is the best map the state has of its mine and meets the requirements of the state mine inspector, Mr. John Pellegrino. The curate and military are very glad to have it and it will be a big help in their work.
MAP FOR EVERY MINE
Mr. Pellegrino justly criticised the
state last summer for not complying with the state law requiring a map for every mine. He was handicapped, of course, in his first investigation last summer by not being given a map showing the location of air shafts and the workings. The urgency of the work making the map was the reason Professors Terrill and Grider took so large a party of the students into the mine at Christmas for the field practice of mine surveying which regularly comes in the summer in the two camp. A week's work on the Civils' summer camp to furnish an accurate survey of the mine and the work will be done by the University professors and students as soon as opportunity offers.
Senior invitations at check stand in Fraser, April 3-8. Get them early. —Adv. 126.5
The awakening of spring suggests that you place your order for new clothes. Schulz.—Adv.
Bowersock Theatre Wednesday Evening In joint recital with Clara Clemens (Mrs. Ossip Gabrilowitsch)
Ossip Gabrilowitsch
The distinguished Russian pianist Mason & Hamlin piano used
Prices 50c, 75c, $1 and $1.50 Tickets now on sale at the theatre box office Bell phone 10
The Diamond
Birthstone for April
Ideal for Graduation Proper for Engagements
I can sell you a diamond that will answer the purpose of all three
YE SHOP OF FINE QUALITY
THE COLLEGE JEWELER
Gustafson
HENRY MORTON
CHANGING BOTTLE COFFEE
OR TEA IN A BOX
The Premier
When buying a talking machine why not investigate and buy the best? A Premier talking machine is constructed on the plan of a violin, giving the most perfect vibration of tone and clearness of reproduction.
The Premier plays any disc record with any needle, and the Sculptor machine as a guarantee. They are priced within the reach of every home at prices unusually high. A model here illustrated selling at
$65.00
E.S. Strachan
FURNITURE
Ridiculous!
It's ridiculous for men and women to think that they can "sneek" into Spring and not
"Dress Up"
"Spring's" some show and the well dressed person has the ticket of admission
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VOLUME XIII.
UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS, WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON, APRIL 5, 1916.
NEW MEDIC PLANS?
School Has Special Meeting to Consider and Discuss Separate Constitution
FAVOR PROPOSED ACTION
Several Instructors at Rosedale
Get No Pay
A separate constitution, conforming in all requirements to that of the University, was the subject of the special meeting of the Medical School in Chancellor Strong's office late yesterday afternoon. It was found that the present constitution as adopted by the University was not large enough to meet the proposed Medicine. Although no action was taken on the matter the proposed new plan was regarded favorably by all who were present.
The chief argument for this suggested constitution is that the School of Medicine is divided into two distinct branches—the school here and that at Rosedale. Several of the information provided in getting paid for their work and the plan embraces a petition to place only salaried men there.
SUGGEST HEALTH OFFICER SCHOOL A one year school for Health officers was suggested by Samuel J. Crumbine, Dean of the school at Rosedale, but no action was taken on this matter. The school plans to submit a plan submitted to Chancellor Strong, is in co-operation with the State Board of Health.
SUGGEST HEALTH OFFICER SCHOOL
It offers a year's instruction in eleven months, of such a practical nature as to train candidates in a most acceptable way for the degree of diploma of public health, so that they may act as trained health officers for city, county or state. Water and sewage problems in Lawrence, with numerous tests and experiments, will be answered by an exhaustive study of ground water supplies will come next, followed by practice in purifying streams and rivers.
During October the subject of pure food and drugs will be taken up and a complete report will be made up at the Health Council to take into account hygiene, the study of contagious diseases and their prevention is another phase of the work that is to be done.
POLYTECHNICS TO GET CREDIT
As a final test of his ability the student will be required to do work in the office of the Secretary of the State Board of Health in Topeka. He will act as assistant in reviewing and solving complex problems relating to public health and well-reviewing and solving complex problems related to public health topics; he must be able to write press notices or reports on public health topics, and give illustrated lectures. This work will be concluded by a thesis covering some phase of the public health work accomplished during the year. Completion in such a course will enable students, who pass a satisfactory grade to present themselves for an exam, that the usual commencement period.
Students coming to the University from the Kansas City Polytechnic Institute will hereafter receive credit for courses offered here and sophomore years in the Institute provided the work corresponds to the course offered here. This ruling was made at the meeting of the University Senate yesterday after noon.
University Club Auctions Maga
zines—Highbrow Publications
A magazine auction, an annuall affair held by the members of the University Club at their club rooms, will open on Friday Friday Night April 7, at 8 o'clock.
The magazines of the club are sold to the highest bidder as at all auctions. They usually bring about one-third of their subscription price. Many of the magazines are sold at the club. Among them are the New Republic, Nation, Independent, Outlook, Collier's, Leslie's, Harper's Monthly, Harper's Weekly, Atlantic Monthly, Scribner's, North American Review, Scribner's, London Graphic, Life and Punch.
PROFS HAVE TO BID HIGH
This auction is usually held in the first part of October but was postponed this year. The committee which is in charge of the auction will meet Wednesday afternoon to make final arrangements.
No Swimming Yet
Swimming in Potter's lake will not begin until the weather gets somewhat warmer, according to H. A. Lorenz, instructor in physical education. "No one will be allowed to go swimming in the lake except when an instructor is present," said Mr. Lorenz. "There will be no instructor at the lake until the water gets warmer and the danger of cramping is lessened."
Some More "Woman Stuff"
Send the Daily Kansan home.
BROOKLYN
MEDA PROPOSING
SWEARING
E MAN
IDEA
IT MAY
OREAD, AND
THEN NO MAN ON
THE HILLWILL BE SAFE
OH, PROFESSOR, I LOVE
YOUR EYES, YOUR WHISKERS
AND YOUR SUBJECT. I WANT
ONLY TO SIT AT YOUR KNEES
ALL THE REST OF MY LIFE
AND HEAR YOU TALK
OF "MIND AND MATTER"
METAPHYSICS"
REFLEX ACTIONS
AND FUTILITY
IN ITS VARIOUS
PHASES
OH JUST TO SWEEP YOUR HOUSE EACH DAY AND COOK YOUR EGGS!
IF YOU REFUSE TO
BE MINE, ILL PLUNK
YOU IN THIS COURSE
ITS SAFER IN
MEXICO!
MALDY
NUMBER 129
OH JUST TO SWEEP YOUR HOUSE EACH DAY AND LOOK YOUR EGGS!
Margaret Carr, who is taking kindergarten work at the Kansas State Normal, spent yesterday with Laurel Cory, '16 Education. Miss Carr is a former student of the University. She will spend the remainder of the semester's vacation at her home in Leavenworth.
YOU IN THIS COURSE
IT'S SAFER IN MEXICO!
MALOY
Two representatives are chosen from each class at the class elections to be held Monday, April 10. All petitions for class representatives must be written in black with the names of twenty-five of the members of the class which the candidate represents and twenty-five upper classmen.
THIRTEEN GO AFTER LEWIS.PRIZE MONEY
Thirteen outlines, the largest number ever handed in for the Hattie Lewis prize essay, were turned in Monday by prospective competitors for the prize when the time for submitting the plans was up.
"This is more than have ever sent in any previous year," said Prof. R. O. L'Oleary, chairman of the committee. "One year we had ten essays but the number has never run over that."
It is merely the plans of the essays, that are handed in at this time. The essays are not due for several weeks yet.
LAWS ARE ON A STRIKE
"Are you an honest man?" asked Uncle Jimmy, when inquiry was made regarding the size of his class this morning. "Well, then I'll be honest with you. None were expected, absolutely none, but here comes one and I am going to keep him after the whistle blows.
"Only one candidate has come out for each office of the W. S. G. A." said Maureen McKernan, this morning, in regard to the election which is to be held tomorrow, Thursday 6, in Fraser. He will be held as an observance of formality.
A brooding, heavy, portentous silence reigned between classes around Green Hall this morning. The usually obedient and doole disciples of Blackstone were actually disbeeying a Senate ruling. Overcome with the weariness before, the Laws slumbered profoundly through the morning whistles.
WOMEN PASS UP W. S. G. A.
CANDIDACIES FOR STUDIES
Faculty Came to Class But Had No Students
The candidates who have petitioned are: Mona Clara Huffman, president; Myrtle Crose, vice-president, from the Fine Arts department; and Elizabeth Staley, professor of Business College; Hazel Carson, secretary; and Katherine Reding, treasurer.
Yes, the faculty were at their desks. Heavy heartfelt disappointment was absent from their faces. "It isn't true." Dr. W. L. Burdick told his students yesterday, "that we expect you to meet classes Wednesday. We don't." And likewise other faculty members voiced their sentiments.
"If the Senate had voted to make us wear calf kilts," said a Law student this morning, "we would have been arrested. But since the Senate members are ever the defendants in a felony, they can successfully interpose a defense of insanity, citing as absolute proof the exaggeration displayed by them on this occasion."
GLEE CLUB IS ACTIVE TWO MORE CAN ENTER
Annual Spring Concert Will be Given April 13 in Fraser Hall
The Annual Spring concert of the University Glee Club will be given a week from tomorrow in Fraser Hall, announcement of Paul Saultter, manager.
"The club is working out a good repertoire of songs, and will be able to give a cracking good concert," says Sautter. "We are not expecting collections we have before, and will have a brand new collection to offer."
"The program will be made up of quartet, solo and ensemble numbers by the entire club. Although no freak numbers will be found on the program, a well balanced array of semi-class- and popular stuff will be given. The fows are hard at work and will give a good account of themselves."
The club has been asked to sing the second verse of "Crimson and the Gold" at the Trans-Continental Remium of the K. U. Alumni Saturday evening. A New York quartet, made up of K. U. alumni will sing the first verse, a San Francisco quartet the bird.
BLUSH I GENTLEMEN-
YOU CAN'T HELP IT
Some of That Old Time Stuff
Some of That Old Time Stuff
Two members of the Y. M. Financial Committee were principals in a hair-raising escape one night last week, while they were out on a still hunt for money. They stopped at a house in the 1300 block on Kentucky street, where they thought that one of their prospective victims lived.
"This is the house where he lives at, I think," said the freshman, "but it will know positively when I see the stairway."
They rather cautiously entered the house. The stairway seemed to add to the assurance of the freshie. Quietly they climbed the stairs.
The intruders fled with a precipitation that was perhaps more effectual.
A houseful of girls can laugh audibly and the ears of the two Y. M. representatives burned as the owners hot footed it up the street.
Forthwith they entered. Two scandalized young women looked up.
One of the displays in the museum that is least known to the average student is the assortment of gun and blasting powders that is in the mining museum in Haworth Hall. There are something like a hundred samples of different kinds and makes. Included in the display also are samples of various raw materials that are used in the manufacture of explosives.
"This is his room," said the freshi with certainty.
H. V. Caldwell, '15 College, visited this week at the Alpha Cipher Sigma house. He is now employed by the Central Scientific Company, of Chi-town, which sells chemical apparatus to the chemistry departments of state universities.
Miss Doris Anderson, of Omaha, Nebraska, who was a student in the university last year, is visiting at the Shiloh Baptist School. Son says she misses school this year.
Pair of Teams Will Complete
List of Hash House League
Contenders
Contenders
Hash House league baseball games will begin this week, it was decided at a meeting of team representatives in the office of the Daily Kansan last night.
Ten teams are at present members of the league, and two more are desired to make the maximum of twelve. Applications for membership should be made at once to John Gleisser, Home or Bell telephone 297, as petitions will be considered in the order of their receipt.
4. SCHEDULE OUT TOMORROW
CHECK OUT TOMORROW.
The team will appear on a schedule which will appear today in the kansasan. Pending the entrance of the two additional teams desired, blank places will be left, but no team will be considered after Thursday.
Present members of the league are:
First division, Walling, Star, Nemo,
Draper, and Grady; second division,
Stoic, Oreac, Dunakin, Midway, and
Garret. Each team will play every other team in its division, and a series
between the division pennt-winners will settle the championship.
NEW MEMBERS ELECTED
W. M. Glaser, Roy Graham, Milton Baker and Riley McGregor were elected members of the commission last night, and John Gleissner was reelected chairman. The Commission is drawing up a set of rules to govern the operation of the league, which will be submitted to a general vote of the team. The games this week will be played without a tie, without ratification, owing to the inadvisibility of holding another general meeting this week.
Games will be played on the two Hamilton fields as much as practicable. The reduced membership makes this possible, and it is expected that players will attend Woodland will not be needed. Last year the league had twenty-four members, and suffered from the fact that there were too few diamonds to be run off properly. This caused the membership to stump this spring.
Charles P. Woodbury, better known to Lawrence and K. U. people as Tod, a former football star, has turned his energies to another field since leaving K. U. Westchester he was elected to the Missouri State Council on the Republican ticket.
Old K. U. Star in Politics
Prof. John N. Van der Vries, of the department of mathematics will represent Chancellor Frank Strong at the annual K. U. alumni banquet in Kansas City, Saturday night. The professor will be on account of the transcontinental banquet which has been arranged between the graduates of New York and San Francisco for that night and in which he will participate from his home. Professor Van der Vries will walk on "Loyalty to the Institution."
Will Represent Chancellor
Prof. Arvin Olin of the School of Education has been invited to deliver the commencement address of the College at Bacone, Okahoma, May 23.
George S. Grass, Jr. and Leo Moore,
of Hays, were the guests of Wilfred
Woods' wedding.
WILL HOLD SMOKER
FOR GABRILOWITSCH
The University Club will give a smoker this evening at the clubhouse in honor of Ossip Gabrilowitsch, the director of the Clara Clemens Gaborilowitz, will give a recital tonight at the Bowersock theater. Mr. Gabrilowitsch will be at the University Club immediately after the concert. All members of the club are invited.
Mr. and Mrs. Gabibilowitsch are the guests of Prof. and Mrs. C. S. Skilton while in Lawrence. A reception in honor of Madame Gabibilowitsch will be held at the home of Prof. Skilton this evening, following the recital.
PLAY TO FULL HOUSE
Passing Show With Its Sixty Girls and Stunts Scores
"Capacity house" tells the story of the "Passing Show" given under the auspices of the W. S. G. A. last night in Robinson Gymnasium, but the story is not complete without adding that it was pronounced by every person who attended a clever evening's entertainment.
Hit
Practically every seat on the main floor and in the balcony of the gymnasium was taken before the show started. The big hit of the evening scored in the grand "Whirlwind Chorus" by the group of this chapiteau was "The Girl on the Music Cover," sung by Marie Buchannan and illustrated by six girls who made up from illustrations on the Saturday evening Post, and through holes in a magazine, smiled out of the top of that magazine, smiled out of the audience in true magazine fashion.
The separate stintes comprising the Pi Phi Orchestra, the Chi Omega "Toys featuring six girls as wax dolls, the Kappa by Ada Dykes, the "Sextette from Africa" by the Westminster girls, the Kappa farce, "When Julius Sees had a feature dance by Heeler Topping all brought forth bursts or applause.
BAND TO GET GOLD PINS
Members of First Organization Receive Gym Credit Also
J. C. McCanles, director of the University band, says that the members who have an average of 85 per cent attendance and work this year will receive an honor.
The First K. U. Band took part in fifty-three concerts last year and were honored with several long trips to football games, free of charge. Their expenses were paid out of the K. U. Band Fund.
It has been the custom in the past to give K pins to those who turn out regularly for practice and play well in the concerts. McCanles intends that the same custom shall be foliated year, as he promised the band boy at the beginning of the school year a honorary letter for their services.
The members of the First K. U. Rand also get credit for gym work and they have received credit for gym work up until this year, but that custom has ceased.
Salome Langmade, '18 College, left Saturday for St. Francis, where she will spend two weeks doing court reporting.
SENATOR ATTACKS K. U.
Lambertson Advocates Further Application of "Economy" Method on State
DETAILS TO LEGISLATURE
We Have Society Bug; Too Many German Instructors and too Much Graduate Work
More detailed reports of the investigation of this committee will be presented before the next legislature. This commission was created for the purpose of getting some definite statistics on the standing of the educational and penal institutions of the state.
Too much society, too many instructors in the department of German and too much attention paid to the graduate work at the cost of weakening the undergraduate courses are some faults of the University, mentioned by Senate. W. P. Lambertson, of the state效应,经济 committee, created by the last legislature, in a report filed with Goterner Arthur Copper yesterday.
"Senator Lambertson's statements were intelligent, made in good faith and well worth considering. Perhaps they are worth investigating."
"The University has no cause to complain about the opinions expressed by Senator Lambertson," said Chancellor Frank Strong this morning, "We welcome the visits and criticism of such men and wish that more would come, look over the University and comment on it.
IT'S THE SAME ELSEWHERE
"About the same, well. Well, it causes us lots of trouble. But it is something that is in evidence everywhere and while we wish that we did not have it so badly there seems to be no way of escaping it. We are no longer in a respect than the other universities of this kind in this part of the country."
Chancellor Strong expressed the opinion that the report of the efficiency committee will carry considerable weight with the next legislature.
The University was also mentioned in the list of institutions in line for a cut of from two to twelve "superfluous" employees.
Chancellor Strong Reviews the Early History of Law School
The School of Law banqueted at the Eldridge hotel last night, celebrating Uncle Jimmy's seventy-fourth birthday.
UNCLE JIMMY BANQUETED
with all in the best of spirits after the "feed" Fred F. Whitten, toast-master, commented on the occasion and announced the first speaker of the evening, Chancellor Frank Strong told of the early history of the University, the establishing of the School of Law and showed the importance of that institution in connection with the University as a whole.
The three student speakers gave talks that spoke well for their future in the forum. John DeVine, representing the seniors covered the subject, "Senator Lore." Alton Gumbiner of the "middlers" put poetry, prose and "hep" to his speech, "Be That As Iep" by Francis A. Guy of the juniors was shorted in his handling of his topic, "Stop, Look and Listen."
Judge Henry F. Mason of the Kansas Supreme Court discussed the Case System to the evident satisfaction of the students. One of the most brilliant speeches of the evening was that on November 24 and the state" by Senator James A. Burtman Dr. William A. Burdick spoke on "The Inaccessible Goal."
Uncle Jimmy, was the last speaker. He modestly replied to the praise that had been heaped upon him and delighted every listener with his account of the first days of the School if Law.
Prof. W. A. McKeever of the Bureau of Child Wolf Hare has received an invitation from the League of Nations to Enforce Peace to attend a meeting of the organization in Washington, D.C., May 26-27. Ex-president W. R.Taft is in charge of the meeting. Professor McKeever hopes to accept the invitation if other plans do not interfere.
The Weather
Partly cloudy tonight and Thursday continued cold; probably frost tonight.
MORNING PRAYERS
Week April 3-7
N. S. Eldarbin
Leader—Rev. N. S. Elderkin.
Subjects (Nothing about the war):
Thursday: "When His Eyes Were
Opened He Saw Nothing." Acts, IX.
Friday: "Simon Peter Saul Unite Them, 'I go a fishing'" John XXI, S.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Official student paper of the University of Kansas
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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
verses of Kanaka, from the press of
veterans of Kannada, from the press of
Address a., communications to
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Lawrence, Kansas.
Phone, Bell K. U. 25.
The Daily Kansan aims to picture the undergraduate in Kansan; to go further than thany printing the student's name in Kansan; to University hold; to play no favorites; to be clean; to be cheerful; to be courageous; to leave more serious problems to wiser heads in all, to avoid being guilty of the students of the University.
WEDNESDAY, APRIL 5, 1916.
THE TWO PEASANTS
Once upon a time two Peasants drove toward each other and caught in each other's sleights. One cried "Dear of my way,-I am hurrying to town."
to town:
But the other said;
I am hurrying. I am burrying.
"Get out of my way, I am hurrying home."
"I'll quarrelled for some time. A third Peasant saw them and said,
"I'm going to hurry back up!"
Leo Tetel—Aesop.
ORGANIZE YOUR CLUB
There will be room for two more clubs in the Hash House Baseball League, providing the teams make themselves known by Thursday. At that time the schedule will be completed.
With all the available material in the various boarding clubs of the University, these two vacancies will not remain open.
THE CYNICAL WORLD
A good brand of ball will be played.
Get in on the first game next Saturday,
and go after the pennant.
When two leading members of a first class theatrical company take the time and interest to initiate college students into the arts and secrets of the profession, the question usually arises, why did they do it? The present day world and its inhabitants have fallen so into the habit of weighing each act and thought, that it is the usual thing to assign some selfish motive to every action.
But it was pure unselfishness that led Miss Grassler and Mr. Pryng of the Omar, the Tentmaker company to take the time to instruct the University dramatic art class in the art of stage make-up. The University is fortunate to be able to impress such artists with the earnestness of its students in the desire to perfect their knowledge in any given line, and the members of the Guy Bates Post company are to be congratulated upon having a little of that elusive element of unselfishness.
It is unusual for artists to come down off their pedestals and tell the world of their secrets. In a world so commonly ascribed as purely selfish and material it is a pleasure to learn that sympathy and unselfishness do exist. Miss Grassler and Mr. Pryng have youth and understanding. And it was simply youth and understanding and sympathy that led them to devote two hours' time to the initiation of college students into the mysteries of the art behind the footlights.
BE A HERO!
The "bee-e-ro" was still pursued by the villain. Sure, the hero's name was Harry (or Dan, Robert, or Dick). The villain also pursued Betty (or Marguerite or Clarihelle or Elaine) but the "hero," of course, downed the perfidious monster and saved his beloved.
That's what all heroes do. That's why they're heroes. But, O Joy! we all can be heroes, according to Emerson—whose first name is Ralph Waldo. Emerson says: "Every man is a hero and an-oracle to somebody."
So that's where, all of us come in—we're heroes to somebody or other. But probably many of us will be greatly worried over who that somebody is. It might be mother; it might be sister; it might be little brother—and there is a rare chance that it might be father who thinks we are a hero. But the boys wish it might be She, and the girls wish it were He.
Oh, well, Waldo said we are heroes,
o why worry? Let's all throw out
our chests—for we're "Heroes!"
THEY CELEBRATE TODAY
Dean James Green is now 74 years young, and more active than many men who have scare turned the half century mark. The past forty years, the best years of his life, have been devoted to the interests of the School of Law, which has grown from a lusty infant, to one of the best law schools in the country. Some of the most successful lawyers of the land have been "Uncle Jimmy's boys."
He has been more than their professor. He has been their teacher. He has been their companion. And thus he has endeared himself to those who have ever had classes under him.
It is small wonder the Laws celebrate "Uncle Jimmy" Day.
FUTURE OF ATHLETICS
"Tear down your mammoth grand-stands," read an article in the Michigan Alumnus, written in defense of athletics. "Tell your collegiate competitors that we challenge their supremacy no longer. Take the thousands that you are annually spending in the training of "phenoms," who do not need it, and purchase land, as much as you need, where every student may spend a few hours a week playing for the joy of the game and the recreation (for this is recreation) of his physical reserve." The writer admits that "This is drastic;" but sees no other solution.
Although there may be no other solution, the writer takes it for granted that all students desire an active part in athletics and forgets the enjoyment that they receive from these grand-stand sports. If the emphasis is too much upon the training of the expert let us remedy that, but not tear down our mammoth grand-stands, for a while at least.
The spectator gets, also, innumerable thrills from the excitement of an athletic contest. The best promoter of college spirit should not be banished.
The following limericks have been contributed to the Kansan Limerick column. Sit down and grind out a few of your own. Then drop them into the Kansan Box in Fraser, or give them to one of the Kansan men;
There once was a student named Singer.
MY COUNTRY 'TIS OF THEE
KANSAN LIMERICKS
At the present time, when most of the European nations are engaged, a death struggle for supremacy, it is interesting to note what the poets hail for their respective countries. Some of the best of verse has been called forth because of love of country.
**TO IRELAND**
The groves of Ireland they look as charming.
Down by the purlings of sweet silent brooks—
All decked up by posties, that spontaneous grow
Pushed into rocky nooks.
R. A. Miliken.
O'walt I was so fortunate
As to be back in Monster,
This I'd be bound that from ground
I never moved out easily.
For there St. Patrick planted turf,
And utterly
With pig's galae, ma gra, ma' store,
And cabbages—and ladies,
That nap begins Patrick's fast,
For he's the darling saint O!
Henry Bennett.
This precious stone set in the silver sea.
This blessed plot, this earth, this world, England.
William Shakespeare.
A ripple of land; such little hills the sky
The winding wheat fields climb;
Such rocks of valleys with orchids;
Fed full of noises by invisible streams;
White daisies from white dawn; at intervals
The milestone trees standing on soil;
Self-poised upon their prodigy of shade—
I thought my father's land was worthy too
Of our tears.
Elizabeth Barre Browning;
And one, an English honeymoon.
On dewy pastures, dewy trees;
Suffer things in order stored,
A haunt of ancient Peace.
Alfred Tennyson.
W' whatah joy I lailed them a' raw:
The pilgrimage bird's kings.
A' at the bonny U. P. kirks!
Robert Louis Stevenson.
O Caledonian' stern and wild;
Meet nurse for a poetic child;
Land of brewing chocolate wood;
Land of the mountain and the flood.
Sir Walter Scott.
—the pent ocean, rising o'er the pile;
Sees an amphibious world beneath him smile.
The snow canal, the yellow-blossomed vale,
The wilde meadow gliding sail;
The crowded mart, the cultivated plane.
Oliver Goldsmith.
Beeque rains away;
Then Delta, where thy proud tomb, Nassau,
Claims equal reverence, equal axe!
Tr. from Bishop Hurst.
A country which, between its carillons and its canals,
might be the most important chamber as ringing door.
Thomas Hood.
When I may read of tiles in days of calf;
An journey graced by chieftains of renown,
Fair dames, grave citizens, and warriors bold;
If royalty were strong enough to town,
(for which orchid pit theatre should be,
Fair Bruges, I shall then remember those.
Robert Southey.
Deutsche Worte hor' ich widener;
Sie gegrust mit Herat in Land der Hüte;
Land der Lieder.
Schones, heirs Vaterland.
French laurier.
Deutschland, du mein Trost, mein Kick.
John Fallersleben.
Let others go accordin to their affections whether they list, let them travel into England, remembrance in England, and be dyed with the Sunne and ash of spume,但它将 travel into other places; for mine owne part I have resolved that I with my owne part will think with those who with their owne part I have resolved before all others, of Germany is to be preferred before all others.
In playing quoits, threw a ringer,
He said, "Bet your life,
When I choose a wife,
She's going to be a hum-dinger."
There was an old Prof named Thistle
Who blamed everything on the whistle
Once it failed to blow
The reason—don't know,
Unless the engineer made a fizzle.
Upon the Hill is a college.
Where some students go for knowl
edge,
But how much they made
In various grades,
Most of them fail to acknowledge.
The father's face—it beamed with joy
As he said, "It's a ten pound boy."
But that was before,
He'd ever walked the floor
That was covered with a many toy.
The teacher sat down in his chair:
Some say that it was not fair,
But he quickly arose—
Made a grab at his clothes,
And ran out.
NO GERMAN RHODES SCHOLARS
Germans are to be deprived of the privilege of attending Oxford as Rhodes scholars if the following, told by the New York Herald, is true;
The Pall Mall Gazette, commenting on the pending alteration of the Rhodes bequest, remarks: "The cutting out of Germany from the famous bequest is a symbolic admission of the failure of the amiable philosophy of friendship between England and Germany, and an announcement that the dreams associated with these ships were a consipious instance of our general disposition to be neighborly and to foster a common spirit of loyalty and mutual appreciation within the European family."
The British Government is preparing a bill to vary the conditions of the Rhodes Scholarship Trust, so as to eliminate provisions for the endowment of Germans students coming to Oxford. Cecil Rhodes established fifteen scholarships of $1,250 each for young men of German birth, to be nominated by the German emperor. These endowments, along with those for American students, were created, as his wife remained, under the con- dition that "a" would understand between England, the United States and Germany would secure the peace of the world, and educational relations form the strongest tie."
Visitor on campus: "What's the matter with that man? He's running round and round just like a fly with its head off."
"No cause for alarm, visitor," he
student after a grass-hoover.
"Excellent."
Among the rules recently adopted by the football rule committee to govern the sport for the coming season was one giving the referee a considerable amount of latitude in deciding special matters that come before him on the field on the merit of the individual cases. This is an interesting principle of law, though one which has apparently been quite overlooked in recent decisions on other matters pertaining to athletics. It might not be altogether unfair to apply it as a general rule to a wide range of cases regarding college athletics that may arise in the future.
Over two thousand students at Northwestern University have petitioned the faculty to maintain baseball as a college sport.
The Columbia Spectator of a recent date announces that the sophomore journalists have given their second banquet of the year, which was attended by both the men and women. They also gave their pop to give interest and activity to any university movement and Kansas should take note of this.
A woman will preside as judge in a mock trial to be held by the law students of the University of Louisiana. Miss Cliff Martin will decide whether "John Doe" is proved guilty of robbery.
Billiard playing, as a diversion for the greater part of the freshman class of the University of Michigan has been the principal law which forbids students in any public educational institution, who are under age, to frequent billiard halls. The owner of one pool hall has allowed the court and fined as a result of the law.
Harvard has followed the example set by Yale, in restricting men students from playing the parts of female characters in plays given there.
Because they failed in the mid-term examinations, Captain-elect J. A. Enwright, J. A. Gilman, and W. J. Boles, three of Harvard's football stars, were asked to withdraw from school. If they are reinstated they will not be allowed to take part in football or gymnastics in any city rules which prohibit a player from playing in any athletic game after flunking the mid-term examinations.
In the years to come Columbia's athletic teams will be made up of undergraduates. This action was taken by the Athletic Council in 1973 for students holding degrees from other colleges from participant in minor or major sports.
The cafeteria at the University of Minnesota is becoming popular with the university men. A new malted milk machine has just been installed.
A man was seen yesterday setting his watch by the Physics clock. He must have been a stranger on the Hill.
The chapter of Sigma Delta Chi at the University of Indiana "put over" three annual events: viz: the Blanket Hop, the Spring Hike, and the Annual Resurrection Day. The Blanket Hop is an informal dance event in which students of buying blankets for the seniors who have played three years on the football squad. The Spring Hike is a cross country junt and the Resurrection Day is a day on which Sigma Delta Chi degrees that everyone shall dig out his last summer's straw hat and wear it to the game to be played that a terrrorom
From Other Campuses
Washburn College is seriously considering the question of adopting the honor system, defined to mean "fairness to one's self, and fairness to others." In the East 123 colleges are already using this system.
The women's dormitory at Stanford University has devised a plan for the collection of dues. Any woman who has not paid her dues is not allowed telephone privileges, and any young man calling her is told, "She cannot come to the 'phone as she has not paid her dues."
Professors in the University of Minnesota issued an edition of the student paper last week. In a column entitled "The Happy Faculty of Seeing Himself" appeared the follow-up tale, titled Professor Goop Is one who'll stop
To give a quiz on Monday, Or give his students Outside work
To spoil their happy Sunday. He'll average carelessly the marks Upgrade group
He'll smack his lips and send out slipe Beware, Professor Goop!
The University of Nebraska is offering an extension course in mechanical engineering to the shopmen and industrial workers of Lincoln for the purpose of giving the workers a more technical knowledge of their craft. The first class met with an enrollment of twenty-five.
Columbia University is to have a new college magazine entitled The Challenge. This publication will present a free and open discussion of various domestic, international and collegiate matters.
FAIR TOMORROW So Says the Weatherman
Just 17 Days Till Easter
Only 15 Shopping Days
Why Wait Longer?
We have a full line of the new creations. The ideas of an army of designers are represented in the show cases of
The Easter Shop
T I M E I S F L Y I N G
Mrs. McCormick 831 Mass. St.
"The Easter Hat Shop"
CLASSIFIED
Book Store
ED. W. PARSONS, Engraver, Watch store.
jewelry. Bell phone 711. 717. Massage
KEELER'S BOOK STORE **393 Mass**
St. Typewriters for sale or rent.
St. Typewriters for sale or rent.
Supplies.
Paper by the pound. Quiz books.
10c. Pictures and Picture framing.
Dress Making
MISS ESTELLA, NORTHPRUCE,
china carefully handled. 756 Phone.
Phoneno: 810-325-4900.
Shoe Shop
shop店
K. U SHOE SHOP Pantatorium is the best place for best results 1242 MAHON
Eastergowns and party dresses are forming under Miss Reed's careful management in our dressmaking dept.
Have you one ordered?
PHONE KENNEDY PLUMBING CO.
for gss, goods and Mazda Lamps.
B. H. DALE, Artistic Job Printm
both phones 228, 1027 Mass.
FORNЕY SHOP SHOP. 1017 Mass. Don't make a mistake. All work
is done on time.
MRS M A. M. MORGAN, 1821 Tennessee
tajoring. I know very many reasonaI
tajoring. I know very many reasonaI
PROFESSIONAL CARDS
DR. H. L. CHAMBERS. Office over Squires' studio. Both phones.
Squires' studio. Both phones.
HARRY REDING. M. D. Eye, ear,
nose and throat. Glasses fitted.
Of course. B. Uldg. Phones. Bell 513.
Home 512.
G. W. JONES A. M. M. D. Dilease
W. H. KRAMER A. M. M. D. Dilease
colony 7584 Ohio St. Host
10161 Ohio St. Nonsna
J. R. BECHTH, M. D. B. D. O. 833 Mme
Both phones, offices, and residence.
A. C. WILSON, Attorney at law, 743
Mass. St. Lawrence, Kansas
DR. H, W. HUTCHINSON, Dentist, 319
Perkins Blkg, Lawrence, Kansas.
C. O. E.RELUP M. D. D. Hildg. Eyaa
class work guaranteed. Successor to
class work guaranteed.
"THE BEST AMERICAN MAKE"
an Doncaster
ARROW
COLLAR
Cluett, Peabody & Co., Inc., Makers
WANT ADS
WANTED -Student washings. Excellent work and reasonable prices. Phone 2178J. 1237 New Jersey, Mrs. Mary Walls. 125-3*
LOST—On the campus Tuesday, a small gold brooch with a borque pearl in the center. Reward for return to post office in Fraser. 125-3*
LOST - Waterman fountain pen near
Knaus. Finder please return to
Knaus office.
FOR RENT - Mra, Davis, 1217 Tenn.
Room, south, electric lights.
Phone: (800) 346-1900.
LOST—Brown coat sweater taken from in front of gym Tuesday during football practise. Reward. Call Bell 1277J. 129-3
SHUBERT NEXT WEEK BEGINNING SUN.
$1 Mat, Wed. and Sat. Nights, 25c to $1.50
JEFFERSON
DE ANGELIS
IN "SOME BABY"
THESIS BINDING
Engraved and Printed Cards
A. G. ALRICH
Typewriter Paper 744 Mass. St.
PROTSCH
The College Tailor
Watkins
National Bank
Capital $100,000
Surplus and Profits $100,000
The Student Depository
Conklin Fountain Pens
Non-Leakable and Self-Filling
Sold in Lawrence at
F. B. McColloch's Drug Store
847 Mass. St.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
THEATRE VARSITY
TONIGHT ONLY
BESSIE BARRISCALE
In "HONOR'S ALTAR" Produced by Thos. Ince
Also a Good Keystone Comedy
Thurs., CLARA KIMBALL YOUNG in "My Official Wife"
Arrow Shirts-guaranteed fast color Sold exclusively by Johnson & Carl
THE FLOWER SHOP Bell 621 Flowers of Quality 825 $ \frac{1}{2} $ Mass.
Hosiery to match Gowns
$1 Japan
GOTHAM
200
100 % PURE SILK
100 % GARTER PROOF
100 % SERVICED
HEY GOMAN, WE'LL PLAY STAR WARS!
GOTHAM
GOLD STRIPE
MEXICO PARA USE
Garterproof Silk Stockings that wear
$1 Japan
GOTHAM 100
100% PURE SILK
40% GARTER PROOF
100% SERVICE
HEAT GERMAN UNLUXURY STAMPED COTTON
GOTHAM
GELD STRIPS
DECLARE OFF
Patented
FOLD STRIPS
steps garter runs
Twice the usual amount of silk. A close, lustrous weave.
Fall fast as it hot ed silk hosiery that outwears cotton
UNIVERSITY WOMEN!
We do Fancy Tailoring and Remodelling.
MRS. EDNAH MORRISON,
Bell 1154J. 1146 Tenn. St.
Ormsby Bullind & Hackman
At 900 Tennessee RAYMOND'S PRIVATE DINING ROOM
For parties, banquets, committee feeds, etc., call 92 on the Bell for reservations. Let us prepare your next picnic lunch.
STUDENTS
SHOE SHOP
R. O. BURGERT, Prod.
1107 Mass. Mt. Lawrence, Kansas.
Work and Practice is Right.
We also Offer Cover Parasols.
EXPERT BARBERS
At Your Service
College Inn Barber Shop
BURT WADHAMS, Prop.
Corona and Fox
Typewriters
are sold exclusively in Law-
rence by
F. I. Carter,
1025 Mass. St.
We have machines for rent
and a full line of supplies.
IF WALLS COULD TALK
What a Story We'd Hear From Old Landmark, Eh?
"What is it?" is the question asked by the students as, sliding gaily down Adams street, they pass the old stone building about half way down.
The sign, which hangs over the broken down door proclaims that it is the K.U. Pantatorium but the very appearance of the building and the sign shows that the Pantatorium is only a "has been."
OCCUPED AS LAST
The old building has had a much cheekered career. When it was built no one in campus seems to know and even our latest residents say it was there when they first came. It was built for a dwelling house and as late as 1905 it housed a family. Then the veteran, following in the wake of others which were more pretentious than itself, left the quiet family life to seek it's fortune in the world of business.
Manly and Harris, a firm of University students were the first to occupy it under the regime and they established the pantidorium. Upon their graduation they sold out and so they began cleaning business and entered the ranks of the shoe men under the direction of Mr. Broadhurst who is the present owner of the K. U. Shoe Shop. But the new business was not congenial to the old landmark so the next year it returned to its first love when an employee of Mr. Broadhurst took the sign "Clark Clems Clothes."
The building was aging fast however, and showed a desire to retire and spend its days in revery so after a small fire in 1910 Mr. Clark moved out and since then it has remained unoccupied.
RESISTED FIRE THREE TIMES
INSISTED
Durante la career the test of fire has three been applied to the old relic only to be successfully resisted by the stone walls. The effects of the last one have not been repaired and the veteran stands today windowless and doorless with plaster knocked off and walls charred and blackened.
From time to time rumors come out to the effect that it is to be repaired and pressed into service but it is the prevailing opinion that "its ways are unsuited to our day" and that it can only rest in peace until some sacrilegious hand tears it down to make room for a modern successor.
ORGANIZED FIRST BAND
Those bulbs which have recently been planted out east of Snow Hall are not put there for experimental purposes. They are tulip bulbs planted there by the men in the water and sewage laboratory for the purpose of testing them suitful. Before long, according to the planters, the bed will show forth various hues of red, yellow and all other colors known to the tulip.
Stuart Henry Was Responsible for Original K. U.
Testers
Karl Jones, middle Law, has withdrawn from the University to work in the book business in Emporia. He returns to finish his course in the fall.
Marion Reid of Newton, who is now superintendent of schools in Lost Springs, writes his friends that he will be back at the University for summer school, in order to complete his work for a teacher's certificate. Reid was a sophomore in the College last year.
Frances Kleitz, a former student at the University, writes that she likes her work at Leland Stanford University but still wishes to return to the University of Kansas for her Miss Kleiz was on the Hill two years ago.
Stuart O. Henry, A., B. '81, A. M., *93*, who is to give the alumni address in June, is president of the New York State Security Company, but is better suited as an organizer of the first K.U. band. Mr. Henry does not try to conceal his youthful enthusiasisms for he is the author of an article entitled, "The first American Brass Band," which is printed in the Graduate Magazine for April, 1913.
Mr. Henry was born in Clifton Springs, New York, Sept. 17, 1860 and came to Kansas in early childhood. He entered the University in 1877.
After leaving the University, Mr. Henry chose Denver for his first business venture and was connected with various land and irrigation projects.
Six years spent in Europe, studying in Germany, Italy, and at the Sorbonne, Paris, resulted in his writing several volumes of quite distinctive charm, "Paris Days and Homes" (1858) and "Famous Parisians" (1897), "Romance of a French Salon" (1903), and "The Net (1911). He also did editorial work on "The New International Encyclopedia," Mr. Henry is a member of Phi Kappa Psi, the Authors' Club and of Phi Beta Kappa.
Music lovers will be given a rare treat at the concert of M. Gabrieliwitsch, the famous Russian pianist and Mme. Gabrieliwitsch, the noted American contralto, at the Bowersock theater tonight.
M. Gabrilowitsch is of the school of
MARK TWAIN'S DAUGHTER
TO SING AT BOWERSOCK
WILLIAM L. BARRIE
MADAME GABRILOWITSCH
Anton Rubenstein and has gained international fame as a pianist. He is regarded by critics as having few equals in interpreting Russian music.
Co-operative neckties are the innovation at the Kansas State Normal. They are saving students many half-dollars, as well as giving them a more decorated effect. A necktie is bought at the first of the year by each member of the necktie club and circulates for fifty-four laps. Co-operative hats are also being introduced by the women.
Mme. Gabrilowitch, who was formerly Clara Clemens, the daughter of the great humorist, Mark Twain, has studied extensively in both Europe and America and has been accorded a place among the foremost Leider singers. She is the only living member of the author's family.
Class election for junior representative on executive council of W. S. G. A. will be held Monday April 10th in the lecture room of Snow Hall at 12:20. Petitions of nominee's must be handed to election committee of W. S. G. A. by Friday, April 7th. Ethel Scott, Secretary—Adv. 139-3
Said the sophomore to a young lady who is not governed by the restrictions of Mrs. Brown's "contrivance": "You do not have to worry about violating the Midnight Date Rule, do you?"
The Mid-Western Publishing Company has decided to enlarge their sale organization at Lawrence. If you want summer employment see me at Ohio St., 1200 N. Broadway and expenses paid the right party. E. C. Babb.,-Adv. 128-5
FACULTY WANTS OREAD
GOLF COURSE REOPENED
Golf enthusiasts among the faculty would like to see the Oread Golf course re-opened and put into shape for practice. The Country Club, which was opened in Lawrence about a year ago, offers additional security for these professors. At the start the dues were twenty dollars a year but on account of a debt dues have been raised to thirty dollars per annum. Miss Marcia that they can not afford amounts.
John M. Shen, Superintendent of Grounds, has offered to devote one hundred and fifty dollars from a special fund. However, it is necessary for the students and faculty men at the school to amount is estimated that it will require almost three hundred dollars to fix up the grounds.
HAS CONSULAR COURSE
University Offers Work Which Prepares Students for U. S. Foreign Service
Those students who hope to enter the consular service of the United States can take advantage of several courses offered at the University which are International Diplomacy, International Law, French, German, Spanish. At present only two men from Kansas are in the consular service.
Consular-service examinations are held once a year at Washington and it is necessary for those who take the examinations to have been designated by the president to do so. After one year, you must receive a grade of 80 per cent grading on a 100 per cent basis, he must send his application for appointment to the Secretary of State. The government does not maintain a school for the training of candidates for the foreign office does it recommend such an institution.
The examinations are oral and written, the two counting equally. The object of the oral examination is to determine the candidate's business ability, alertness, general contemporary information, and natural fitness for service, including moral, mental, and physical qualifications.
The written examinations will include one language other than English—either French, Spanish or German, the natural, industrial, and scientific languages of the United States; political economy; and the elements of international, commercial and maritime law, American history, government and institutions; and economics. The course will be the history of Europe, Latin America, and the Far East, since 1860.
Prof. Blain F. Moore, assistant professor of Political Science, says, "The Consular service offers wonderful opportunities for the young men of today; it is an easy job, pays a rather large salary and offers a good social standing. The system at present is run down on account of politics. When Roosevelt was in office he put it on a good basis. Now it is almost necessary to have a political pull in order to get an appointment.
A new Seth Thomas has recently been installed in the upper reserve room of the library. It seems to be as difficult for it to keep step with the other clocks on the campus as it is with the students, who have selves. So the students now have one more excuse for being late to classes.
Convict 113: "The doe just told me that if I did not quit smoking I'd die within two years.
Convict 114: "Going to quit?"
Convict 113: "Nope; the joke's on the dog; I'm going to hung next month."-Chaparral.
GREAT MEN LECTURE
Students at the University Hear Addresses on Up-to-date Subjects
An unusually large number of well known men have addressed the students of Kansas during this school year.
Hamilton Holt talked on national preparedness; Norman Angell on international policies; Raymond Robins, religious subjects; Seumas MacManus, English literature; Dickens' Christmas Carol and G. Lowes Dickinson; European
The few names already mentioned are but a small part of the long list that might be made. Others who have addressed the student body this year include W. A. Jolly, Lord Gordons, Gov. E. W. Major, Winfield Scott Hall, Raymond Meyer, Stuart Walker, Dr. J. G. Needham, H. P. Burchell, Charles F. Scott, Prof. R. A. Milliard, Charles S. Southwick, Writer Bynner, Irving Baccheller MacDougall.
The awakening of spring suggests that you place your order for new clothes. Schulz.-Adv.
MARY PICKFORD
war and the problem of reconstruction these are some of the head-
will play in her best loved characterization— "RAGS" from the novel by Edith Bernard Delano at the BOWERSOCK TOMORROW ONLY
Annual Glee Club Concert
Solos Quartet Numbers Club Ensemble
Student Tickets Admit
Fraser Hall
Thursday,April13
BONWIT TELLER & CO.
The Specialty Shop of Originations
FIFTH AVENUE AT 38$^{th}$ STREET
NEW YORK
The Esprit of the Campus
BALLET
In frocks for class and leisure wear, coats for campus and evening wear, and "Bontell" footwear originations.
in the “Moquere” of quaint tams and Canotier hats for sports apparel, a type of sports apparel originated by Bonwit Teller & Co.:—
*Destinies of Bonwit Teller & Co.—this cisset of the campus in Jeune Fille Fashions—Feminine apparel designed especially for the girl in college.*
Come to our store for anything you need for your
Kodak
Fresh films always in setok,
as well as Developing Tanks,
Velox paper,—general supplies
of all kinds.
The esprit of the campus—reflected in gay little blouses for sport and costume wear:—
And for the developing and finishing of your pictures, our prompt, painstaking service is sure to please you.
Come in and see us. We can give you some valuable pointers.
Evans Drug Store 819 Massachusetts
Bowersock Theatre Wednesday Evening In joint recital with
Clara Clemens (Mrs. Ossip Gabrilowitsch)
Ossip Gabrilowitsch The distinguished Russian pianist Mason & Hamlin piano used
Prices 50c, 75c, $1 and $1.50
Tickets now on sale at the theatre box office Bell phone 10
Senior Play April 26. Make Dates Now!
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
BASEBALL SEASON ON
Ames Plays Opener on McCook This Afternoon Elements Permitting
WEATHERMAN THE JINX
Rain Held Up Two Ames Games Last Year
The Ames Aggies and the Jayhawkers are playing the first game of the 1916 baseball season in the Missouri Valley on McCook Field this afternoon. And it will be a real exhibition of the national sport. Both teams are in good shape and the field is in first class shape and the crowd ought to be good unless the weather man drops in late in the afternoon.
No one is hoping for a complete series this year more than the Ames squad. Last year only two of the four scheduled games could be played on account of bad weather both in Iowa and in Texas, prospects for two games in Lawrence are slim considering the present atmospheric conditions. Since the postponement last spring Ames has been claiming that they would have come back in the first two games. But the first chance will be this afternoon.
**SMEE IN BOX TOMORROW**
On the mound McCarty will have a veteran, Red Craig. Tomorrow he will have George Smee. Both these men are experienced and have pitched Jayhawker teams to victories in best teams in the Missouri Valley. Both are going at an unusually good pace this year and will annex a few more pitching records before the year is over. The Ames coach was unable to announce his lineup for today's game.
The line-up for the Kansas team today may be the following but if things do not go right at the start any one of two dozen men may get into the fraces before it is over. The line-up Webber, 1b; Deaver, 2b; Wood, ss Gibbens, 3b; Smee, If; Wandel (Capt. cf; Chinnery, rf; Weltman, c; Craig, t)
TO RESURRECT ARCHERY
University Women Preparing for Contest Next Month
The women at K. U. have added another sport to their list of out-door games, and an archery contest to be held in May is working up enthusiasm over this new-old game. Archery contests are certainly not new. From the days of Greek and Roman romantics, the sport is pictured romantically in tales of jousts and tourneys, and like so many old things is again coming into style.
But who would have thought that the followers of Robin Hood would be women? Not that Robin Hood was unmanly, but times have changed, and since the men are so engrossed with football, baseball, and the more thrilling sports, archery and its revival has been left to the women.
"We have no doubt that archery will become as popular here at K. U. as any other sport," said Miss Gladys Elliott. "But we like to keep it for the upperclassman, because they can come over when they have only a few minutes and practise without the bother of putting on gym suits."
Showers Are Usable
The showers in the basement of Gymnasium are useable temporarily.
"Next fall," said H. A. Lorenz this morning, "a larger lead pipe will be installed and the showers will be imple-mented." The water from the shower room this year has been annoying most of the time, and it has been hard to keep the sprays in workable condition at all. We hope that the improvements which have been made are necessary repairs until the new lead pipe and sprays are put in next fall."
1916 TRACK SCHEDULE
April 29 Annual K. U. interclass meet on McCook Field.
April 21 Drake Reiay games a Des Moines.
May 5 Nebraska dual meet at Lawrence.
May 6 Kansas state high school meet at Lawrence.
May 13 Missouri dual meet at Columbia.
May 19 Kansas Aggie dual meet at Manhattan.
May 20 Annual high school invitation meet at Lawrence.
May 27 Missouri Valley Conference meet at Columbia.
June 3 Western Conference meet at Chicago.
LACK OF HELP HALTS
BACK OF HELP HALTS
OREAD MINE PLAN
Failure of the volunteer system to produce recruits enough to start prospect work has delayed the starting of work on the tunnel which the mining department is to drive in. Engineering are to drive under Mount Oread. Prof. A. C. Terrill of the mining faculty called last week for volunteers to work on the prospecting which must precede the actual work tunnel, but only four men answered.
The coal vein which was found by the workmen on the bridge a few days ago about thirty feet below the level of the Kaw is in all probability the one which the K. u. Mine may try to reach. It is known that there is an opening and the people admired a hundred and fifty feet below the surface but for the present no attempt will be made to get to it with the mine.
PICK BY ROUND ROBIN
Tennis Squad Will Have Tournament—Play Starting Next Monday
A "Round-Robin" tournament is to be the method used in selecting the Varsity squad of tennis players this spring according to the decision of a dozen racket sharks who attended the tournament last week. The weather will be the only thing that will prevent the plans from being carried out on schedule time.
The games of the tournament will start Monday. Each man who wants to try out for the squad will play every other applicant and the four players will perform before they compose the squad that will represent Kansas in the Valley matches this spring. The schedule will be arranged early this week. Meanwhile, the players will perform before they permit them to practice the weather regular play starts.
The squad this year will consist of four men instead of two or three as has been the case in other years. Whether three or four men will get the different trips this spring will depend on the quality of play shown by the candidates. But in any case the players must be able to fill the shoes of Dix Teacher when he finishes his Varsity work this spring.
Regular practices will be held each afternoon this week after which the tournament schedules and time for practice will be announced.
WILL HAVE BARREL FIGHT
Sophs Get New Stunt For Their Mixer Tomorrow Night
"A barrel fight," a new thing for Lawrence, which has two exponents of the manly art, fighting from unmanly barrels for principals, is. the headliner for the sophomore mixer, Ecke's hall next Thursday evening.
Taking second place on the bill is the boxing program embracing a battle royale between five welter weights, and a number of speed matches. A quartet will sing several songs supplementing the instrumental numbers, and Beau Olecot, football mentor, and Bean Olecot, basketball coach, agreed to exchange a few choice yarns for the mixers while the eats and smokes go the rounds.
A large ticket sale to date has made the management hump to insure enough smokes and eats for a crowd twice the ticket sale.
"The cankerworms are beginning to hatch," says Professor H. B. Hungerford of the department of entomology. This is the pest which has necessitated the banding of the trees. Those not banded will probably be stripped of their foliage as soon as they reach the cankerworms are only found in certain localities. The trees that are banded with tree tangle feet are free from the insects as the female cankerworm can only reach the trees by crawling up. As soon as the cankerworm gets its growth, it falls to the ground where it remains a shiny brown insect called the chrysalis until February and then crawls out and up the trees where it lays its eggs which hatch in five or six weeks.
Cankerworms Hatching
An Interfraternity Conference of the fraternities of Syracuse University has been organized. It is hoped by the members that the conference will solve all problems of interfraternity that remain unable to content successfully with those propositions which require the action of the united fraternities.
Lorenz Says Average Student Works on Inferior Apparatus in Gym
NEED NEW EQUIPMENT
"Thespecialists," says H. A. Lorenz, instructor of physical education, "theathletes of known ability in the University, are given every advantage, such as the ability to coach, and other necessities and luxuries, that can possibly be given them. The average student, however,—the fellow who is compelled by the need to succeed—can up with scant and inferior apparatus and many other inconveniences."
FAVOURS SPECIALIZED ATHLETES
"I am be thoroughly understood,
from the time I began," she said,
"that I am greatly in favor of specialized athletics and think that football, basketball, and baseball heroes, as well as the track and field stars have their rightful place in our Uni-
tities. They are very hard to find, and are given too much emphasis and attention. I know, however, that the gymnasium equipment, a great deal of which is home made, clumsy and practically immovable, is by no means used or valued; we have lost interest in gym because we cannot properly take care of them."
There is but one set of movable parallel bars in the gymnasium, and, according to Mr. Lorenz, it is absolutely unsafe, and should not be used. There is urgent need for a new vaulting bar and should modern and safe set of parallel bars.
APPARATUS IS ANTIQUE
"Our apparatus is so antiquated," said Mr. L. Burchard, who is impossible for us to have competitive exercises with other universities, as much as we would like to do so. We would like to give more exhibitions, in order that the people might see the work of our department, but we cannot even do this with the present apparatus. It is small that it does not allow us to buy the things we really need."
WILL DEBATE ATHLETICS
Kansas to Meet Tigers on Intercollegiate Sport Question
Intercollegiate athletics is the subject of debate between the Universities of Missouri and Kansas on Friday evening in Fraser Chapel. The question is "Resolved, that intercollegiate athletics should be abandoned in American Universities." Missouri will uphold the affirmative.
Kansas will be represented by three of the four following men: Henry Shinn, Odis H. Burns, Raymer McQuiston and Lynde Anderson. These men have been working on the question of whether the university ester and have just finished a trip to Independence, Cherryvale and Coffeyville where they have debated the question before the high schools. The team that will represent K. U. on the local floor, will be picked according to their standing. The names will be announced soon.
Kansas was defeated by Missour last year.
WILL PLAY "DER VETTER"
Deutsche Verein to Stage Comedy on April 8
The Deutsche Verein will give Der Vetter, a three act comedy, Saturday evening April 8, at 8 o'clock in the theatre of Green Hall. The comedy is under the supervision of Miss Margarethe Hochderfer, and Prof. W. W. Hawkins, instructors in the department of German. George Baerg, as Der Vetter, will play the leading role. Hardy in Gwennie, Wilhelm, Shomber, Blackface Gwennie, W. Goldman, R. Sibbett, Benjamin Baitzter, and Edward Kroesch have parts in the play.
Ten copies of Bryce
Ten new copies of Bryce's American Government text, placed upon the shelves in Spooner library for use by the students in the classes under Professors C. A. Dykstra and B. F. Moore. Up to the present time, the students have been greatly hindered in reading their assignments because of a lack of books. There is also an older edition of the same books in the library for the use of the law students.
"Der Vetter is one of Roderek Benedix's productions, and is a peach of play," said Professor Hawkins this year. "Proof is that proof it will be interesting."
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Send the Daily Kansan home to the folks.
The Sigma Xi banquet will be help Thursday night, April 13, at I. O. O. F. Hall. The members, as well as the guests, are welcome, as well as the case may be) will be there.
I will pay two and a half cents for each copy of the mining edition. Professor Terrill.
Women students, living west of Tennessee and south of fourteenth street, are invited to a district meet-room on Friday at 7 o'clock at 1408 Tennessee.
All Men Students are requested to be in Fraser Chapel at 12:30 p. m., Tuesday, April 12, to vote on the proposed cheerleader amendment to the constitution of the Men's Student Council.
The Forty Club will meet at 1215 Orend Wednesday night at 8 o'clock. All members are urged to be present for the coming year will be elected.
The Committee for Roaming Houses for women will meet at 4:30 this afternoon at the office of Adviser of Women. Mrs. Eustace Brown.
Mrs. Cora G. Lewis, member of the board of administration, will address the women of the faculty at 4:30 Thursday in room 114 Fraser Hall. The address will be followed by tea served by Mrs. Eustace Brown.
The Sachem honorary society of senior men will meet tonight at the Sig Alph house at 9:00 p. m.
Coach Oletti wants 25 more men out for spring football practice every afternoon. Spring training lasts until April 20.
No Soph Hop Farc Rehearsals will be held this week, as the gym will be in use. Everybody out—east, chorus, Monday next Friday afternoon at 4:30 o'clock.
The Daily Texan says that Yale students and coaches are disturbed over the possibility of losing the captains of the football, swimming and wrestling teams because of their poor grades.
Cornell fraternities will not pledge freshmen until they have finished one.
Mr. Pecan: "What seems to be the trouble, James?"
James: "One of the cylinders is missing, sir."
Mr. Pecan: "My word! Where do you suppose we could have lost it?"
The Emprioria State Normal has a "class to teach teachers manners."
Football practice 10 o'clock Saturday morning. Coach wants more men.
If it keeps you hustling to stand off the grocer, the butcher and the landlord, how would the family do it? A chef could work the Northwestern each month?
L. S. Boughly
Mary Myers, a junior in the College last semester, visited her parents the latter part of the week. Miss Myers is attending the Emporia Normal, studying in the department of kindergarten.
Miss Elizabeth Wywandt visited Mary Smith and Vioia Engel at the Alemanya house Saturday and Sunday. She will be visiting Chicago, but has been spending the
spring vacation at her home in Abilene.
According to Prof. Geo. Putnam this is the students version:
from matplotlib import plot
plot([1, 2, 3, 4])
the sweetest are "Enclosed
check."
Senior invitations at check stand in Fraser, April 3-8. Get them early.
—Adv. 127-5.
READY!
$ \mathbf{A}_{5}^{7} $ wonderful showing of all that is new and correct for Easter in
Suits, Coats, Skirts and Blouses
Don't delay your Easter shopping, for every day we are finding it harder to reorder desirable new merchandise.
WEAVER'S
Indestructo Trunks Bags and Suit Cases Sold Exclusively by Johnson & Carl
Sure!
.
You will want better shoes or oxfords this Spring to keep step with the new times and opportunities.
The "Barry" Oxfords for Men illustrated here are Correct, not freakish in style, but suitable for all occasions.
We have them in several new styles in Black or Brown leathers. With O'Sullivan Rubber heels attached, which insures great comfort to the wearer—all at the uniform price of
$ 5
Otto Fischer
"The Shop of the Town"
Mr. University Man:-
What does that phrase mean to you in barber service?
Drop in tomorrow-three doors north of Varsity.
SECOND GAME 1916 SCHEDULE
Baseball--Ames Aggies vs. K. U.
Student Ticket admits. Tickets, including grandstand, 50c. Student ticket holders, grandstand 15c. THURSDAY—TOMORROW. 3:45 P.M.
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VOLUME XIII.
NUMBER 130
$2,000,000 A MINUTE
Transcontinental Reunion Satur day Night Will Hold up That Much Capital
FEW TICKETS LEFT YET
Seniors And Faculty May Have Them by Asking
Tickets Free—A Few Left Will be given to members of the faculty and seniors who call at Fraser 112, today or tomorrow.
Sufficient cable pairs to connect the gymnasium with the main office were found in Fraser Hall and from there two miles of aerial wires have been strung to the Gym. Seven men have attended every training session doing the necessary wiring on the second floor to enable 500 persons to hear the lapping of the surf on either coast. A double row of chairs, equipped with receivers, will run nearly the length of the Hall. On a table at the east end will stand the ordinary small telescope to transmit the voice of several alumni to the extremes of the continent.
About a $1,000 worth of equipment will be used by the Bell telephone men for terminating the circuit and connecting the evening service during the switching.
Two million dollars worth of capital will be held up for every minute of conversation between New York and San Francisco, said the representatives of the Bell Telephone Co., who are on the HP today overlooking the Gymnasium. The Gymnasium, to be used in the Trans-Continental Reunion Saturday night.
... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ...
Annual Smoker of Second Year Men Will be Held Tonight
SOPHOMORES WILL MIX
It's a big night tonight for second year men. The sophomore mixer to be held in Ecke's hall embraces a unique and varied program that is bound to please an audience of the stronger sex,
The first attraction will be a "barrel fight," a new thing for Lawrence. A boxing program consisting of a battle royal between five welter weights, four championship belts, will furnish no small amount of lively entertainment for the mixers.
Prof, Merle Thore and Beau O'cott, football coach, will tell some choice stories, and a quartette will render several songs to supplement the instrumental numbers, while the eats and smokes go the rounds.
Judging from the number of tickets sold to date, the management is expecting a large crowd and is preparing eats and smokes accordingly.
Expressed in Terms of Ice Cream.
GIVE THE HORSEPOWER FORMULA FOR "GIRL"
GUESS!
Prof. Maurice Reece, in his Physiology 1 class, recently made the statement that the energy used in melting a dish of ice cream will raise a ton of heat and the energy stored up in the cream would raise the coal 16 stories. Now if the potential energy of the cream is 16 stories; and the kinetic energy expended on the melting of coal equals a girl at a soda fountain after a movie?
UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS, THURSDAY AFTERNOON, APRIL 6, 1916.
Earl O'Roke, assistant professor of zoology, met with a painful though not serious accident when he attempted to light the gas furnace in his hot few days ago. The gas had been escaping from the jets, and the explosion which occurred lighted the furnace, burned his hands and face severely. The fact that the explosion did not occur until a few moments after he had lighted the gas and had had time to step away from the furnace saved him from what would have been very serious injuries. He has been cared for since with his face and arms bandaged, on yesterday when he came on, the Hill for a few minutes. He will probably be able to resume his class work in a few days.
PROF, 'OROKE INJURED BY
EXPLOSION OF GAS FURNACE
Pan-hellenic Tomorrow
The Pan-hellenic Baseball League will have its formal opening tomorrow afternoon when the Acacias meet the Phi Psia on Hamilton field. Dutch Wedell has been selected as official umpire of the league for the season.
Miss Annette Perry and Miss Helen Ogden, Chi Omega from Manhattan, are visiting at the Chi Omega house here. They attended the Black Helm dance at Woodland Park Saturday evening.
NELLIE BRYANT RECOVERS;
WILL, COME TOMORROW
Miss Nellie - Bryant, prima donna soprano, from the Royal Opera, Ulm, Germany will give a recital Friday April 7th in Fraser Hall as was formerly announced. Word was received a few days ago to postpone the date indefinitely but Miss Bryant wired several emails saying she had recovered from her illness and would be here Friday. Tickets for the concert will be free.
Miss Bryant was singing in Germany when war was declared but upon the closing of the opera house at the Metropolitan Opera, Germany will give eacu recital Friday, country with great success. She will be assisted on the piano by Miss Anna Sweney of the Fine Arts faculty. The program will be printed tomorrow.
POINT SYSTEM IN USE
May Cause Some Prospective Candidates to Withdraw
With the spring election for the Men's Student Council, the athletic board, and the cheerleader, less than a month away, prospective candidates have begun to cast anxious eyes toward the "point system" in fear that the new ruling adopted last spring may prevent their running.
The point system as adopted last May is as follows:
Point Limits: freshman, 20; sophomore, 19; junior, 40; senior, 40
Student Council, president, 35;
vice president, 25; secretary, 25;
members, 28.
Senior class: president, 30; other officers, 10.
Junior class; president, 30; other officers, 10; Prom managers, 25.
other officers, 5; Hop managers, 25
Freshman class: president, 10
Senior class: captain, 30
School of Engineering: President 20; vice-president, 5; secretary treasurer, 5; editor magazine, 25; assistant editor, 5; business manager 20; assistant manager, 5; circulation manager, 5; governing board, 5 president of engineering societies, 5.
College: President, 20; other of
College: President, 20; other or ficers. 5.
School of Law: senior president, 20; middle president, 10; junior president, 10; manager of Scrim, 10; other officers, 5.
Athletic Association; president, 10
member, 5; manager Gee Club, 10
member.
Y. M. C. A.; president, 35; vice-
president, 20; secretary, 20; treasurer,
20; member cabinet, 20; member com-
mittee, 5.
Department Clubs: president, 5
dramatized roles of senior and Dream
board players.
"K. U. AND CHRISTIANITY"
"K. U. AND CHRISTIANITY"
FOSTER'S TALK TONIGHT
Why it is that the most important organization on the Hill receives the least consideration is one of the questions Geo. O. Foster will discuss in this class at the night at 7 o'clock before the Y. M. and Y. W. meeting in Myers Hall.
"K. U. could give up any other institution or organization with less loss to her well being and fair name throughout the state than she could in any other situation," the letter. "Here in the University with the rush of classes, the attractions of other activities, we fail to see the importance of the Christian organizations, so seeing things with a better perspective, we need to correct our point of view."
The new catalogue will be similar to the one used this year. It will consist of thirteen sections devoted to the different departments and courses of the University and a General Information section, each being bound separately. A few copies of the combined sections will be printed.
The University of Kansas catalog for 1916-17,which is being published by the state printers at Topeka, will be distributed in May at the time of the commencement program. About 30,000 copies will be issued.
K. U. CATALOGUE TO BE READY NEXT MONTH
Dix Edwards, Lawrence Winn and Dick Small all worked for Edwards in the Kansas City election Tuesday Winn's father, E. L. Winn, a republican for the victorious candidate for house alderman from the sixteenth ward.
Mu Phi Epsilon, musical sorority will give a musical for their guests Wednesday April 12, in honor of the birthday anniversary of the sorority
The class in History of American Journalism are out for the "Laws" laurels. Yesterday they spent the time between classes in giving yellows for some of the old time celebrities in the newspaper game.
The following girls went to Kansas City Saturday on a shopping tour: Agnes R. Smith, Louise Bierer, Jennifer M. Dildred, Mildred Pits and Bess Alnsworth.
GET YOUR RAKE READY
Students Will Have a Campus Clean-Up Day, If Plans Materialize
CHANCELLOR LIKES IDEA
Suggests Feed and Baseball
Game as Added Attractions
MUSICAL STARS
Plans for a holiday, on which all students can take a part in cleaning up the campus, have been broached to Chancellor Strong and several other Chancellor favors the idea with possibly a few changes in original plans.
Chancellor Frank Strong said "I am very much in favor of this plan, and would suggest that May 1, which is a holiday, be set aside for that purpose. It would be a fine thing to add another tradition to that day. I would suggest that each sorority, fraternity, and club require each member to take an active role in the work. The work of the University might give a lunch at noon on the campus and then at about three o'clock we might go down to the ball ground and have a ball game. I am sure that every division of the University will be glad to co-operate in the work. The Board of Administration has nominated the employment of Harlan Hearst as projectors of Kansas City, in beautifying the campus and we might be able to have them here to direct the planting of some shrubs on that day."
Prof. W, C. Stevens: "There is nothing which needs improvement more than the campus, and with a little work and care this could be made one hundred times. But course it would be a little costly to do it all at once, but by improving a part at a time it would not be long until the entire campus was in fine shape. The Board of Administration is very anxious to improve the appearance of the grounds and have authorized immediate supervision of landscape architects."
George O. Foster: "I think that it would be a very good plan to declare a holiday. The south side of the camper trailer is heated, heating needa clean-up bad."
L. E. Whitmore, instructor of photography he made a trip to Portugal. Wedding morning.
SET ASIDE MAY 1
CLASSES WILL COMPETE
Track Athletes Are Training Now For Big Interclass Meet April 29
HOLIDAY IS A GOOD PLAN
The track men are already beginning to dope out their prospects in the annual track meet which will be held April 29. Not content with working for the larger meets alone the cinder artists are getting the class spirit alight and a day of the meet will see some close competition for the medals offered.
The present juniors have won the last two interclass meets and have bright prospects of winning this one. The team will also need which to build a team the Juniors have a well balanced aggregation with a good squad for the relay. But the sophomores will be out for points this season they also have a well balanced squad.
The letter men will not be limited to one event as has been done a few times in the past. But even at that the captains on the different class teams will not line-up more men in an event than is necessary. Thus the novice will have his chance to get in the running for the medals. And a dark horse will have a good chance to overcome over on one of Hamilton's veterans.
Mrs. William Pfau, of Cincinnati,
Supreme President of Mu Phi Epsilon
sorority, is visiting the local chapter
this week. Mrs. Pfau is on her way
home after a visit with the western
chapters in Washington and Oregon.
Any man is eligible to participate in the interclass affair. Medals are given to four places in each event. The coaches are particularly desirous of seeing a large number of men out this spring and will devote a part of their time to coaching these men in any event they wish. This is the interclass affair. This one meet is the only intramural event that will be held this spring.
Professor Bodenhafer of the sociology department will take a class in Remedial and Corrective Agency to Leavenworth April 15. The Federal and military prison at Leavenworth will be visited and the state prison at Lansing will also be inspected. A class in sociology from the University goes through the Leavenwort prisons every year. The purpose of these trips is to study the various methods of the prisoners view which a complement of the penal systems employed. In including several students outside of the class there will be over fifty who will take the trin.
Gabriilowitsch Concert Draws Appreciative Audience of the Musical Select
TWO RECEPTIONS FOLLOW
Senata Appassionata of Bee
(thoven a Feature of Program
A disappointingly small audience greeted Gesson Gabriellowitz, one of the world's leading pianists, last night at the Bowersock when he appeared in joint recital with Madame Clara Ciemens Gabriellowitz, contralto. The audience, although small, was made up of music lovers and the apper- tion given the audience, up to enthusiasm what was lacking in volume.
Although comparatively light, the Sonata Appassionata of Beethoven was the only heavy number of the evening—the program afforded excellent opportunity for the display of Gabriilowitz's ability as master of piano and bass in playing his exquisite shading, his clean technique and ease and reserve power, supplemented with that touch of the poetic which always characterizes pupils of the great Leschetizetsky, completely carried away his hearers.
Mr. Grabilowitsch's handling of the heavy Beethoven Sonata was easily the feature of the concert. Sitting at the piano as quietly as though playing a child's exercise, the Russian virtuoso interpreted the Allegro and Finale of the sonata with an intense sense of proportion. All technical difficulties apparently did not exist for him. Mr. Grabilowitsch's technical ability also appeared to good advantage in Moskowski's "Wave" etude. The Chopin nocturne was a rare gem
MIAMI WELL BEAUTY.
While Madame Gabriilowitsch was well received by the program was not of the same caliber as that of her husband. And the very excellence of Mr. Gabriilowitsch's playing accentuated this.
MADAME WELL RECEIVED
Following the concert, Mr. Gabriolwitsch was entertained with a smoker at the University club, and Madame Tirso was admitted at the home of Professor Skilton
K. N. G. TO BANQUET
Proposed Legislature Affecting Militia Will Be Discussed Around Tables
Company M of the Kansas National Guard will hold its second annual banquet tonight at 7 o'clock in the Mercer Theater. The purpose of the occasion is to promote good fellowship and spend an enjoyable evening rehearsing old stories of camps and maneuvers. Noted military men from over the state will
One hundred officers and men will attend this banquet, the only social affair attempted throughout the year by the company. After the feed toasts the officers went on a walk Adj. Gen. Charles I. Martin, Capt. Walter Sweeney, Twenty-first Infantry U. S. A., Col. Wilder S. Metcalf, Capt. Albert Krause, Capt. Hugh Means, Major Carl Phillips, Capt. James Naismith, Sergei, Capt. Maximilian Koller, Kirstie Lleuet, Edward M. Briggs will act as toastmaster.
Publicity and enlargement of the extension work of the University is the object of a trip through the lead and zinc district of Kansas and Missouri on which Dean Walker and Prof. A. C. Terrill of the School of Engineering and H. G. Ingham, of the Extension Division, left last night.
Talks by these men will touch upon proposed legislation in Congress, which is of vital importance to the National Guards.
Several new courses in mining engineering that are to be given by correspondence have recently been announced, and this extension work will be called to the attention of the miners and operators in the district.
FACULTY MEN TO INSPECT LEAD AND ZINC DISTRICT
For a cosmopolitan atmosphere the two college inns, Lee's and Bricken's had their share Tuesday night after the K. U. Passing Show. Actresses, soldiers, literary lights, politicians, athletes and other notables composed the after-theater crowd just as in a Broadway cabaret.
Professor Terrill spoke to the operators in the Webb City district this week.
Four University young women, Milled Light, Marjorie Rickard, Lenora Jennings and Millie Carter, were invited to dinner at the Sigma Phi Gioga house.
Irene Myers, who is a student at the State Normal School, spent Saturday and Sunday with Frances Ludeman '19 College.
JOAN FUND MEMORIAL
FAVORED BY MACK
FAVORED BY
"Giving the memorial fund to the student loan fund would be a very good plan," said Harold Mack, chairman of the senior memorial committee for the fund. "I do not think that the plan would find much opposition among the class, in fact I know some people who would contribute if the money were given to the loan fund or if it is used for other purposes."
Of course, the loan fund idea would get away from the notion of a memorial, as there would be nothing tangible that could be seen with our class numerals on it. But we might use the fund to help them in our donation to the fund for the use of seniors only, or some similar provision."
ANOTHER SING TONIGHT
Senior Women to Give Program on Golf Links Tonight —Others Later
The senior women will meet tonight at 6 o'clock on the golf links for supper and a "sing." This is the second "sing" to be held by them, for the last one proved to be such a success, that women are planning to "mix" often.
"The purpose of these meetings," said Joseph Jaquana, chairman of the organization, "is to get the senior women all well acquainted before the separate most of us. Then, again, we are practicing K. U. songs, some of which are not very well known. At this next 'mixer,' we are going to practise Professor Carruth's 'Poet and Peasant' all the well-known, university songs."
If it rains, the "sing" will be held on the steps of Dyce Museum instead of on the golf links. To take care of your shoes and socks, women are asked to bring fifteen cents.
MISSING CAMPUS SKETCHES
HAVE BEEN RECOVEREI
The campus scenes that were made by Louis Wilhelm, 113 Law, and which are undoubtedly the best work of the sort on the Hill, have been received from the obscurity in which they sank during the last year when they were lost in some undiscoverable place. The campus rooms in the Fine Arts rooms in the Ad Building. The pictures, which are approximately four feet by five, portray popular and unusual pictures of the University buildings and of the campus.
Two years ago they were sent to Topeka to the State Capitol for a university exhibit that was arranged for the legislature by the Board of Regents, later they were started back to Lawrence but were lost until a few months ago when they turned up in some inexplicable manner with five of the pictures badly torn and punctured. The room where they were been retouched and a number of them now hang on the walls of the sketching room.
FACULTY COMMITTEE
VISITS NARMAL SCHOOLS
A faculty committee consisting of Professors Olin, Cady, E. W. Murray and Dean Blackmar spent Wednesday in Hays in conference with the faculty of the Agricultural Normal School at that place. The committee is endeavoring to secure better correlation and articulation between the University and the normal schools of the state. This will help place whereby graduates of the normal schools, wishing to secure higher degrees may be enabled to enroll in our Graduate School. The committee will go to Emporia Tuesday.
Dr. Payne Coming
The department of mining engineering has secured Dr. Henry W. Payne, a noted engineer, to speak before the engineers next Wednesday on the subject "Siberia and the Klondike Today." Dr. Payne has recently arrived in this country after spending three years in Klondike and Siberia.
Jenks Wins Fellowship
Leland H. Jenk, who attended the University last year as a graduate student, and who is now a student in Columbia University, has recently received the Jacob H. Schiff fellowship in political science, valued at $800. Mr. Jenks is a graduate of Ottawa University, and from there received a scholarship for his work he has undertaken from here to the Columbia University, where he is doing advanced work in political science.
Albert Hakan, '18 College, went to Kansas City Friday to visit with his parents there.
Can it be that the Law students are becoming dissatisfied with the indolent life which is so generally attributed to them? Instead of reclining against the columns of Green Hall between classes two of them went out in front and pitched pennies at a crack the other day.
CAPPER WILL PRESIDE
Kansas to Debate Missouri on "Intercollegiate Athletics."
TEAMS FEELS CONFIDENT
Will be Last Appearance of Two Veteran Kansas Debaters
Governor Arthur Capper will preside at the debate between the University of Missouri and the University of Kansas tomorrow night in Fraser chapel. His presence on this occasion will add much to the interest of the participants, and he will be a discussion of the merits and demerits of intercollegiate athletics.
The members of the University debating team returned from their practice trip last evening. At three of the towns, where they staged the debate, the team was well-prepared. Two of the debates won by the negative and one by the affirmative. As a result the team feels confident that they can register a victory for the negative against Missouri tomorrow evening. The men who will attend the debate will be picked, but their names will be announced in tomorrow's Kansan.
The representatives from Missouri are expected to arrive some time this afternoon. They have been working on the question since last fall and can be depended upon to put up a stiff fight for our ancient rival.
Special interest in this debate attaches to the fact that it will be the last debate that three of the men will ever be able to take part in for the University debates, and three University debates in two of which he has been victor, is anxious to win one more laurel for K. U. before he steps into the ranks of the teaching profession. Odis Burns, who has represented the University in two debates, said that his victor, hopes to another victory for his Alma Mater. Raymer McQuiston, who made the debating squad last year and who debated against Nebraska last fall is working diligently, while Lyle Anderson, who won his "KC" in debating is putting up a stiff fight for the honor of K. U.
Delta Sigma Rho, the honorary debating fraternity will honor the Governor, Arthur Capper, who will preside at the K. U.-M. U. debate, the judges of the debate, and the representatives of both Universities with a banquet at the College Inn - immured following the Ashton. This is the last important forensic event of the year, every effort is being made by the fraternity and the department of public speaking to make the affair a success.
A novel scheme, which was planned by a French jeweler, enabling students individually to help in the support of students who has been adopted at this University.
SELL FRENCH BABY TAGS
K. U. Students Raise Money For Nation's Infants
French baby tags are selling fast. The tag is a small square pendant upon which is impressed the picture of a mother with arms around her. The French tri-color, red white and blue, runs, across the top of the tag.
They are made by a famous French jeweler and are sold at the nominal sum of twenty-five cents. Five cents of this amount goes to the manufacturer and the twenty cents goes to the factory where the cents a French Twenty cents together with the state support will keep a French baby for two days.
These tags are in the hands of various students and they are selling rapidly.
Senator Joseph Lectures
Senator J. E. Joseph of the state legislature from Whitewater will lecture in Snow Hall Friday at 4:30, on "Public Ownership or Regulation of Public Utilities." He will give the crucial points introduced in a modern lecture by Senator Joshua is the father of Don Joseph, the president of the senior class last year and Frances M. Joseph, a sophomore in the College.
Now that it will have to be satisfied with local political conditions, what will the X. Y. Moon do with that half of its paper?
The Weather
The Forecast: Rain tonight,
warmer east portion. Friday unsettled with rain east portion.
MORNING PRAYERS
Week April 3-7
eader—Rev. N. S. Elderkin.
Dekker, S. M., S. K. McNeil.
Subjects (Nothing about the war):
Friday: "Simon Peter Sautte Unto Them, I go a 'fishing.'" John XXI, S.
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Official student paper of the Universi- alty of, Kansas
EDITORIAL STAFF
Chas. S. Sturtevant . . . Editor-in-Chief
Miles W. Vaughn . . . Associate Editor
Raymond A. Fagan . . . News Editor
Raymond Clapper . . . Assistan
REPORTORIAL STAFF
William Cady... Business Manager
Chase Burvenga... Adv. Manager
Chris Davis... Business Manager
Paul Brindel
Don Davis
John Dyshaw
John Gleisner
Harry Morgan
Guy Serviner
Cargill Sproull
Charles Sweet
Glenn Swogger
Vernon Moore
Subscription price $3.00 per year in advance; one term, $1.75.
Entered as second-class mail, mails otherwise to Washington, Kansas, under the order of Marion A. Moore.
Address a. communications to UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Lawrence, Kansas. Phone, Bell K. U. 25.
Published in the afternoon five times
titled 'A review from the press of
Department of Medicine'.
The Daily Kansan aims to picture the undergraduate in a role, to go further than the university to go further than the University holds; to play no favorites; to be clean; to be cheerful; to be gentle; to be generous; to leave more serious problems to wiser heads, in all, to increase the ability of the students of the University.
THURSDAY. APRIL 6. 1916.
THE HORSE AND HIS MASTERS
A gardener had a Horse. She had megan to pray to God to get another man to garden. She sold the horse to a potter. The Horse was gaid but the potter had even sold the horse to a gardener, the Horse complained of her lot and the Horse was better master. And this prayer, too, was fulfilled. The potter sold the Horse to megan, who skipped of horses in the tanner's yard.
WHAT THE "GRIND" MAKES
"Beo to me, wretched one! It would be worse if I could stay with my old master. If I could have my sons you have said not for work, but in your skin's sake-"Lee Tolstoi.-Aesop.
WHAT THE ORIGIN LINKS
Which student succeeds better out in "real" life; the man who makes Phi Beta Kappa, or the one who is a "hale fellow well met"? The question is asked again and again, and various answers are given.
From figures which a Harvard alumnus obtained after searching for Harvard names in "Who's Who," the former theory seems to be the correct one. The man who leads his class seems to have had a better chance of getting into America's "red book" of illuminous names.
Of the nine thousand Harvard graduates who have had an opportunity of appearing in "Who's Who," 1,305 are found there. But no less than 22 out of 30 of the "first" students are there. Men who were among the first ten in the class in scholarship have 41.5 per cent mentioned; and those who took their degrees "summa cum laude" have 42.5 per cent of their number among the famous. There must be something in scholarship standing after all.
That poet who wrote about "women's fearless eye" must have had some acquaintance with faculty women.
WHY DO THEY GO?
We are all strong believers in Kansas—the state itself, and its institutions. Kansas has always been the state where men and women do things. Scan the magazine indexes tomorrow and read what her sons and others outside the state are saying about her. Economists, statesmen, politicians—all to allure her, cite her practises in illustrations, place her on the pedestal of the public idol.
Her university has frequently received a little of this prestige, more often a different kind. Crowded class rooms, loss of recognized instructors, inadequate facilities, small appropriations by the legislature, need of more buildings—all of these have contributed to this prestige of a different kind.
Yet the University improves, as does everything in the state of Kansas. Each year records an increased enrollment. But, while the enrollment increases here, students are passing through Lawrence going to other state universities.
As far south as Louisiana and Virginia, and as far west as California Kansas young men and women travel to enroll in the state universities
there. The University of Michigan received 49 Kansans last year. The University of Missouri registered 14, Ohio State 4, Virginia and Louisiana state universities one each, Illinois, Pennsylvania, Oklahoma, Nebraska, Leland-Stanford, all more than five each.
What is the matter with the University of Kansas that her own men and women will travel from her to study in other states? Have they the faith in her and her university that we have? Or is it just a case of "distance lends enchantment"?
THE LITTLE THINGS
A visitor to Lawrence took a street car going to the campus. Having heard of the beautiful scenery from the top of Mt. Oread, the visitor peered through the windows of the car, as he approached the Hill, but could see nothing but a blur without. Not until he stepped from the car to the platform alongside Robinson Gymnasium did he realize the grandeur of the view.
The annual window washing and spring housecleaning which the street car company is supposed to give its cars is long over due.
It's the little things that count.
HAVE YOU A COMPLAINT?
How about it Mr. Kansan Reader:
are you satisfied with the way old K. U.
is being run? Are you satisfied
with your instructors, with the way
the grass grows, with the different
aspects of student life and activity?
In other words, do you want certain institutions, and certain traditional methods of accomplishing results, or not accomplishting them, changed? If you have anything on your mind, unburden it to the Kansan.
The Campus Opinion over in the third column is yours to do with you will. All the Kansan asks is that you sign your name as a matter of good faith, and that you do not go beyond the grounds of common decency.
So be you Senior, Faculty, Junior,
Special, Freshman, or sophomore, let's
hear the excuse for that grouch you're
carrying around. Air it—but don't
make the communication too long, and
drop it in the Daily Kansan box over
in Fraser Hall.
The following is from the Chanute Tribune:
TWICE TOLD—BUT WORTH IT
Sarcasm is the sour cream of wit—Columbia Jester.
New York Boy: "Yer a liar."
Boston Youth: "You are a New
Haven director."—Ex.
"Harry would dance perfectly bu for two things."
Possum: "Tubby, I don't see how you can be so lazy."
Student: "Decayed teeth cause eye strain."
Mr. Jennison in physics: "What is steam?"
Tubby: "Ah, it's not so hard."- Exchange.
"I'm sorry, but Brutus took it
"with good while ago," replied the solemn
Slim Aggas: "Water gone crazy with heat."—College Widow.
Irate Diner: "Hey, waiter, there's a mixture of real food in this mixture."
"I can't find any clothes to put on the scarecrow," said Farmer Cortasnate.
"I want the "Life of Julius Caesar,"
"I said the impulsive youth, rush
John: "Got change for a dollar?"
Bill: "Sure!"
"I'm only tryin' to scare the crowds; we're ourselves to death."-Harvard Lampo.
Prof, Nutt: "Yes, especially decaved eve teeth."
Irate Diner: "Yes, a swallow."—Tom-Tom.
Professor Nutt in School Hygiene some of the effects of decayed teeth*
TOO LATE
"You might use some of the fancy ducks our boy, Josh brought home for Christmas."
John: "Lend me a half."—Argana
nana.
Fresh Waiter: "Some little bird told you, I suppose."
Francis William Bourdillon was born in Woolbedding in 1852. He received his education at Worcester College, Oxford, and was afterwards a private tutor to the sons of the Prince and Princess Christian.
POET'S CORNER
The night has a thousand eyes.
THE NIGHT HAS A THOUSAND THINGS
EYES
And the day but one;
You have the bright night world dies
With the dying sun.
The mind has a thousand eyes,
And the heart but one.
Yet the light of a whole life dies
When love is done.
One more time, Dear Lord.
HE WAS GIVEN A JOB
The mind has a thousand eyes, and the heart but a pair.
A small boy entered an office in N. Y. the other day, very early in the morning, when the merchant was reading the paper. The latter glanced up and went on reading. After three minutes the boy said:
When love is done.
—Francis William Bourdillon.
"Excuse me, but I'm in a hurry." What do you want?" he was asked. "Why do you want?"
"You do? " Well. "snorted the man
of business, "why are you in such a
burt?"
"Got to hurry," replied the boy. "I left school yesterday to go to work, and haven't struck anything yet. I can't waste time. If you've got nothing for me, say so, and I'll look elsewhere."
"When can you come?" asked the surprised merchant.
“Don’t have to come,” he was told. “I’m here now, and would have been to work before this if you’d said so.”— Exchange.
LINGUISTIC SOVEREIGNS
German and various Slav dialects.
The king of Spain speaks English.
The Tsar speaks English, French German and various Slav dialects.
The Kaiser speaks English, French Latin, Polish and Russian.
The king of Italy speaks French German and Italian with equal facility.
The emperor of Austria speaks, in addition to German and French, Hungarian, Polish, Serbian, Crotian, Marian, Romanian, Italian and some Hebrew.
The late King Edward spoke Ger-
man, French, Spanish, Russian and
Ask.
AGAINST BILLY SUNDAY
Editor of the Daily Kansan:
King Perdinand speaks English,
King German and Russian—Boston
Transport.
CAMPUS OPINION Communications must be signed as evidence of good faith but names will not be published without the writer's consent
I understand that an attempt is being made to get Billy Sunday to come to Lawrence and speak to the students during his campaign at Kansas City. I have been wondering if the University of Kansas really ought to have Billy Sunday come and speak here. Of course, right now he is attracting a great deal of attention because he is the course bound to gain him popularity among a certain class of people. Aside from this, however, we must remember that Sunday is a professed minister of the Gospel of Christ and that should be the reason we would have him speak to us—if we would.
And do the students of the University approve of this one:
Little girl, you look so small
Don't you wear no clothes at it?
Don't you wear no skirt?
Don't you wear no petty skirt?
Don't you wear no underclothes.
But what about Mr. Sunday's method of preaching? What about the language he uses, the comparisons he makes, the pictures he draws? How does he use the language that would appeal to a University student?
To be concrete take a few examples of the things Mr. Sunday says durin his campaigns. Here is on from his meetings at Philadelphia, January 8;
Little girl,you look so small
"When I am at heaven's gate I'll be free from old Philly's blood. I can see now the Day of Judgment and of me Philadelphia and of me is taken up by God.
"I gave them their message, Lord I gave it to them the best way I could and I understood it. You go get the files of the Philadelphia mormons and printed my sermons Lord. You'll see what I preached," will be my answer.
'You were down in Philly, weren't you Billy?' the Lord would ask me. And I'll say to him, 'Yes, sir, ord. I was there.'
Some of Mr. Sunday's remarks are actually digging. For instance, when he said
"If I were the wife of some of you men, I'd refuse to clean their old spittoons. I say let every hog clean his own trough."
'Did you give them any message of salvation, Billy?'
Is this the sort of language we have been taught to use when speaking reverently of God? Does it not require a mail box that Mr. Sunday is too familiar?
Is this the kind of language we want a minister of the opel to use in a talk before the students of the University of Kanaa?
And the Lord will say, 'Come on in,
blood' you're free from Philadelphia's
blood.
Varsity Fifty Five
THE STUDIO FASHION CLUB
Copyright Hart Schaffner & Marx
Coach Harry-Up Yost, of Michigan, believes that the barring of freshmen from athletics is the reason that the big universities show to such a disadvantage in their games with the smaller schools.
More than 2,000 specimens of mammals and reports on hundreds of birds have been given to the University of Wisconsin. They are Kellogg and Miss. Annie Alexander. They are both university women. The specimens were gathered in the wilds of northern California, and include a new variety of mountain goats, as well as flying squirrels. Two Oregon snowshoe rabbits were also found.
But your cornet and your hose? Other universities have refused to ask them. What do their students and why? Why did Princeton refuse to ask him to come?
PECKHAM'S
The state of Nevada has been granted by the United States senate 7,000,000 acres of land for the benefit of the public schools and of the university.
At Washington rallies, the attendance of all the fraternity men is checked up as well as the number of freshman and sophomores. A "pep" list is published in the daily giving the statistics.
The trustees of the University of Pennsylvania have granted the petition of students asking for the installation of a course in military training at the university under the direction of the war department. According to the preaching of the pacifists the student body at this University must be largely made up of vons of munition makers.
"Roughneck Day" was celebrated March 15 at the State Agricultural College. It is a festival day for the airing of old clothes, since the college began dressing as "Weary Willies" to escape the penalty of being paddled.
From Other Campuses
If Nebraska cannot play football with schools outside the Missouri Valley Conference, then, according to the Daily Nebraskan, there will be a strong demand for the Cornhusker to throw off the shackles of the Conference.
This year's Yale graduates are organizing their New York City Yale Club before they get out of school. Any member of the class who expects to live in New York City is eligible to membership.
The University of Nebraska is agitating a single tax of three dollars a semester paid by each student registering. The proceeds of the tax would amount to about $1,500. The money would be divided among the different student organizations to aid in their support.
A regular suit for regular fellows
Regal Shoes. The home of Hart Schaffner and Marx Clothes. Emery Shirts.
Variations to please every taste $18 and up—pay $25 if you can.
Send the Daily Kansan home to the
Giks.
HART SCHAFFNER & MARX young men designers created these suit-hits; they express the youthful idea. But all men can wear these suits; you're young enough, no matter how old you are if you only think so.
Book Store
Class election for junior representative on executive council of W. S. G. A. will be held Monday April 10th in the lecture room of Snow Hall at 12:20. Petitions of nominee's must be handed to election committee of W. S. G. A. by Friday, April 7th. Ethel Scholotty, Secretary—Aday, 139-3
The Mid-Western Publishing Company has decided to enlarge their sale organization at Lawrence. If you want summer employment, see me on the website of Ohio St. schools and expenses paid the right party. E. C. Babb., -Adv 128-5
Send the Daily Kansan home to the folks.
CLASSIFIED
KEELER'S BOOK STORE, $239 Maa
St. Typewriters for sale or rent.
Typewriter and School Supplies.
Quiz & Quizzes 8 for
10c. Pictures and Plays.
ED. W. PARSONS, Engraver, Watch-
jewelry.
Bell phone 711, 717, 715
Shoe Shan
MISS ESTELLA NORTHRUP. china
MISS ESTELLA NORTHRUP. china
carefully handled. 758 Magee. Phone
610-297-3400.
K. U. SHOE SHOP and Pantatorium is best place for best results. 1342 IHU
PHONE KENNEDY PLUMBING CO.
Masla. Masson Mazda Lamps. MAssla. Masson Mazda Lamps.
B. H. BALLE, Artistic Job Printing
Both phone 228, 1027 Mass.
FORNEE SHOE SHOP, 1017 Mass. Don't make a miltake. All work
must be done with equipment.
MIS M. A., MORGAN 1851 Tennessee,
Kurting, very reasonable
Kurting, very reasonable
PROFESSIONAL CARDS
DR. H. L. CHAMBERS. Office over Squires' studio. Both phones.
HARRY REDING. M. D. Eye, ear
phone. U. Hide. Phones, Bail $13.
June $12.
G. W. JONES, A. M. M. D. P. Dleaness
college, 1892
college, 1893
Host, 1894
St. Phoebe St. Phone
J. R. BECHTEL, M. D, D. O. $33 Maa
Both phones, office and realdite.
A. C. WILSON, Attorney at law, 743
Mass. St. Lawrence, Kansas.
DR, H. W. HUTCHISON, Dentat. 2018.
Parkins Bldg. Lawrence, Kansas.
C. O. ORELUP M. D. Dick Bldg Eyx
G. E. ORELUP M. D. Dick Bldg Eyx
c. G. E. ORELUP M. D. Dick Bldg Eyx
g. G. E. ORELUP M. D. Dick Bldg Eyx
Successor to
work guaranteed.
WANT ADS
LOST—Brown coat sweater taken from in front of gym Tuesday during football practise. Reward. Call Bell 1277J. 129-3
FOR RENT - Mrs. Davis, 1217 Tenn.
living room, south, electric lights.
Phon. 209-534-8811.
LOST—Waterman fountain pen near
little library. Finder please return
to Kakao.com
Senior invitations at check stand in Fraser, April 3-8. Get them early.
-Adv. 127.5.
Gaul's Passion Service—Plymoutn
thoir—Sunday 7:45. Doors closed
:50—Adv.
NEXT WEEK
BEGINNING SUN.
$1 Mat. Wed. and Sat. Nights, 25c to $1.50
JEFFERSON
DE ANGELIS
IN "SOME BABY"
THESIS BINDING Engraved and Printed Cards
A. G. ALRICH
Typewriter Paper 744 Mass. St.
PROTSCH
The College Tailor
Watkins
National Bank
Capital $100,000
Surplus and Profits $100,000
The Student Depository
Conklin Fountain Pens
Sold in Lawrence at
F. B. McColloch's Drug Store
847 Mass. St.
The University of Chicago
HOME in addition to resident
worl. enterals in instruct-
ment center
STUDY For detailed in-
formation address
1234567890
24th Year U. of C. (Dix ), Chicago, IL.
CIVIL CIVILISIMUS
Tailored Suits or fancy gowns depend upon neatness as much as style for their successful appearance. Cleaning & Pressing
for fancy gowns
department upon mat-
ness as much as
these are successful
in appearance.
Cleaning. Involves.
Pressing. Involves.
LAWRENCE PANTATORIUM
Tel. 506 Bell 12 W. Warren
ASK FOR and GET
HORLICK'S
THE ORIGINAL
MALTED MILK
Cheap substitutes cost YOU same price.
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
THEATRE VARSITY
TONIGHT ONLY CLARA KIMBALL YOUNG In "MY OFFICIAL WIFE" Fri.,Margaurite Snow in "A Corner in Cotton"
Arrow Shirts—guaranteed fast color Sold exclusively by Johnson & Carl
Any time is the right time for a glass of Coca-Cola
Morning, noon, or night. For a first-quencher, or just for a delicious health beverage—you will find a new pleasure in every refreshing glass.
THE COCA-COLA CO.
Atlanta, Ga.
9c
Demand the genuine by full name—nicknames encourage substitution.
to send some flowers around this week end.
Sweet peas, roses, pansies,
carnations, swinsonia or anything you wish. And remember—
Call Bell 55
We Raise Our Own Cut Flowers
and you reap the benefit in service and prices.
The Lawrence Floral Co.
Bell Phone 55 1447 Mass.
Best prices on party orders. It will pay you to see us.
Miss Loretta Murphy, a graduate of the University of California, is the gueux of her sister, Bess Murphy, in College, at the Alpha Cil Omega house.
The engagement of Cathene Harris, '17 College, to Raymer McQuisnion, '16, has been announced. Miss Harris is from Eudora and is majoring in the history department at Bowie Kappa, and a member of the University Debating team which meets Missouri Friday.
"A silo," said Pearl Carpenter, '16 College, and practice teacher in the high school, "is a farm tool that is used in storing grain." She lives in Kansas City.
If kissing were a sin at all
Like kneeling to propose.
There'd nothing else be left to do
For daring hansome beaux.
They say there's microbes in a kiss,
the rumor is most rife.
They say there's microbes in a kiss.
The rumor is most rife.
Come, Lady Dear, and make of me
An invalid for life.
-Puppet.
Investigate the merits of tailor made clothing. It's cheaper in the long run. Schulz.—Adv.
Marjorie Rickard, Mildred Light,
Lenore Jennings, Nellie Carter, and
Edwina Peckham were delightfully
married at the Sigma Phi house Sunday.
*Pauline's Passion Service* - Plymouth
7:40-8:15 Adv.
7:40-8:30 Doors close
Send the Daily Kansan home.
ATTEND MILITARY CAMPS
Many K. U. Students to Get Training During Summer
The University will be well represented among the various summer military camps to be held throughout the United States during the coming months. Aside from the regular encampment of Company M of the K. N. Infantry, an annual camp will enlist for a month's training at the "citizen-soldier" camps.
Of this last type, the camp at Fort Benjamin Harrison, Indianapolis, Inc., will doubtless have the most representatives from K. U. Announcement regarding the camp has been received and the officers of the physical education, and he has succeeded in securing several recruits for the citizen soldiery. The encampments last a month, three of them being held between July 5 and October 5. Expenses are for transportation, board, and uniforms, and aggregate furnishes fire-arms, the government furnishes fire-arms, ammunition, and housing facilities.
"I should be glad to talk with any student who wants to spend a month or more at Fort Harrison," said James Mason, an assistant professor of the men will be interested."
At the present time, no one knows where Company M will hold its annual encampment. Captain F. E. Jones says that a joint camp for Kansas, has been established at either Fort Riley or Fort Leavenworth in Kansas or Fort Robinson Nebraska. The war department will decide the matter. Fortry men from Kansas have been leavening the last year. A larger number is expected this summer.
Prof. C. G. Dumpl of the department of English deserves first place on the honor roll for closing classes on time. He has dismissed his classes three minutes before the whistle blows for the past three or four weeks.
Miss Marie Dent, who withdrew from the University the second semester because of ill health, is visiting at the Chi Omega House. She attended the Sigma Nu formal last Friday evening.
Dean P. F. Walker of the School of Engineering returned Tuesday from a trip to Iola and Pittsburg where he has addressed the commercial clubs in those towns on "Factories and Industries." He was also borne of the School of Law taught the Dean's class in "Engineering Contracts" while he was out of the city.
Dean H. L. Butler Establishes Community Music Organizations Over State
Der Vetter, the play to be given by the Deutsche Verein Saturday, will begin at 8:30 instead of 8:00 o'clock as announced. The change was made during the trans-continental reunion to see the first of the performance.
Der Vetter Changed
KANSAS TO BE MUSICAL ISSUE SURVEY REPORT
Lyle Anderson, Raymer McQuiston,
Odis Burns and Hank Shinn are out on
a debating expedition. They expect to
carry off the honors at Coffeeville,
Caney, Independence and Cherryvale.
They will return Wednesday.
High praise is given to the work of the School of Fine Arts by Mr. Thomas Tapper in a recent number of "intention" in regard to Community Music.
The article quotes Dean Butler as saying, "Our aim is to make music understandable and therefore more enjoyable, as well as to encourage young people to go to church and home life, and to oppose cheap, vulgar and indecent music.
SENDS MUSIC OVER STATE
"To do this we送 we to any school or club in Kansas that has or can borrow a Victor phonograph, four sets of fifteen disc records each, to be used for instruction purposes. To learn the lyrics a keyboard written 'talk' explaining the music about to be heard, and gives a few interesting talks regarding its origin, etc. These talks are entirely informal and devoid of technical terms, and precede the finest and most expensive records from Victor, Edison and Columbia catalogs.
REQUIREMENTS TO GET MUSIC
"All we ask," said Dean Butler,
speaking for the School of Fine Arts.
"is 1st, to give these entertainments
in the evening so that parents as well
as children may attend; 2nd, that no
admittance fee be charged; 3rd, that
you use a Victor or Victrola, and
that only M-ton paper needleless
needles will suit you in packing and unpacking the records to
avoid breaking or scratching them;
5th, that you pay transporting
expenses on the records which will be
sent to you collect; 6th, that you send
them collected to the address furnished
you by the School of Fine Arts."
Through this correspondence work and many visits in Kansas, Dean Butler has established community music collections in twenty or more localities.
CLAY USED SUCCESSFULLY
Kansas Product Substituted in Pottery Work
That Kansas clays can be used successfully in the making of fine glazed pottery is being proved by the advanced class in applied design, which is now doing some experimental work along this line under the direction of Miss Maria L. Benson, instructor. The pottery has a peckation and an exhibit of over sixty designs may now be seen at the entrance of the Museum.
"The experiment is important," said Miss Benson, "because the ox-blood glaze which is the most difficult to obtain even with standard materials was secured on a number of the designs. The glazes represented there are all original and were worked out in class."
"The work on exhibition in the Museum is especially fine because of employment of Kansas clays instead of standard materials," says Prof W. A. Griffith, of the department of drawing and painting.
The display consists of vases, candle-sticks, tea-pots, sugar bowls, cream pots, and many other use/ and ornamental designs. As a result of the work represented in the exhibit Kansas may become the source of maidenhead pottery. In this work the class has used clays found on the University campus, at Hoisington, Great Bend, and Ellsworth.
The ware is the property of the students who did the work and the exhibitions will be changed from time to time as new material is produced by them. The equipment only five of the class in design can take the work at one time.
Dr. Alice Corbin, associate professor of German, after several weeks of illness was able to meet her classes for Dr. Emma Hill, who has been treated in Oswego for nervous trouble by her aunt, Dr. Emma Hill, and is now feeling much better.
Dean Mallott of Ablene, a senior in the Abellone high school, spent Saturday and Sunday getting his work lined up with an entrance to the University next fall.
Mr. Frank Hagenbush, of Kansas City, spent Sunday visiting friends and relatives in Lawrence. Mr. Hagenbush is a graduate of Dental College. He says he likes Lawrence very much and would not mind locating here some time in the future.
Most prudent Freshmen now wear their "Prophylaxis" when they are on the hill. No, not toothbrushes—look at them. No, not toothpaste. A prophylaxis is merely a preventive.
Gaul's Passion Service—Plymouth Choir—Sunday 7:45. Doors closed 7:50—Adv.
Social Investigation Conducted by Dean Blackmar Sent to
The Lawrence Social Survey is now in the hands of the state printer. This survey was conducted in 1914, but its publication has been delayed owing to the resignation of Prof. E. W. Burgess, who was field surveyor and who had undertaken to collect the data in manuscript form.
Press
This survey was carried on by the various organizations of Lawrence and the department of sociology of the University, under the direction of Dean F. W. Blackmar. Its object was a study of social conditions and agencies as a basis for a constructive program of community advance.
LAWRENCE IS INTERESTED
The movement created a great deal of interest among law enforcement people, but over the whole country, as is shown from the numerous requests which come to Dean Blackmar for a copy of the survey. Even more important than the interest taken in the work were the benefits derived from it. Quoting from the introduction to the survey by Dean F. W. Blackmar, the author of the study, welfare, the enactment of an adequate housing ordinance, the securing of a supervision of the city milk supply, the support given by the board of education to the summer playground, are all outcomes of the survey movement. Of greater significance than these concrete achievements is the spirit of co-operation secured by the very method of the organization of the survey."
MOVES NEED OF SCHOOLS.
Now, recently, the survey has brought to light that he plays playgrounds in North Lawrence, for which some attempt has already been made. Mr. Hartley, with the assistant Dean Blackman, is now attempting to either the plans along this line.
DAVIS PEEVED WHEN
POSTER WALKS OFF
Cut Data Early to Make it Off
Cut Date Early to Make it, Too.
Don Davis, the modest and shrinking violet who has been conducting the Soph Hop advertising campaign, was all a-peeved when he came on the Hill this morning. Someone had swiped one of his Soph Hop posters,—and for the first time since the publicity campaign began, an "ad" that contained photos of him peeled in the glass case in front of the University bulletin board.
"I wouldn't have minded losing the picture if the man who took it had just waited until Wednesday,"wailed Davis. "But I'd counted on using the same cartoon on Monday and Tuesday—and here some unknown person bawls up my fine scheme and gums the game.
"The worst of it is that I'd spent more time on that drawing than on all the rest of 'em put together. Why I even left my date at 9:30 Sunday to go to home and work on that cartoon, before it midnight to finish it too!"
"And then to have it swiped—
'Cruel, cruel world!'"
John Michener, '16 College, went to Wichita, Saturday, and returned with a notebook full of town news, which he distributed among the number of unfortunates who were unable to make the trip home.
"Why is the atmosphere on the Hill so quiet and studious today?" a freshman was heard to remark Wednesday.
"Oh, 'I tell you who, why,' answered Omah. "Omah, the Law are taking a vacation today."
Hash House League schedule will appear in tomorrow's Kansan.
Edna Hetzel, '16, School of Education, is in Leavenworth this week in charge of the German department of the high school during the absence of the regular teacher. Miss Hetzel secured this place through the Appointment Bureau of the School of Education.
When Gordon B. Welch, '16 Engineer, made the trip to his home in Jola, Friday, he did so on the strength of the white flag which was hoisted on Fraser. Gordon says he can stand most things, but the puddles he swam through going and coming made him wish he were a duck.
The large shipment of loving cups which Manager Hamilton had been expecting for some time was discovered
the other day in Fraser Hall. The shipment had become mixed with some goods for Fraser and had been stored away. These cups are for the winners and runner-up of the recent basketball tournament and will be forwarded to the winning teams as soon as possible.
Russell Armstrong and Archie Johnston, graduates of Hutchinson high school last year, were here over Sunday visiting Fred Preble and Lawson May, '19 College, at the Y. M. rooms. Incidentally they looked over the University with an eye toward becoming future students.
Our peach ice cream is made from the crushed fruit. Try it. Wiedemann's.-Adv.
Don't Neglect The Faculty Kitchen
Is your kitchen equipped with the "Hoosier Kitchen Cabinet—The National Step Saver?"
Sanitation, durability, convenience and economy are only a few of the advantages of the "Hoosier."
If not, you should not delay another day in investigating the conveniences enclosed in the small space occupied by the "Hoosier."
This is "Hoosier Week" all over the United States, and you should be one of the many thousands who will take advantage of the offer of a "Hoosiers" at terms of
$1.00 down and $1.00 a week
"Over 800,000 housewives proclaim the "Hoosier" the best investment in their homes."
Ex.S. Strachan FURNITURE
Ever- Wear Aluminum num
808-810 Mass. St.
Kitchen
Tables
Chairs
Stools
Annual Glee Club Concert
Solos Quartet Numbers Club Ensemble
Student Tickets Admit
Fraser Hall
Thursday,April13
Daniel Frohman presents THE SUPREME
Mary Pickford
in a characteristic triumph—
"RAGS" from the novel by Edith Bernard Delano
At the Bowersock Theatre
Tonight Only
Two complete shows 7:45 and 9:15
TOMORROW and SATURDAY:—Lenore Ulrich in an intense drama—“The Heart of Paula”
Senior Play April 26. Make Dates Now!
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
K.U. IN TWELVE INNINGS
Ames Lost 7 to 6 in Opening Game of Baseball Season
Kansas came near losing its star pitcher, Red Craig, in yesterday's Ames game when the veteran huren slid into second base and wrenched his knee badly. The injury was on the same limb hurt during the 1914 football season and with George Smee handy, Coach McCarty took no chances of any strain being put on it and Craig was promptly jerked on the pitch. As Smee entered the game with the scorer he secured the credit for winning the contest as far as the scoring is concerned goes to him.
FIRST BATTLE A THRILLER
Long Struggle Full of Unexpected Plays
COULDN'T HIT IN PINCHES
COULDN'T HIT IN PINCHES
A total of from thirteen to sixteen blows was registered by Kansas during the game, according to who kept score, and but five errors were put out. The jahawkball game compared with nineteen Antees. Buck U. hits never came in the pinch while the Crimson and Blue fielding misplays persisted in bobbing up when there were visitors on the bases.
Four hits, three of them for extra bases, base on balls at critical times mixed up with poor K. U. fielding, enabled the Ames Agrees to fight Kansas to a standstill for twelve long innings in yesterday afternoon's opening game of the Valley Conference and finally to lose by a 7 to 6 score.
The score:
AMES
AB R H PO
Davis cf 6 1 1 1 0
Aldridge ss 4 2 0 0 9
Carrigan 1b 3 1 0 14
Jones f 4 2 2 2 0
Kinnick 2b 3 0 0 7 3
Janda rf-p 5 0 1 1 3
Evans f 5 0 0 0 0
Stewart c 5 0 0 5 1
Elder 3b 5 0 0 0 4
Merrill p 2 0 0 0 3
40 6 4 34 23 9
One out when winning run was
40 6 4 34 23 9
KANSAS AB R H PO A
Gibben b 3 6 0
Wandell cf 5 2 2 2 0
Wood ss 2 1 1 2 1
Smee lf 4 2 2 4 0
Chimery lf 4 2 0 4 0
Walter rf 2 1 2 2 0
Travis rf 4 0 0 0 0
Weber b 1 0 0 5 0
Groft 4 0 1 2 0
Deaher 2b 4 0 0 1 3
L.Weltm c 5 0 1 4 0
Craig p 3 0 1 0 2
Chase 0 1 0 0 0
1. One out when winning run was scored
42 7 13 35 9 5
2. Chase ran for Groft in the 12th
3. Carrigan run, bunted third
story.
The score by innings:
Weltmer. Three base hits, Smee, Jones.
Two base hits, Jones, Janda, L
Welttren.
Ames 300 010 020 000
Kansas 302 000 010 00x
The summary
Sacrifice hits, Kennick, Deaver, I Weltm
bases, Smith, Jones
Stolen bases, Davis, Jones, Weher
Adldridge.
Base on balls, off Craig 2, Smee B Merrill 2, Janda 2.
Double play, Jaya to Carrigan.
Struck out, by Craig 5, by Snee 6
to Carrigan.
Hit by pitcher, Kinnick by Craig.
Hits off Craig 3 in eight innings off Smee 1 in four innings, off Janda 5 in four innings, off Merrill 8 in seven innings.
Time of game 3:45. Umpire, Owen.
SHOW FAMOUS FOLIOS
In commemoration of the Shakespeare Tercentenary the University library has placed in the hallway of Spooner library, an exhibit case in which are some of the most interesting works of the Shakespeare collection of 1,250 volumes.
Early Shakespeare Editions on Exhibit in Spooner
This collection contains no rarities nor valuable Shakespeare originals, but fortunately many of the more important items have been represented. The collection consists of forty three volumes of the quarta faciesimis, photo- lithographed by William Griggs.
Among the books shown the following ones are worth special mention: Methuen facsimile reprint of 1623, 1632, 1664 and 1685; a fine copy of the Booth reprint; the Howard Staunton reprint of the first folio; and a copy of the facsimile of the Chatsworth copy of 1623; a facsimile of the dissertation of the Duke of Devonshire, with an introduction and census of copies by Sir Sidney Lee.
Senior invitations at check stand in Fraser, April 3-8. Get them early. Adv. $128.$
Miners Tell About Experiences
Milner's Tell About Experiences
Writing under a great air pressure
when being in the experience,
say several mining enquiries,
were taken into the caisson under the
river last week. One of these who
was on the expedition said that they
experienced no inconvenience in
breathing. It took them several min-
utes to take the title in the caisson,
and one who tried to breathe in the
nose he nearly blew it off his face.
Other parties of engineers will be taken into the caisson this week by Prof. Arthur Terrill of the depart- ment, who will mine engineering. Those who wish to take the trip can register on a card on the board at Haworth Hall.
HEARS THE REHEARSAL
Reporter Intrudes and Sees "Copping the Grapes" as
Stop the music, Mr. Pianist, have the lights turned down and ask the leading man to look behind all the scenery to see if it has ears—we're about to give away a secret. Every-weather reporter snaked in a Kansas reporter sneaked in a museum of the senior play, "Copping the Grapes." No, we can't tell who he is—Alton Gumbiner and Don Burnett wouldn't stop at murder. They want to keep the thing secret, so that it will be a success. And besides they're mad anythings wrong, an announced the date of the play a month later, May 26 instead of April 26.
The rehearsal last night wasn't as spirted as it might have been and the males in the cast deserve criticism because they let the leading lady go home alone, while the weepy maiden aunt had three escorts. Director Macintosh came to the actors, in forceful terms, that she wanted satisfied, and if sarcasm is really the way to get under people's skins they must have understood him.
The policeman forgot his lines and couldn't for the life of him say 'eminent eligibility committee.' He told the author that he didn't have an answer to the question. The burglar tried to make love to the man, the leading man, who is engaged to her, nearly went to sleep, instead of gnawing his nails.
The author asked the leading man if he thought that he was playing the part of a person who had been married for two years, and that worthy son. A boy named Ubcle Jimmy banquet the night before, and that his love had been drowned.
The play is divided into two acts, an epilogue and a prologue, and if it's as funny as the rehearsal all payers will get their money's worth.
ARE LOOKING FOR WORK
Students Not Afraid to Labor During Summer Vacation
---
"What are going to do this summer?"
This expression is a familiar one among the men and women of the University at this season of the year. Believing in the old adage "it's the early bird that catches the worm," many students are already looking forward to employment. Even up to this time, more students have been received at the Employment Bureau than were received during the whole second semester last year.
Last year, twenty-three women secured summer work through the Employment Bureau. The nature of the job required them to dip canvasing and made a success of t. The last report of the Employment Bureau shows that out of the two or three hundred men students which had enrolled, eighty-one were doing summer work.
But a much larger per cent of students get jobs for the summer "on their own hook." Many of the men work in the harvest fields, others work in father's office, still others do canvassing and a few even play baseball.
Rhea Heath, of football fame, went to Kansas City, Tuesday to serve as an election judge. Judging from the reports of the rough work done in the election, it might have been well if the whole football team and company "M" had gone along with Heath for the day.
Six women in the University are doing junior chauqua work, a few work on newspapers, others work in stores and offices and a few labor during vacation enlarging their hope chests.
J. C. Tibbets, a special in journalism, went to Kansas City Tuesday to study the election and learn how the papers handed the election.
But at any event K. U. Students are not afraid to work!
Senior invitations at check stand in Fraser, April 3-8. Get them early... Adv. 128.*
Obtain comfort, fit and style in your spring clothes by consulting Schulz.—Adv.
Fruit salad, whipped cream and wafera, ten cents a plate. Wiedenman.
H. H. LEAGUE LAUNCHED
Fridays and Saturdays are fruit salad days at Wiedmann's.-Adv.
Schedule of Games Prepared-
Managers Must Hand in
Names
Hash House League captains or managers must hand in a list of players by Friday.
Hash House League baseball games will operate Saturday under the rules in force last year, pending the prepaRE of a revised set of regulations by the league. The games has been drafted, which appears elsewhere in the Kansan. Each of the twelve teams will play Saturday, making six games in all, three in division. Two will be played in the morning and four in the afternoon.
The Commission decided last night to require the captain or manager of each club to hand in a list of players not later than Friday night, indicating what men are not regular boarders at the club the team represents. These men will be copied on copy desk of the Daily Kansan, or moved to John Gliesner, 1250 Tenn. St.
Send the Daily Kansan home to the folks.
We have a large line of box candies.
Our own and other makes. Wiedemann
Phi Delta Psi, the honorary society for senior women at the University of Illinois, has just given its annual spring party to which all junior girls are invited. At this party every year, 15 juniors are chosen for election to the senior society. Girls are selected on basis of personality and activities in which they take part, but the friendship has some weight. The invitations are issued regularly fortunate ones before May 1 when the names are published. All meetings and activities of Phi Delta Psi are secret.
The Commission wishes to call the attention of the managers to the clause in last year's rule which requires that at least five players of a team in the field must be regular boarders, and that at no time can the number be less. Players on the Varsity may participate in Hush House League games without provision that they do not occupy positions toward which they aspire on the Varsity. "K" men may also play, with the same restriction.
The matter of obtaining cups or medals for awards is being investigated, and also the possibility of ob-
servance from the Athletic Association.
The Cercle Francais met this after noon at 4:30 in Fraser Hall. Mnd de mure talked of her experiences in Paris, and of Paris itself.
Clarence Gorril and Russel Friend, 18 Colege, received an icey bath Satuary in Lake View when their canoe appears at a row was the cause of the spill.
"Hydraulic Power Development" was the subject of an illustrated lecture read last night for the Engineers by Prof. J. O. Jones, professor of hydraulics. The lecture was sent out to teachers of water power by the Pelton Water Wheel Co., showing the details of the development of water power by the old wheel and the new turbines. The lecture is being sent to all of the larger universities in the United States to bring them up to speed that wish it. About seventy-five engineers attended the lecture.
The Deutsche Verein held their regular meeting Monday afternoon and were entertained with an illustrated lecture given by Prof. H. O. Kruse, instructor in the department of German. The slides dealt with the various aspects brought out in his lecture. In his talk he touched upon the nature of the country, the industries, the conditions, the historical development and the dangers and difficulties confronting modern Germany.
Show Pictures of Germany
ANNOUNCEMENTS
The Sigma Xi banquet will be held Thursday night, April 13, at I. O. O. F. Hall. The members, as well as the five weave, will be there (whatever the case may be) will be there.
I will pay two and a half cents for each copy of the mining edition. Professor Terrill.
Women students, living west of Tennessee and south of fourteenth street, are invited to a district meeting at 7 o'clock at 1408 Tennessee.
All Men Students are requested to be in Fraser Chapel at 12:30 p. m., Tuesday, April 12, to vote on the proposed cheerleader amendment to the constitution of the Men's Student Council.
Coach Olecott wants 25 more out for spring football practice every afternoon. Spring training lasts until April 20.
No Sooph Hop Farc rehearsals will be held this week, as the gym will be in use. Everybody out—cast, chorus, next Monday afternoon at 4:30 a.m.
K. U. Debating Society meets in room 313 Fraser Hall Thursday at 8:00 p. m. Election of officers, followed by a Dutch feed at Bricken's.
Football practice 10 o'clock Satur-
Adv.
Senior invitations at check stand in Praser, April 3-8. Get them eary. -Adv. 126.5
Do the great financiers of the country go without ample life insurance? Can you afford to go without it easier than they can?
L.S. Broughly
Lecture on Hydraulics
Indestructo Trunks Bags and Suit Cases Sold Exclusively by Johnson & Carl
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CARROLL'S
?
The Frowzy Germ
The little pet pictured above is the *Bacillus Stevenlye* ens, in common parlance the "Frowny Germ." He is present in great numbers in every part of the world, and what he lacks in personal appearance, he fully makes up in seal when he gets on the job.
PLACING THE BLAME WHERE IT BELONGS
The discovery and segregation of the "Frowzy Germ" forms an achievement fit to endure in the annals of Science along with the discovery of Agchylostoma Duodenella, Uncinaria Americana and allied nematodes as the cause of Ankylostomiais. In fact, there are those who contend that the discovery and segregation of Bacillus Slovenly-cus is of even more far-reaching importance than the discovery and segregation of Agchylostoma Duodenella. It is urged by such contenders, that whereas Ankylostomiais has been confined chiefly to the South, there is no region in all the world free from the ravages of the terrible "Frowzy Germ."
For the benefit of non-scientific readers, who after all are most concerned, let it be made known that Ankylostomiasis is short for Hook Worm disease and the Aegyklostoma Duodenale, with his playmates, Uncinaria Americana and the nematodes, are the cheerful little chaps who produce that form of sickness.
It was formerly supposed that the lackadaisical, don't-care, what's-it-matter attitude of the Georgia "cracker," for example, was due entirely to laziness and general cussedness, but charitable Science lingered on the phenomenon and has shown that, as a matter of fact, this apparent worthlessness is really the work of a large colony of little worms armed with hooks, which attach themselves to the small intestines of the victim and suck the blood from the intestinal walls, at the same time robbing him of all a man's natural ambition and initiative.
In similar manner, it is now shown by the advance of Science that all the slovenly men and women we see around us in everyday life, are neglectful of their appearance, not because they want to be, but because they are afflicted with the presence of the Bacillus Slovenly-cus, or "Frowzy Germ."
It has always been the belief that men and women were unmindful of their persons either because they were too mean and stingy to spend money for better clothes, or because they had some strong predisposition to carelessness, but now these theories are completely upset by the remarkable discoveries of the group of patient and world-famous scientists who have segregated this vindictive Frowzy Germ.
Of course, it will be realized that until this discovery was made, the general public were not to be blamed for regarding a shabby, untidy appearance in man and a dowdy exterior in woman as substantial evidence of stinginess and carelessness, or both. These scientists, however, were quick to see that since a neat and well-ordered appearance in such a constant source of profit to man or woman, in business or in the personal and social relations with the rest of the world, and since such an appearance is so easily secured and maintained, there must be some unguessed cause for anyone falling away from such a condition.
Quickly the scientists pricked the idea of *stinginess* being the cause, for, as they have remarked, was it not a fact that very often those who gave least attention to their clothes were among the freest spenders in other directions? Surely then it was not stinginess. The belief in some natural predisposition of skin to stinginess by those relentless scientists, for it was found upon investigation that these were the quickest to demand that their homes and offices be kept in good condition.
To follow, bit by bit, the trail of these patient scientists through an une years that have led up to their announcement that at last they have grasped the cause of the slovenly, frowzy, dowdy persons one sees about him, would be to weary the lay reader and so let it suffice that the cause is known and, in passing, it may be said that during the patient laboratory experiments and world-wide observations of this group of illustrious men, they have accumulated vast quantities of data, the least part of which would convince any normal-minded man of the truth of their deductions.
THE STRANGE CASE OF MADAME X.
Among some of the interesting cases observed, may be mentioned that of a certain beautiful young woman, referred to in the record as Madam X. She was always known as a person of great taste in matters of dress until shortly after her marriage to a young man of distinguished family, when she began to lose the subtle essence of her charm. The gold of her hair was unfaded, the blue in her eyes undimmed, but no longer did she convey to others that impression of grace which once had delighted all who knew her.
Little by little this charming young matron changed into a dowdy, careless woman. Her husband, once a model of conjugal devotion, gradually came to display less and less interest in her and finally the whole community one morning was shocked to learn that he had disappeared from its midst at just the same time a beautiful chorus girl was leaving. The wife, of course, was protracted and while in that condition, it chanced a member of this scientific group had the rare opportunity to make a blood test. Squirmiling and wiggling among the red and white blood corpuscles, almost unnoticeable among the many varieties of familiar bacteria which infest the human blood stream, the investigator came suddenly upon the amiable creature pictured on this page. Presto! At last he had found the cause of the young bride's carelessness. While her friends had been cruelly gossiping and blaming her for her changed appearance, she in reality had been suffering from the ravages of the Bacillus Slovenly-cus.
THE SACRIFICE OF THE PROFESSOR'S SON.
In feverish haste—but not without all due scientific care—the professor made cultures of this germ and then one night he syliy injected a few million sons of our Frowsy pet into the arm of his own son, as he slept in his bed at home. The transformation was swift and marvelous! The professor's son, a carefully groomed young man—the pink of fashion—and on the threshold of a successful business career, began at once to fall away from his former ideals of dress. From a model of sartorial perfection, he became a careless, slovenly figure, a reproach to the business house that employed him. His advancement stopped, he took to drink and finally lost his position. What his end might have been, Heaven alone knows, had not his Spartan father suddenly come to his rescue and by strong administrations of a new anti-toxin, rescued him as a brand from the burning.
THE CURE IS PAINLESS AND SURE.
By such observations and experiments, these careful scientists have left no doubt of the baneful activities of the Bacillus Slovenly-cus, and now they have prepared a cure.
Every person who suffers from the presence of Frowzy Germs—the symptoms are plain and unmistakable—is invited to present himself, or herself, to the nearest clothing or women's wear retailer sometime during the period from March 27 to April 8 and be inoculated with a liberal dose of Dress Up serum. These world renowned scientists, who are to be credited with the discovery of this germ, are willing to guarantee that anyone who will take part in the Spring Dress Up and will realize the importance of clothes, will never again suffer from the Bacillus Levenus-cyx.
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VOLUME XIII.
REUNION STAGE IS SET
Wiring For Transcontinental Alumni Meeting Now Finished
START SEVEN FORTY-FIVE
NUMBER 131
Five Hundred Will Listen on as Many Phones
UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS, FRIDAY AFTERNOON, APRIL 7, 1916.
All tickets have been given out. If any ticket-holder finds that he can not attend, he will do a kindness by returning his ticket to the Alumni Office.
The wiring of the gymnasium was finished today and everything is ready for the transcontinental reunion tomorrow night. The preliminary test will be made Saturday morning. Workmen have been busy for two weeks to commence an investment to accommodate five hundred seniors and alumni, who will gather in the gym to hear programs in New York and San Francisco.
Special request is made that everybody be in his place at the gym promptly at 7:45. The wire will "open" on the instant.
Four copper wires, the thickness of a lead pencil and worth a million and a half dollars, will bring together from ocean to ocean members of the Alumni Association of the University of Minnesota Saturday night at 7:45 o'clock.
With receivers to their ears five hundred alumni and seniors, congregated in the Gymnasium will hear the roll call come over the 14,400 miles of copper wire. Then Mr. E. C. Alder will exchange greetings with Chancellor Frank Strong at Lawrence and Prof. W. R. Carruth in San Francisco. The Chancellor will next deliver a five mile tour of campus in San Lawrence, New York and San Francisco. After the reading of a resolution adopted by the New York Alumni, "Life at K. U." will be sung by Ben Brune at New York.
"The Crimson and the Blue" first verse by the New York audience, second verse by Lawrence and third verse by Nicholas Sparks will follow. Lucius Sayre in New York will exchange greetings with Dean Sayre of Lawrence. After a musical selection from San Francisco, the Star Singer will close with a good-night roll call.
Professor Carruth will then talk three minutes followed by a musical selection by the K. U. Glee Club, Greetings will be exchanged by acquaintances at each coast. Mrs. Florence Finch Kelly in New York will speak a few seconds with her son Sherwin Kelly in Lawrence.
To accomplish transcontinental telephony the Bell Telephone Company has used 6,200,000 pounds of copper wire and one hundred and four-four thousand telephone poles. To put Lawrence on the transcontinental network the alumina association meetings in New York and San Francisco a circuit was established between Lawrence and Omaha a distance of 250 miles.
RUB-A-DUB-DUB!
EACH GIRL IN A TUB!
Freshmen, Junior and Senior.
With the confidence of Henry Ford, four Annette Kellermans stepped into four tubs to race for the opposite side of the pool at the Splash Party given for women at Robinson Gymnasium, last night. Just as the peace plans sank in the water, they carried their fair freight to the depths below, and the race was finished a la side stroke, Australian crawl and 'over and over.'
Splash! Forty swimmers had volunteered to remove the twelve floating mines without touching them, the removal, the twelve applicants for a Carnegie medal试饮 to drinking from one to twenty gallons of water. Oh while they were on the apples.
Faithful but tricky Old Dobbin, in disguise of a barrel, threw every rider; in spite of the fact that he was a man of strength and absolute failure. Five finished the last game, Follow the Leader; jackknife dives, back somersaults, double turns from diving board, platforms, and tables; too stremmous for most of the party.
Appetites, eats, and a vote of thanks.
Women's archery class will meet every day at 4:30 instead of 3:30 o'clock.
Send the Daily Kansan home to the folks.
Plain Tales from the Hill
In explaining the chapter on attention to one of his psychology classes recently, Professor Dockery wandered off on absent mindedness—that is to say, he told a story about an absent minded professor.
At the next meeting of the class, absent mindedness was receiving no little attention on the part of the students. To revive them, Professor Gurdas Kumar and Radha provided method and cited an incident illustrating absent mindedness.
A titter went around the room, no load outbursts as usual. It was the same story which he had told at the previous meeting.
Professor Olin, in class in education: "Of course I have no right to ask you this question, but does anyone happen to know the name of the stove which was called after Benjamin Franklin?"
Student: "Franklin stove."
Professor Olin: "Good, Miss Blank.
Dr. Alberta Corbin, instructor in the department of German, is meeting her classes after having been deferred for two months on account of illness.
A regiment of medic students set upon a punitive expedition Monday morning in pursuit of a freshman bandit who boldly stole across the campus without wearing his little cap. The villa(in), after being chased down to 13 and Louisiana streets, eluded his pursuers. The medics returned en masse, a sorrowful and disappointed lot.
The effects of the colossal war in Europe have at last reached the men at K. U. in a direct and poignant way. The price of hair-cuts (feather-edge or round cut, it makes no difference) jumped last Saturday from twenty-five to thirty-five cents at the long tonal parlor.
"Everything looks fresh and green like spring," remarked Kyle Cyclops, as a freshman with his pre-Easter headgear passed by.
Roy Kent visited his sister, Miss Clara Kent at the Gamma Phi Beta house and incidentally his fraternal brothers at the Kappa Sigma house this week-end. Kent attended the University during his freshman and sophomore years and is now in the College of Emporia, at Emporia.
Prof. R. M. Ogden, who has bee out of town on business for the past week, is again conducting his psychology classes. Prof. F. C. Dockeray has been managing his classes during his absence.
Clark Bruington, 164, Law is the possessor since last Saturday of a brand new apartment to his house in Dodge City with it when the school year is endy
Miss Myra Johnson, a student at the Kansas State Normal at Emporia visited Lucille Hampson, '19 College Sunday.
Prof. C. C. Crawford's class in English history was reviewing the turbulent reign they undertook when the tungled domestic relations of that monarch and how frequently death came to his discarded wives. The last two minutes of class wore given over to asking questions about the lives of those understood in the lesson. A voice finally inquired: What became of Catherine after the king had divorced her? Professor Crawford looked at her and said: "She was allowed to die."
This may be Leap Year, but that is no excuse for the posters advertising the Soph Hop to picture the lady always leading the man. All the posters so far have the lady in the wrong position with her left arm extended.
When the faculty and the student body of the School of Law took their cuts Wednesday they felt that hankering desire to stand on the steps of Green Hall again. With the building empty, they knew that it would appear strange to the other students as they passed by and found no law on duty.
So, several of the laws climbed wearily up the Hill to stand at their post. When they came up and pressed on the steps. There they remained for some time.
From three to sixty tons of coal are used daily at the University, depending on the season of the year and the severity of the weather. This coal is obtained at a cost of a little more than moderated weather the heating plant fires up only about four or five hours each day, using on an average five tons of coal.
They can't stay away!
In reading an extract from an abolition to his class in American history Wednesday, Professor Davis came upon a reference to children as little David, and Professor Davis, "and I have come across many a rhinestone in my life."
Prof. R. D. O'Leary has heard the call of warm weather and is having a large sleeping porch built at the residence of his residence at 1306 la. street,
TWO MIXERS A MONTH HOLD PATRIOTIC FEAST
Sophomores Agree to Have Their Get-togethers Every Two Weeks
Sophomores Agree to Have
CORN COB-AFFAIR APRIL 18
Ten Cents Will Admit—Koester Working on Program
"A sure enough pep party" was the verdict of the seventy-five sophomores who attended the Hall of Fame in 1989 mixer The Classroom. Successful was the event that similar ones are to be held every two weeks in the future, the next being scheduled for November.
Professor Thorpe slipped the provisional fireworks under everybody's chair by urging the building of a University commons where get-together nights could be held with less trouble, less expense, and more convenience.
UNIVERSITY COMMONS
"You can't build a commons torror row, of course," said Professor Thorpe "but there's no reason why a series of mixers such as this shouldn't lead to clubhouse in the future. Why don't you have these class mixers often?"
Acting on the suggestion, the mixer committee has announced a "corn cob mixer" for Tuesday, April 18. The price of admission will be one dime. It was placed low in order that every sophomore man might be induced to take a course with some lively boxing matches, some snappy mask, and more peppery talks.
ANOTHER ONE APRIL 18
E. C. Bricken to Banquet Championship Team at Oread
WILL DELAY H. H. GAMES
Cafe
The Hash House League baseball games, which were to have begin tomorrow, have been postponed on account of the snow. The games slated for this week will probably be transferred to the end of the schedule, as it will be finished in ample time to permit another week's play.
The attention of the managers and captains is called to the rule which requires a list of players to be handed in, showing what men are regular boarders at the clubs, and those who are not. The name turned in to the copy desk at the Daily Kansan or mailed to John Glisserman, 1425 Tenn. Street.
E. C. Bricken, proprietor of the Oread Cafe, has offered to banquet the championship team of the Hash House League. Brick promises a white velvet table and linen, and all the trimmings, to the nine that wins the pennant.
"Every member of the faculty and student body of the University of Kansas must interest Kansans in the proper maintenance of this institution," said Mrs. Cora G. Lewis, a law professor at the university, in her talk to the women of the faculty at the University of Kansas, Thursday afternoon in Fraser Hall.
SOCIAL LIFE VALUABLE
Mrs. Lewis Urges Women to Enter Politics for University
"Kansans must be taught to be cheerful taxpayers and the woman of the University can do her share in the teaching by enlarging her life in teaching. We have a university qualified to be a leader in her community; it is expected of her.
"Every woman on the faculty is a central distributing power for all that is good and should influence the representatives of practically every county in Kentucky, and we feel in the class room alone; there is need for personal contact and social compatibility between the women of the faculty and student body. The state of Kansas does not recognize the faculty and has made no provision for it."
The Weather
Mrs. Lewis told how other states furnish their universities with halls of residence for the young women and a woman's building, whereby bringing the social life of the institution under the influence of the faculty.
She urged women to enter politics and vote for the man loyal to the University and furthermore to inform the state over the state with loyalty to K, U.
The Forecast: Fair and colder tonight with temperature considerably below freezing. Saturday fair and warmer west portion.
K. N.G.s Meet in Merchants' Hal—Banquet and Hear Talks by Officers
ONE HUNDRED PRESENT
Adj. Gen. C. I. Martin Praises
Company M
With miniature American flags standing guard over the menus and patriotic selections sung by a victoria. Company M of the Kansas National Guards held its second annual banquet in the Merchants Association Hall Thursday night. Nearly one hundred officers and men were present.
The banquet began promptly at 7 o'clock and lasted for three hours. Captain Hugh Means, Regimental Adjutant of the First Infantry, was the first speaker and gave a talk on "Patriotism."
"No nation can exist very long without its people being patriotic in every sense of the word," he said. "Of course, there is a certain amount of it in this country but not enough; we have all been too interested in chasing the dollar to give a thought to the protection of our country."
Adjustant General Charles I. Martin, praised the showing made by Company M in the recent inspection. Company M is a military organization in this country in which there is no commercialism. According to his belief it will not be many years before every import would be delivered; he will have required military courses.
Chaplain James Naismith, spoke on the part athletics played in the army, and the necessity for physical training. Major Carl Phillips then explained the work of the Medical Corps at the time, and one moment of the First Infantry, spoke for a few moments on the importance of being a hard and efficient worker.
Sergeants Merrill F. D. Daum and Sherwin F. Kelly gave short talks on different phases of army work. Captains Walter C. Sweeney, and Albert J. who were scheduled for a talk, were able to attend the banquet.
K. U. HELPS HOME TOWN
Information Bureau Spreads the Gospel of Better Cities Over
State
Did you know that a league which is working for the betterment of conditions in your home towns has its head office at the University of Kansas? It has.
The League of Kansas Municipalities was organized in 1910. The membership of any Kansas city in this league is authorized by law and any city may by ordinance appropriate money out of the general fund to pay employees for the expenses of two delegates to the meet- ners of the league.
Homer Talbot, secretary of the league, conducts an information buruer here which answers scores of inquiries daily not only from cities which are league members but others as well. The questions relate as a rule to the city officials in cases in which city officials do not know the correct form to be used or wish to know what state laws govern the passing of such ordinances.
The league holds a convention each year at some city which it specifies. At the convention held in Hutchinson last October there was an attendance of about 10,000 people four Kansas cities and towns. The next meeting will be held in Independence on October 11, 12, and 13. At these conventions problems of city administration are discussed and information and experience thereon circulated.
“There are two things we are working for,” said Secretary Talbot when asked about the work of the league, which includes other the initiative and referendum. We need especially the home rule,—an amendment securing to the people of the cities the right to local self-government and the general laws of the state.”
HOLD CONVENTIONS
One hundred and thirty Kansas cities and towns have joined the league during the last five years that organized it. Every city official in these cities receives a monthly magazine edited by the secretary of the league, Homer Talbot, in which municipal problems and every section of the state are discussed.
The Forty Club will have its annual spring party at F. A. U. Hall, May 5, according to the plans discussed at their meeting at the Kanza River Park. The club also have a dance at Woodland Park Saturday beginning at 8:30 p.m.
WORKING FOR HOME RULE
The officers elected for the coming year are; Horace Chandler, president; John Dykes, vice-pres.; and Wilfred Wann, sec. and treas.
CHANCE TO ORGANIZE AERIAL CORPS—JONES
"The formation of aerial corps is a new proposition," said Prof. F. E. Jones yesterday. "I think that there is a good chance for the formation of a corps at the University, provided the right person gets behind the movement. There might be an organization of men, not necessarily aeronauts, but astronaut engineers. There are many students who are interested in those particular phases of the work and I have no doubt that if they had the right kind of boosting they would form an Aerial Corps."
Y. M. CABINET IN TONIGHT
Installation Banquet to be Held in Myers Hall
The Y. M. C. A. cabinet for the coming year will be installed at a banquet given this evening from 5 to 7 o'clock in Myers Hall. The members of the cabinet for the year which has just ended, the new cabin and the faculty members of the Y. M. C. A. board will be present at the banquet. The address被 addressed by Chancellor Strong, Rex Miller, the president for the past year and Edward Todd, the incoming president.
The cabinet for the coming year follows: president, Edward Todd; vice-present, Harry Harlan; recording secretary, Lester Evans; and the following chairmen, religious meetwork, work on behalf of the work, harland Russell; new students, Lester Evans; social, Homer Herriott; employment, association stenographer; missions, John Calene; publicity, Clarendon Havehurst; boys work, Lawrence Nelson; memorial team, Chas. Slason; conventions, Benjamin Baltzer; Bible study, John B. Dail; visit reception, Fred Rodkey.
Dean Blackmar (in sociology class); "Miss Gossard, do you really think that women should adopt military tactics and become soldiers?"
Plain Tales from the Hill
Mary Cossard: "Well! yes I think they should and I could, then they could
Dean Blackmar: "Ahem! I think I shall leave the nabbit of war and war
The Chi Omega sorority held its annual Founder's Day banquet at the chapter house Wednesday evening April 5. The alumnae back for the banque were, Misses Gertürd Dunne and Misses Anne Dornan. Oswego, Josephine Todd of Leavenworth, Erna Fischer and Pearly Emily of Lawrence.
Miss Nellie M. Stevenson, of the extension department, is a very honest person. When she found a pocketbook on a crowded street car after the Passing Show Tuesday evening, she went to an unusual amount of trouble to find its owner, who was Mrs. J. T. Buchanan.
LAWRENCE CAMERA CLUB
EXHIBIT NEXT WEEK
The annual exhibit of the Lawrence Camera club will be held in the Fine Arts rooms in the Administration building next week. The exhibit of the club this year will be similar to those of former years. Many new pictures will be shown with the best of past work.
The club is now the oldest camera club in America although it was not the first one organized. Other clubs have been organized, have had their day and died, but the Lawrence club has survived. The last secondeen years and is today one of the most national organizations of the kind in the country
While the days of the exhibit have not been decided on yet, nor the pictures that are to be shown sent up, Prof W. A. Griffith believes they are important enough by taking the three flights of stairs even by people that are not camera flends.
Dean P. F. Walker on Tanning
Dean P. F. W. Walker of the school of engineering who is visiting different towns in southeastern Kansas for the purpose of investigating and arousing interest in manufacturing and the industrial possibilities of the state, spoke last night at Intercounty members. One point which Dean Walker is emphasizing in his talks, is the possibility of developing the tanning industry. Kansas has the raw materials for this business and the manufacturing industry would be lost in instances instead of Dean Walker believes.
Student Seriously Hurt
Roscoe S. Harrington, a freshman from Augusta, was seriously injured this morning in the basement of the Gymnasium. Returning from under the showers after class he fell backward upon the floor striking on the head. A third of his life was in the basement at the same time and with the help of several students carried Harrington up to Dr. James Naisthim's office.
RIVALS DEBATETONIGHT
Kansas and Missouri Clash On Fraser Rostrum—Gov. Caper Will Preside
THE FIGHT WILL BE SHARP
Subject One of Great Interest to Sport Lovers
The debate between the University of Missouri and the University of Kansas on the question, resolved: that intercollegiate athletics should be abandoned in American colleges and universities will be held in Fraser Hall at 8 o'clock tonight. Governor Arthur Capper will preside. The discussion promises to be an exciting one, on account of the interest which students all over the country would want to derive them from intercollegiate athletics. Should any attempt be made, the arguments for it would probably be the same as those brought out tonight by the Missouri debaters.
Kansas will be represented by two veterans, O. H. Burns, and H. A. Shim, and one new man, Rayner Wittman, who is negative of the question, namely, that American colleges and universities should not be deprived of the right to rival each other in football, basketball, track, or other athletic competitions. W. W. Fuller and F. Gableman will argue the affricative for Missouri.
The judges are: H. J. Haskell, of the Kansas City Star; L. A. Helbert, of the Kansas City Commission in Kansas City; and Rabbi M. H. Mayer, also of Kansas City Mo.
The debate will begin promptly at 8 o'clock. Student tickets will admit.
WINTER MAKES LAST CALL
Overcoats Again Reappear as Cold Wave Hits K. U.
Reports have stopped coming in to the weather bureau here that students are swimming in Potter's Lake, and not a single voice chirped over the phone that a dandelion is blooming in some remote corner of the campus. Winter has decided to give a few skid marks of resistance. It hasn't been cold enough to injure crops but it was cold enough Thursday to make overcoats in demand and walking or freshman caps decided uncomfortably.
"It is frequent that we have snow in April but it seldom falls so heavily," said Prof. F. E. Kester, weather forecaster and professor of meteorology at the lowest temperature last night was 34 compared to that of 52 of last year.
There is consolation in the fact, and it would be a good thing to think of as we trudge through the slush, that no water is eye trouble than April snow water.
COMPANY M MAKING PLANS
TO HAVE DRILL OUTDOORS
Beginning next Tuesday evening,
Company M, K. N. G., will hold its weekly
meetings on an earlier hour than the gymnasium
on an earlier hour that the custom during the winter months.
Many members of the company find it impossible to do any work on drill nights when drill begins at 8:30. The men work out for about an hour and a half, the regulation of the war department, and the entire evening is occupied by reporting to the armory, drilling and changing of uniforms.
"There is no reason why the men cannot be here at seven o'clock," said Capt. Frank E. Jones. "If we start at that time we would be able to drill outside in the daylight in a week or two. We could all be through by 8:30 at the very latest, and the rest of the evening would be free."
MONA CLARE HUFFMAN
PRESIDENT OF W. S. G. A
Mona Clare Huffman was elected president of the Women's Student Government Association held yesterday in Fraser. Before the polls closed on Friday, Mrs. Huffman was on in on the ballot for president. This was done without her knowledge, Miss Thompson says. In a similar manner the name of Edna Davis was entered, as opposed to Myrle Cross, candidate of the Representative of the School of Fine Arts.
After the votes were counted the results of the election were found to be: Mona Clare Huffman, president, Bess Ulrich, vice-president from the School of Fine Arts 257 votes; Katherine Reding, treasurer 280 votes; Hazel Carson, secretary 297 votes; while Janet Thompson, the minority candidate for president received 70 votes, and Edna the School run for vice-president from the School of Fine Arts received the votes of 43.
Alene Wilson cast the first vote that started the exciting election at nine o'clock while Nell Kennedy finished with the last ballot at six o'clock.
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Official student paper of the Univer- city of Kansas
EDITORIAL STAFF
Chas. S. Sturtevant...Editor-in-Chief
Miles W. Vaughn...Associate Editor
Raymond A. Fagan...Newa Editor
Raymond Clapper...Assistant
BUSINESS STAFF
William Cady... Business Manager
Michael Benventev... Adm. Manager
Cliff Wood... Manager
Paul Brindel
Don Davia
Relajón
John Gleisner
Harry Morgan
Subscription price $3.00 per year in advance; one term, $1.75.
Guy Scrivner
Cargill Sproull
Charles Sweet
Glenn Swogger
Vernon Moore
Entered as second-class mail mail under the letter of Kansas, Kansas, under the letter of Maryland, Maryland.
Published in the afternoon five
twenty-five minutes after
versity of Kansas, from the press of
Kansas City.
Address a1, communications to
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Lawrence, Kansas.
Phone, Bell K. U. 25.
The Daily Kansan aims to picture the undergraduate life of the faculty and more than merely printing the books, but rather using the University holds; to play no favorites; to be clean; to be cheerful; to be more auspicious; to leave more serious problems to wiser heads, in all, to help students identify the students of the University.
FRIDAY, APRIL 7, 1916
THE PARTITION OF THE INHER-
A Father had two Sons. He said to them: "When I die, divide every one."
When the Father died, the Sons could not divide without quarrelling. They went to a Neighbour to have said to them what they had asked them how their Father had answered and how his Father said. "He ordered us to divide everything into two equal parts."
"If so, tear all your garments into two halves, break your dishes into two halves, and cut all your cattle into halves." The Brothers obeyed their Neigh-
The Brothers obeyed their Neighbour and lost everything.
"SPRUCE UP?"
"The Campus Beautiful" has received a great deal of favorable comment of late. Comment is cheaply and easily given; it takes real work to make any lawn, any country home, any country estate, really beautiful. It is then work to keep it so.
Mr. Oread is acknowledged as being as beautiful a spot, with its historic buildings, as any campus in the Middle West. Visitors are always impressed by the beauty of the Wakaraus valley, by the wonderful sunsets so often seen, by the distant view of the lazy Kaw as it winds its way out of sight to the North and East.
But when they leave the natura views and look over the more matter of fact aspects of the campus, they are not so visibly impressed. There are cow paths made by thoughtless students who are too full of culture to keep to the walks, there are piles of boxes and litter behind the various buildings, there are few shrubs, there are fewer flowers. The buildings, some of which are old and rather dilapidated in appearance, are not covered, as they should be, by the clinging ivy.
Many things might be done, if a little thought were only given to the matter. The over-industrious dandelion that persists in poking its yellow head through the campus lawn might be challenged as to its right to exist on Mt. Oread. The weed could be eradicated with the combined efforts of all the University on a particular day set apart to "clean-up" the campus. Let us, by a combined effort, leave the University in June, in the most attractive dress it has ever worn.
THE LITTLE THINGS
When President Wilson speaks of Senator Charles Smith of Kansas, he says "Senator Curtis," not "Curtis," even though they are on familiar terms.
When a student speaks of a professor, even though he knows him ever so little, he usually says "Smith" instead of "Professor Smith."
Those high in official circles use proper titles in speaking of men. It's the little things that count.
THE OLD ORDER CHANGETH
THE OLD ORDER CHANGETH In the "good old days" we often hear the graduates tell how each school's hand was raised against the other. They were mortal enemies. They carried balls around on their
shoulders, hoping someone would "start something" so they might retaliate.
But "the old order changeth" and when the molasses-covered floor in the gymnasium was discovered just before the Engineers were to dance, no violent threats were heard. The followers of Dean Walker repaired the damage done, and went on quietly with their dance.
Now a still hunt has been instituted for the maurauders. Although some have insisted the deed should be laid to the Laws, yet when their banquet was held, no retaliation was attempted.
The self restraint shown hardly smacks of the high school days, when one class "layed" for another and insisted on "getting even" for a suspected wrong.
BROADEN YOURSELF
This is an age of specialization, but aren't we apt to overdo it? The engineer delves into his problems of mathematics, the astronomer carefully studies Bode's law, the Botanist peruses the latest treatise on respiration of plant life, but do they round out their lives with some knowledge of the outside world?
Does the student of engineering, of astronomy, of botany, or of any of the other studies followed at the University read outside his own field? If he is to be an intelligent factor in the life of his community, he must prepare himself to that end. And such preparation does not mean too great a degree of specialization. Living a top-sided and overdeveloped existence will not round out one's life as it should be.
The men in the world who are make well versed in several branches of human knowledge other than those in which they are primarily interested.
Jayhawk Squawks
The real trouble comes when a man's fancy doesn't turn "flighty."
By blaming it on spring, the average girl will array herself in a combination of colors that would make the rainbow feel like a gray goose in a fog.
A popular magazine advertises that it has the "funniest page in America." But Alec Sommers insists that the first prize goes to the chapern collyme of a neighboring metropolitan disturber.
The giraffe ought to be educated for he comes of a family of "High Browse."
One thing that's puzzling us is these stairs pretty girlts. Where do they stay durably?
"Iland歌 Pgi P! Phi" Girls alr
Tailed!"— headline, Aw, Allean
qelt
We note that a gentleman named Kuhl works at a drug store. Presumably he presides over the fountain.
As a rule, the greater number of friends a girl has, the more change of dress she can sport.
Sir Walter Scott was born at Edinburg in 1771. He first began his writing by translating Burger and Goethe, but he left his work to take up the job of a schoolmaster. In 1814 he published the first of his well-known "Waverly" novels. In spite of ill health he wrote incessantly in order to meet his bills, and gave to the world the novels and poems with all are so familiar. He died in '832.
Breathless there a man with soul so dead
"This is my land, my native land!"
"This is my land, my native land!"
PATRIOTISM
POET'S CORNER
As home is in his footsteps he hath turned
from wandering on a path, through
strife. 1876
For him no minestrel captures awel;
Boundless the wealth as well can
Boundless the wealth as well can
Dr. Mary Merritt Crawford, a Cornell graduate has just returned to America from work in the French hospitals. She paints graphic pictures of the war; pictures from a femininely sympathetic point of view, horrible though they may be. The New York Tribute tells of a peculiar devotion between two inmates of her ward, one an Irishman, the other an Arab, as follows:
A WAR FRIENDSHIP
Despite these titles, power, anpu pus-
rue, and the name of his house,
Living, shall forfeit fair renown,
and the property of his wife.
To the vile duat whence he spreng-
unpte, unphephed, and taunt him.
Wu watt.
Little Slugi, an Arab boy of eighteen, who had part of his hand shot away, ran across Pat one day and fell desperately in love with him. There is no other way to describe his devotion. He followed him everywhere, and soon slugs slapped sions from him, would kiss him night and morning, and when Pat went out Slugi would sit the picture of woe at a window watching for Pat's return, haunted by the fear that Pat was leaving for England and hadn't told him. Pat would say to me: "Indade, I can't believe you if I could take him with me." I'd kape him all my life." But, of course, it was impossible.
Their parting was tragic. Pat was taken away a week before Christmas. Slugi was a wreck. He transferred a small part of his devotion to me, because I gave him a copy of this picture. While I was ill little Slugi was sent away too. He has probably gone back to Algeria, for he is useless as a fighter. He has Pat's home address and all will need send him letters for a while. I told Pat one day to appreciate Slugi's devotion because he never get such love and lovely again, or at least never get any more.
| | Midway | Stole | Oread | Dunakin | Garret | Stevenson |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Midway | READ | April 8 HW 10 | April 15 HW 10 | April 29 HW 8 | May 6 N7 8 | May 13 HW 10 |
| Stole | April 8 HW 10 | BASEBALL | May 13 HW 2 | May 6 HW 8 | April 15 HE 2 | April 20 HW 10 |
| Oread | April 15 HW 10 | May 13 HW 2 | NEW8 | April 8 HW 4 | April 29 HW 1.30 | May 6 HW 10 |
| Dunakin | April 29 HW 8 | May 6 HW 8 | April 8 HW 4 | IN THE | May 13 HW 4 | April 15 HW 2 |
| Garret | May 6 N7 8 | April 15 HE 2 | April 29 HW 1.30 | May 13 HW 4 | DAILY | April 8 HE 4 |
| Stevenson | May 13 HW 10 | April 29 HW 10 | May 6 HW 10 | April 15 HW 2 | April 8 HE 4 | KANSAN |
| | Walling | Star | Nemo | Draper | Grady | Heflebower |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Wailing | DAILY | April 8 HE 10 | April 15 HE 10 | April 29 HE 1:30 | May 13 HE 4 | May 6 N7 10 |
| Star | April 8 HE 10 | KANSAN | May 13 HE 2 | May 6 HE 8 | April 29 HE 10 | April 15 HE 4 |
| Nemo | April 15 HE 10 | May 13 HE 2 | PRINTS | April 8 HE 2 | May 6 HE 10 | April 29 HE 8 |
| Draper | April 29 HE 1:30 | May 6 HE 8 | April 8 HE 2 | 'ALL' | April 15 HW 4 | May 13 HE 10 |
| Grady | May 13 HE 4 | April 29 HE 10 | May 6 HE 10 | April 15 HW 4 | SPORT | April 8 HW 2 |
| Heflebower | May 6 N7 10 | April 15 HE 4 | April 29 HE 10 | May 13 HE 10 | April 8 HW 2 | NEWS |
I gave Slugi chiroform one night when he had to have another finger taken off. He had cried so for Pat as he went under that I sent an ornament to him. As he came out of the chloroform big head bed, holding Slugi's head in his arms, tears running down his cheeks, and Slugi would pull his head down and kiss him and say; "Good Pat, good comrade: I spik English, one two three, four. How do you do? Thanks four, once. How pat, no go; stay with Sluigi," etc. It hurts him and pet and big Pat would soothe him and pet and comfort him.
KEY: HE, east field on Hamilton; HW, west field on Hamilton; N, north of McCook; 2, 4, 10, etc., hours of play.
HASH HOUSE LEAGUE SCHEDULE
The Mid-Western Publishing Company has decided to increase their sale organization at Lawrence. If you want summer employment see me this evening at 1341 Ohio St. Salary and experience paid the right m
FIRST DIVISION
SECOND DIVISION
and expenses paid the right part:
E. C. Babst—Adv 128-
DRESS UP!
Who's Your Tailor?
YOUR EASTER SUIT
will embody every element of satisfying assurance if made expressly for you by our Chicago tailors, Ed.V. PRICE & Co., and the price will easily come within your allowance. Order today!
SAMUEL G. CLARKE
07 Mass. St. CLOTHIER Eldridge Hotel Bldg.
Book Store
CLASSIFIED
Exclusive Local Dealers for Ed.V. Price Co., Merchant Tailors, Chicago
KEELEER'S BOOK STORE. 393 Mass
St. Typewriters for sale or rent
purchased by manufacturers, supplies.
Paper by the pound. Quiz book.
10c. Pictures and Picture framing.
China Painting
ED, W. PARISSONS Enthayer, Watch-
Jewelry, Bell phone 711, 717, 718
Shoe Shon
MISS ESTELLA, NORTHBUP. china
MISS ESTELLA, NORTHBUP. china
carefully handled. 736 Mass. Phone
carefully handled. 736 Mass. Phone
K. U. SHOE SHOP and Pantatorium is the best place for best results 1242
PHONE KENNEDY PLUMBING CO.
MASS. MUSEUM AND Mazda Lamps. 837.
Mass. Museums.
B. H. DALE, Artistic Job Printing
lothrons 282, 1027 Mass.
FORNEY SHOE SHOP, 1017 Mass. Don't make a mistake. All work
MRS M. A., MORGAN $321 Tennessee
tajigring. Prices vary reasonable
tajigring. Prices vary reasonable
PROFESSIONAL CARDS
DR. H. L. CHAMBERS. Office over
Squires' studio. Both phones.
HARRY REDING. M. D. Eyes, earl,
phone 512-469-7830. Phones. Bell 512.
sina 512. U. Bldg. Phone. Bell 512.
G. W. JONES, M. - M. M. D. Disease
Hospital 128 Ohio St. Phone:
Heaston 128 Ohio St. Phone:
A. C. WILSON, Attorney at law 743
Mass. St. Lawrence, Kansas
J. R. BECHTER, M. D. D. O. 833 Mass
Both phones office and residence
DR. H, W. HUTCHINSON, Dent. 2017.
Perkins Bldg. Lawrence, Kansas.
D. ONSLUP D. D. Dick Blidg Eyx
B. ONSLUP D. D. Dick Blidg Eyx
D. ONSLUP D. D. Dick Blidg Eyx
D. ONSLUP D. D. Dick Blidg Eyx
D. DR. Hamman guaranteed. Successor to
Dr. Hamman.
LOST—Brown coat sweater taken from in front of gym Tuesday during football practise. Reward. Call Bell 1277J. 129-3
WANT ADS
FOR RENT -Mrs. Davis, 1217 Tenn.
Phone 20074, south, electric 128-3
Phone 20074
LOST—"Modern Frame Structures"
and a leather I. H. C. notebook
Ward kindly return to F. N. Bost.
112 Tenn, and receive librarian
ward.
131-3.
Why Not Spend This Evening at the Bowersock Theatre?
The Heart of Paula an intense and fascinating Spanish romance, with
and enjoy the superb acting and beautiful settings in the Pallas Production of
Lenore Ulrich
in the leading role
Tonight and Saturday
Also the last installment of the South American Travel Series
Our modern and fireproof theatre will no doubt add to the enjoyment of your entertainment because you will unconsciously have
that "safe feeling."
Four Complete Shows 2:30-4:15 — 7:45-9:15
FLOWERS FROM THE FLOWER SHOP
are always a pleasure to receive. Arrangements superior to all others. The keeping qualities are well known. A comparison is all we ask of the uninitiated.
MR. AND MRS. GEO. ECKE. Leading Florists
825 i5 Mass. St.
Phone 621
.
There's No Excuse
needed when we dye your suit or dress and return it to you. We know from thirty years' experience that when we finish the job it is as near perfect as modern machinery and expert work can make it.
Owen
will deliver the goods. Try us and see if our work won't satisfy. If it doesn't—we will!
510 Bell
464 Home
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
---
Consider the vastness of a store that can outfit man, woman or child, or furnish a home complete with equal success!
Today there are many families in this great southwest who supply ALL their needs in this store just as their mothers and fathers did 30 years agojust as their grandmothers and grandfathers did 50 years ago.
This store was established in 1863.
Emery,Bird,Thayer Company Kansas City,Missouri
W. S. G. A. CLASS ELECTIONS MONDAY IN FRASER
Class elections for representatives to the W. S. G. A. will be held Monday, April 10, at 12:30. The freshman class will meet in room 118 Fraser, by order of Rose Haworth, secretary. The sophomore class meeting has been called in the lecture room 119 Fraser, by order, secretary, and the junior class is asked to meet in Room 110, Fraser, by Carolyn McNutt, secretary.
All petitions for class representatives must be handed to the election committee of the W. S. G. A. today.
EXTENSION DEPARTMENT
GIVES WELFARE INSTITUTE
Under the auspices of the University extension division, a Child Welfare Institute will be conducted in Hutchinson, April 9 to 12 inclusive. Prof. Wm. A. McKeeper, head of the institute of child welfare, will be in charge.
Lectures will be given by Prof. M. V. O'Shea of the University of Wisconsin, a well known American lecturer and writer on child life, and by Alexander of the International Society of Social Work throughout the country for his work in behalf of the boys and girls of the "teen" age.
The Phi Alpha Tau, honorary dramatic fraternity, will meet Thursday at 7:30 o'clock at the Pi Kappa Alpha house, for their regular business session.
Is a policy in a first class life insurance company worth any sacrifices on your part?
L.S. Broughly
Gaul's Passion Service—Plymouth Choir—Sunday 7:45. Doors closed 7:50—Adv.
Fresh Strawberry Ice Cream
FOR
Sunday Dinner
We shall also be able to deliver Brown Bread, Chocolate, Carmel Nut, and Vanilla ice cream.
Phone your order to
Reynolds Bros.
1030 Massachusetts St.
THEATRE VARSITY TONIGHT—THE CHARMING SCREEN STAR MARGUERITE SNOW IN "A CORNER IN COTTON" A ROMANCE OF WALL STREET AND THE SUNNY SOUTH
A ROMANCE OF WALL STREET AND THE SUNNY SOUTH
Sat.—Douglass Fairbanks in "His Picture in the Papers." Also Monkey Comedy Next Wed.BILLY BURKE in "PEGGY"
Arrow Shirts—guaranteed fast color Sold exclusively by Johnson & Carl
—So says the calendar.
SPRING?
Sometimes the calendar and the weather do not agree. But we must all agree it is
Dressmaking Time
Miss Daisy Reed is making a specialty of party dresses. Come in and give her a call tomorrow and let her design your new party gown.
Mrs. McCormick 831 MASS.
"The Easter Hat Shop"
Spring Style
That is absolutely authentic is shown here
KUPPENHEIMER SPRING CLOTHES
We advise you to come in now and get first pick from the large assortment of patterns and colors
Robert E. House
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Here Are the Coats for April "Snows"
SIMPLICITY IS THE MOST IMPORTANT ADDITION TO A FUNNY GIFT.
THE "RESERVE"
An English Homespun Raincoat for Men. Looks like a spring top coat but is absolutely water-proof. $15.00
A WORLD OF FASHION.
THE "REVENNA"
An English Homespun Raincoat for Ladies. It's water-proof but distinctly different from the ordinary raincoat... $12.50
Our raincoat stock is very complete, showing a great variety of new and staple styles for men, women, boys and girls, $4 to $30
Men's Rain Hats 50c
Ober's HEAD TO FOOT OUT FITTERS
Ladies' Rain Hats 50c
COAT
DRESS
New Spring Suits
Our Suit Stock is at its very best for Easter Business, and we especially urge that you choose your Suit before the Final Easter Rush which is always with us during the last week—Easter Sunday comes on Apr. 23.
Prices $12.95 to $40.00
Coach Olcott wants 25 more men out for spring football practice every afternoon. Spring training lasts until April 20.
50 New Coats
just in stock, which include Silk Tafel
Popkins, Poplings, Checks, Tri-Colored
Checks, Shepherd's in navy, black,
White Chinchilla Coats, $6, to $27.50,
White Chinchilla Coats. $6, to $27.50,
COTTON AND LINEN
More than a Hundred New Spring Blouses Just in from the Makers
Send the Daily Kansan home.
Crepe de Chine, Georgette Crope, Will o' the Wisp, Tub Silks, Laces, Nets. And a charming selection of WASH BLOUSES of Organdy, Voile, Mulls and Lawns, trimmed in laces, embroideries or hand embroidery.
Drives, Bullline & Hackman
In this showing of Blouses all prices are represented from $1.00 to $12.
Epworth League Lenten service of music Sunday night, April 9, 6:30 p.m.—the Methodist University choir assisted by Mr. A. C. Hodge, baritone, Mr. Will RaRamon, reader and Mr. Ernest Morgan, violinist.
Indestructo Trunks Bags and Suit Cases Sold Exclusively by Johnson & Carl
Jones' Spring House-Furnishing Sale Starts Monday, April 10
A special invitation is extended to our out-of-town customers to attend our Great Spring Housefurnishing Sale and select from our enormous stock all of your Household Needs at extremely LOW PRICES.
Because we bought in such great quantities, manufacturers made us special prices. We now give you the chance to furnish your home at little expense. If you want to Save Money, buy at JONES' GREAT SPRING HOUSE-FURNISHING SALE YOUR
House-Cleaning Necessities, Kitchen Ware Furniture, Carpets, Linoleums, Draperies Bedding, China, Glassware, Pictures Wall Paper and Paints
Remember We Pay Your Round Trip Railroad Fare by refunding 5 per cent of your purchase up to the amount of your Fare to Kansas City and back home. Take advantage of this exceptional opportunity to SAVE MONEY.
THE
THE JONES STORE
Kansas City's Profit Sharing Store.
AMES LOST ANOTHER
Ninth Inning Rally Saved Game for Kansas - Snee Pitched Game
WON IN THE THIRTEENTH
L. Weltm Scored Weber With Winning Run
It was the last of the ninth with two out and an Ames score of 9 to 6, even the bravest Kansas rooter was on the gate. Chimney was on first but two looked like a forlorn hope. L. Wettmer was up, and with the count two and nothing against him the catcher O'Keefe's quick fast ones and limped to first.
Taylor pinch hitting in the crisis for Deaver lined the first ball pitched to center for a single bringing in one of Gibbon followed with a wicked drive to short which Aldridge mussed badly and L. Weltmer and Taylor scampered home with the runs that saved the team. But if he was of never quitting had again won out.
WINNING RUN IN THIRTEENTH
Forty minutes later in the last of the games, the winning Jaynawaker run finally took over, which went for two bases, and L. Weltmer's line drive to right. The Ames series was over and although forced to play a total of twenty-five innings in the two games, Kansas had made a clean sweep of its first Misericord Valley Conference series in 1916.
BOTH PITCHERS POUNDED HARD Both Smee and Okey were pounded hard due to the cold, rather pitcher being able to keep really warmed up. Yesterday's thirteen inning game pitched out of seventeen innings total of 179 pitches, and added a second victory to the veteran's record for the new season. The score:
AMES
| | AB | R | K | H | PQ | A |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Drafts, cr. | 6 | 2 | 3 | 2 | 0 | 1 |
| Aldrich, cr. | 6 | 2 | 3 | 2 | 0 | 1 |
| Kerrigan, 1b. | 6 | 2 | 3 | 2 | 18 | 0 |
| Jones | 6 | 2 | 3 | 2 | 18 | 0 |
| Kinnick, 2b. | 6 | 0 | 1 | 1 | 2 | 3 |
| Kinnick, 2b. | 6 | 0 | 1 | 1 | 2 | 3 |
| Stewart, c. | 6 | 0 | 1 | 1 | 11 | 3 |
| Elite | 6 | 0 | 1 | 1 | 11 | 3 |
| Okey, p. | 6 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 4 |
Total: 52 9 13 37 19 8
AKKSMS B, ABB, G IR H PO AE,
45KBMS B, ABB, G IR H PO AE,
Wardell, dh, 6 1 1 0 3 1 0
Weddell, w, 6 1 0 3 1 0
Sneeb, b, 6 1 0 3 1 0
Clinery, nf, 7 1 1 4 1 0
Clinery, rf, 6 1 2 10 0 1
L. Weltmer, f, 5 2 2 10 0 1
L. Weltmer, s, 5 2 2 10 1 1
Dexter, 2b, 4 0 0 4 1 0
Weir, w, 4 0 0 4 1 0
*Taylor*, 1 1 1 0 1 0
Total. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 59 10 11 39 18 6
One out when winning run was made.
Weber, batted for Chase in the 3th.
Brown, batted for Deaver in the
Score by innings:
H R E
Ames. . . 050 000 000 - 9 13 9
--a new broad brim hat—in two different shades—a light tan with a brown band—and a nile green with ivy band—
The summary: Two base hits; Chase, Davis, Sacrifice hit, Taylor, Double A, Aldridge, Kerrigan 2, Kinnick 1, Aldridge, Kerrigan 2, Deaver, Struck out, by Seize 12, by Seize 12, off Since 2; off Offey 6. Hit by pitcher, off Since 2; off Time of game, 259. Iump, Owen.
Send the Daily Kansan home.
UNIVERSITY BEGINS EARLY
FIGHT ON DANDELIONS
The University is taking the lead in fighting the dandelion in much the same manner as it did the canker worm. "Workmen have been digging dandelions for the past two weeks," she said. She, superintendent of buildings and grounds, this morning, "but they are really too small to dig at present.
"It won't be many days until they will be big enough, and then work proper will begin. We are never able to get all of them, but we are going to make a hard campaign to rid the dandelions of anything after the dandelions are in blossom, and that is why we begin work so early this year."
An illustrated lecture on Russia will be given by Professor Twenhofel at the Uitarian church Sunday night at 8 o'clock.—Adv.
A smoker will be given at the University Club Tuesday evening, April 11, for Dr. W. H. Payne who will address the mining students in Marvin Hall Wednesday afternoon. Dr. Payne is a consulting engineer for New York City and is visiting several of the American Universities.
Senior invitations at check stand in Fraser, April 3-8. Get them early. Adv. 128."
Just Opened
With a line of good goods at prices that will interest
MEN
Stopin Saturday or Monday or even tonight and give us a call. It will pay you to see us first, at
820 Mass. Street
fdeal CLOTHING CO.
High Grade Merchandise at Less Price
MMA
The "Pep"a new broad brim hat—in two different shades—a light tan with a brown band—and a nile green with ivy band—
THE PRICE $3.50
On display in our South Window.
Johnson & Carl The Young Men's Store
Senior Play April 26. Make Dates Now!
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VOLUME XIII.
ATHLETICS NOW SAFE
K. U. Team Prevents Abolition of Intercollegiate Sports in Debate Against Missouri
GOV. CAPPER PRESIDED
Was First Visit Since His Election
Intercollegiate athletes are now safe. Kansas won the debate.
A team consisting of Raymer McQuiston, Odis H. Burns, and Henry Shim defeaed L. M. Fischer, W.R. Roehl, and Robert N. Reservatives of the University of Missouri, on the question, Resolved: That intercollegiate athletics should be abolished in colleges and universities, Friday night in Fraser Hall. This resolution would prevent members of the Kansas team and they walked upon the rostrum with the determination to win their last forensic conflict. A decision of two to one in favor of Kansas was registered by H. M. Fischer, L. A. Halbert of the Kansas City Welfare Board, and Rabbi H. H. Mayer of Kansas City, who were the judges.
Gov. Arthur Capper showed his interest in University debating by making his first trip to the institution since his election in order to preside at this function. His presence added the greatest of the general public in the debate.
Missouri, upholding the affirmative,
attempted to prove: that intercollegiate
athletics should be abolished in
American colleges and universities.
L. M. Fischer, their first speaker
of the conference, was a strong
athletes and in all feasible forms
of athletics, but that they thought
intramural athletics should take
the place of intercollegiate athletics. He then tried to show that the interest in intramural athletics was sufficiently
intramural at the place of intercollegiate athletics.
Raymer McQuiston, the first speaker for Kansas, sought to show that the evils of intercollegiate athletics could be prevented to student management. As a remedy for these evils he proposed faculty management and then by citing the experience of many universities tried to eradicate that these evils could be eradicated.
The second speaker for the affirmative, W. R. Fuller, claimed that intercollegiate athletics by robbing the university of the other students, by hindering spontaneous intellectual activities and by giving a false impression of the nature of an education demoralized the scholarship of the university. His main speech was by far the most effective given by the affirmative.
Odis H. Burns, in offsetting the argument of Odis M. Fuller, claimed that the negative by no means admitted the contentions of the affirmative, that intramural athletics and that intramural athletics could not exist without intercollegiate athletics. To support his arguments he submitted facts and testimony gained by a questionnaire submitted to 70 American universities and collages.
GABLEMAN A TRACK MAN
BELENDA N. X. HARLEY MAN
F. Gabiake, who is a member of Missouri's track team, maintained that intercollegiate athletics robbed students in the professional schools of time for the preparation of their life work.
To this Henry Shinn replied that students in professional schools were vastly in the minority and could be forced to take part in courses if the contentions of the affirmative were true. He maintained that it would be unjust to do away entirely with intercollegiate athletics upon that ground since the men in the pro-verb class had had an opportunity to take part during their under graduate days.
REBUTTAL WAS APT
The rebuttal of both teams was ap and effective. L. M. Fischer, who delivered the final rebuttal for Missouri did the most effective refutation to his team in a desperate attempt to win. He was not able to overcome the arguments of the negative team, which without disparagement to any other Kansas team this year, was the best possible team. We have put forth. Much of the credit for the victory is due to effective coaching of Prof. H. T. Hill.
After the debate a banquet was given by Delta Sigma Rho in honor of the Governor, the judges and the visitors. Speeches were given by each of the judges in which they spoke of the need of clear reasoning and effective public speaking in the practical affairs of life.
Foster's Talk Postponed
Because the Ames baseball game lasted so long Thursday afternoon Registrar George O. Foster did not know what to do before the M. Y. M. C. A and W. Y. C. A. meeting Thursday night. It will probably be given in about two weeks
Send the Daily Kansan home.
LAST WEEK TO PAY
SENIOR MEMORIAL DUES
UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS, MONDAY AFTERNOON, APRIL 10, 1916.
LAST WEEK TO PAY
This will be the last week that seniors may pay their memorial dues. According to Harold Mack, chairman of the committee, the season is getting late, and it will be necessary to wind up affairs as soon as possible in order to avoid any money is available and to determine for what the money shall be sent.
When the campaign for memorial funds close this week the class expects to have between two hundred and fifty and three hundred dollars to invest in a fitting memorial for the lass.
MINERS PLAN FOR DAY
Program for Wednesday Includes Many Big Speakers From East
Mining engineers' day Wednesday is to be marked by the presence of several noted men in the mining and geological fields. Arrangements have been made to secure A. D. T. Kiliami of New York, Dr. H. W. Payne, a well known consulting engineer who has been at work for mining interests in Siberia, and the Klondike for the last century. He is also involved for the department of Labor and Industry at Topeca, and several other men for speakers.
Mr. Kilani will speak Wednesday morning on "The Relation of Fine Grinding Machines to Ore Dressing," for the ore dressing classes.
Dr. Payne will speak on "The Kloukie and Siberia Today." He is a friend of Prof. Erasmus Haworth and has had much experience in these countries, having only returned from Russia a few weeks ago. Dr. Payne was also formerly head of the West Bank University and taught the degrees of C. E., Ph. D. and S. D. He will speak before the University Club Tuesday night.
A. A. Knapp of the department of Labor and Industry at Topela will tell of "Kansas Men That Might Have Been."
It is possible that members of the
office of the department will also
have a picture on their desk.
13 BABIES ADOPTED
Lawrence People Describe Kind of French Infants Desired and Pledge Their Aid
Thirteen French babies have been adopted by various persons and organizations in Lawrence as the result of the efforts of the war relief workers here. At a meeting of the Collegiate Alumni Friday afternoon, they were distributed to be filled out with a description and age of the baby desired.
NUMBER 132
Mrs. O. H. Martin, of Kansas City, in an address at the meeting, pointed out that the purpose of providing for the French children was not merely to teach them about national; that French ideals, and standards of literature and art may not be lost to the world; and that the reason for keeping the children in France is that they may be reared there to be good French citizens.
The First organization of the city to adopt a baby was the Phi Pi fraternity and now several sororities and fraternities are thinking of following that tradition. The store have combined to care for two babies. A committee was elected consisting of Miss Edith Snow, chairman; Mrs. F. B. Dains, secretary; and Robert Morrow, treasurer. They may be able by anyone desiring to adopt a baby.
An effective phase of the war relief taken up by the local workers is the selling of medals designed by French students, that the medals are the work of Lalique makes them valuable and much to be desired as souvenirs. The design comes from the intense feeling that the French orphans must be saved from being shipped to women's society, has charge of the University division of selling medals.
The cupy will be glazed in crimson and blue and will be kept on display in the club house of the Kansas alumni there. It will probably be placed on exhibition in the Museum for a few days before it is sent to the Keystone state to become the property of the loyal grads.
CAMPUS CLAY MADE INTO
CUP FOR PITTJSBURG GRADS
"Hail to Thee—Alma Mater—K. S. U." and the monogram, "K. U." are to be engraved on the loving cup that is now being made of clay on the University campus, for the Kansas University of Flint, a school by Willa Schmidt, senior Fine Arts.
Professor Ernest J. Leisy, formerly of the University of Kansas and now of Bethel College, Newton is spending the day on the Hill.
Miss Schmidt will have spent about two days in making the cup when it became too cold.
TALKED ACROSS U. S
K. U. Alumni in New York, Sar Francisco and Lawrence Held Reunion
CONNECTIONS WERE GOOD
Voices 2,000 Miles Away Heard
Distinctly
For an hour Saturday night, K. U. alumni in San Francisco and New York talked and laughed with five hundred alumni and students who were holding telephone receivers to record the conversation. The conversation was as distinct and as easy to follow as if it had been between two telephones in Lawrence instead of those at the extreme edges of the United States. In New York, a wintery snow storm raged in the dark outside the banquet hall when the temperature in San Francisco the sun was shining and the temperature was above sixty degrees.
At 8:15 o'clock, Lawrence time, 9:15 o'clock in New York and 6:15 o'clock in San Francisco, the transcontinental telephone line was opened and the manager of the New York telephone office talked to Pittsburgh, Chicago, Omaha, Salt Lake City and several other cities asking each the weather conditions and the temperature. Connections were made with no delay and during the hour communication was uninterrupted.
"CHEAP JOHN” POLICY HURTING K. U.
Following the roll call Mr. E. C. Aler, president of the New York alumni exchange greetings with Chancellor Strong at Lawrence and Prof. W. H. Carruth at San Francisco. Professor Carruth spoke to the New York alumni and to those in Robinson Gymnasium for three weeks. The professor also Strong who reviewed the growth of the University. Then the New York alumni read resolutions which they had adopted condemning the attitude of the state legislature toward the University and declaring that the university was being damaged because of insufficient money and equipment.
TALKED TO N. Y. FRIENDS
The Bell Company's equipment for the service included five hundred individual receivers and two regulation receivers. The receptionist talked from Lawrence was done. Dozens of batteries and a number of expensive testing instruments were connected in a small room in the Gym where the service was kept in perfect condition.
TALKED TO N. Y. FRIENDS
Several musical numbers were given over the wire. The K. U. Glee Club played and they gave four the Rock Chalk yell. Each gathering sang a verse of "Crimson and Blue." Miss Carrie Watson, Dean L. E. Sayre, Prof. May Gardner and a number of Lawrence alumni were called to the telephone to talk to New York friends.
HENRY M. PAYNE BEFORE
THE INVESTIGY CLUB
The University Club has arranged for an illustrated lecture tomorrow evening at 8 o'clock at the clubhouse, by Henry M. Payne, a well known mining engineer of New York city. The subject of Mr. Payne's lecture will be "Across Japan in War time." All members of the club are invited
A mass meeting of men students of the University will be held Tuesday, at 12:30 in Fraser Chapel to vote on the following amendment to the constitution of the Men's Government Association. The amendment follows.
THE UNIVERSITY CLUB
Mr. Payne has spent the last three years in consultation work in mining engineering in the Klondyke and British Columbia and during the last year was a member of the board of the Royal Society, between London and the Senskoie of Russia. Last spring he was in Japan and in the fall in Siberia, returning from the latter place in December, having secured a fine collection of gold, silver and copper coins in time, which he will show at the University Club.
If this proposition receives a two-thirds vote at this mass meeting, it shall be then known as section six of article seven of the constitution of the Men's Student Council, and will go into effect at once.
Mr. C. J. Martin, Adjutant General of the state, came from Teoka Thursday night to give a toast at the annual banquet of Company M. While here he visited his daughter, Lillian Martin, '18 College.
"The cheerleader shall be elected at the spring election. Petitions for this office must receive the endorsement of the Athletic Board and must be in the hands of the secretary of the Athletic Department's clock on the third Tuesday in April."
VOTE ON CHEERLEADER
AMENDMENT TOMORROW
K. U. GLEE CLUB TO SING
Bess Murphy and her sister Loretta, of Topeka, who is visiting her, spent Saturday and Sunday in Kansas to their cohus, Mrs. Louis S. Jones.
Men Will Give Concert Thursday Night in Fraser Hall
MISCELLANEOUS PROGRAM
Solo, Quartet, Ensemble Numbers Included
The annual spring concert to be given Thursday night in Fraser Hall by the University Glee Club, will be a concert by the Glee Club, Sauter, manager of the club. Solo numbers, several selections by the club's quartet, and assembled singing by the entire club of twenty-tour make up the evening's entertainment.
"The price of admission has been made 25 cents this year," said Sautter, "although the program will be the very best. Student athletic tickets will be better but whichever is used, we'll give them more than their money's worth."
"The boys are working hard," says Prof. W. B. Downing, director of the club, "and will have a well balanced group of selections to offer."
Swing Along . . . . . . . . Cook
PROGRAM FOLLOWS
TORCH SEES MEDALS
Club
Club
Bedoin Love Song...Pinsuta
love Song...Pursuit
Orla S. Holmes
Her Picture ... Andrews
The Torredor's Song...Carytie
You'll Remember Me...Balfe
Ray Gafney, Paul Sautter,
Club
My Heart Is Thine...De Capua
Gola Coffelt
INTERMISSION
Gunga Din (reading) ... Kipling
Harry Harlan
ry Ha
Schdeider's Band ... Mason
Love Is Mine...Gartner
Chess & Strategy...
Quartet . . . . .
NEW BALL LEAGUE READY
Opening Game of I.F. League at Woodland Park Tuesday
The re-organized inter-fraternity baseball league, composed of the local societies in the University, met at the Sigma Phi Sigma house last week and arranged for their schedule of spring games. Pti Upsilon, Kanza and Sigma Phi compete this year for a handsome loveliness formed each year by the Johnson & Carl Clothing company, and for a prize banner which will probably be offered by Allie Carroll. The new professional Pan-hellenic League, composed of some of the professional fraternities, has caused a slight change in K. U. baseball circles this year. The men's teams will compete in a league of those whom will be called the Professional Pan-hellenic Baseball League.
Marcellus Stockton, of the Pi Upsilion fraternity, is president of the interfraternity league this year, and says that he is confident that there is a chance for him to join. The schedule has been arranged and the first game will be played tomorrow afternoon at 4:00 o'clock when the Pi Us meet the Sigma Phi Sigmas at Woodland park. Joey Williams will hurl the pellet for the Pi U's, and Admission to the Sigma Phi Sigmas.' Admission to the games will be free.
Martion Reed was chosen last week to succeed Harold Matttoon as president of the K. U. Debating Society. The other officers are: Raymond Ogg, vice-president; Charles Fee, secretary; Alfred Richmond, treasurer; W. J. Crowley, sergeant-at-arms; Eugene Dyer, press reporter. The meeting last night had the best attendance of any this year.
MARION REED CHOSEN
TO HEAD K. U. DEBATERS
Santa Program Professional
Director J. C. McCanles of the University, said this morning when speaking of what a band the band is to give this month, that the program will be extremely heavy, one that would tax any professional band to the utmost, and says that his boys are going to play it in a professional manner. It will pay every one to come out and hear what a band the University has this year. The concert date is April 26.
Band Program Professional
Irma Larrick, '17 College, Ruth Foster, '17 College and Dorothy McCamish, '17 College went to Topeka Friday to attend a dinner-dance to be given by the Phi Delta fraternity of Washburn College.
Everett R. Filley, a senior in the School of Law last year, is working for the Producers Oil Company and the Producers' Oil Company and Tulsa.
HOLT WILL DELIVER
COMMENCEMENT ADDRESS
Hamilton Holt, editor of the "Independent," will deliver the commencement address in Lawrence on
(1)
HAMILTON HOLT
June 7. Word to this effect was received this morning by Prof. F. R Hamilton of the Extension Division.
PROF. OGDEN RESIGNS
Goes to Cornell Next Fall Accepting Tempting Offer of Alma Mater
The University of Kansas will lose another instructor when Robert Morris Ogden, professor in psychology goes to Cornell University, next fall to be head of the education department.
"Yes, it is true that I have received an offer from Cornell," said he over the phone this morning. "Of course I shall finish out the year at K. U. but I take up my new position at the opening of the college year at Cornell."
Professor Ogden is an authority in psychological fields. After receiving the degree of Bachelor of Science from Cornell in 1901, he went to Germany and studied at the University of Wurzburg where he was graduated 2 years later with an added title of Ph.D. From 1903 to 1905 he was assistant professor of psychology at the University of Missouri. After that he accepted an offer from Knoxville, where he began teaching the time from 1905 to 1914 he was promoted to the rank of professor at the University of Tennessee.
this is Professor Ogden's second year here. His present salary is $12,000.
MISS BRYANT IN CONCERT
Former Lawrence Woman Sings in Fraser Chapel
Miss Nellie Bryant, soprano, appeared in a recital before an appreciative audience Friday afternoon in Fraser Hall chapel. The audience was not as large as it otherwise would have been because of the announcement of the postponement of the recital.
Miss Bryant has a voice that is unusually pleasing. Especially was this true in the selection Aria from "Cavalleria rusticana" and "Eastasy." The soloist is a former Lawrence girl having attended Lawrence high school and studied for a time under Prof. C. A. Prayer of the School of Fine Arts.
PASSING SHOW PAYS WELL
Y. W, C. A. Netted $156.30 From Tuesday's Entertainment
The K. U. Passing Show staged Tuesday evening by the Y. W. C. A will add considerably to the fund to be raised by the association this year. In previous years the Y. W. and the Women's Student Government Association have taken alternate years in staging the annual K. U. circus and the May Fete. This year however the women are unwilling to assist in producing the concert then it is the W. S. G. As year for holding the May Fete. So in order to raise the money the women were forced to hold a circus of their own.
The sixty bellies who staged the performance are highly pleased over the performance total of $168.30 has been reported to date, while several cabinet women and fraternity men have not reported their attendance will amount to approximately $30.
The Weather
The forecast: Fair tonight and Tuesday, warmer north and east portions
Miss Sue Butts entertained Delta Phi Delta, an honorary painting sorority, Thursday afternoon at the Achoh house.
CAPPER IS SURPRISED
Senator Lambertson's Report on University Goes Out of Hs Province
RESEARCH WORK NEEDED
Majority of Students Are Not Social Butterflies, Says Governor
"The report of Sen. W. B. Lamberton, of the state efficiency and economy committee at present contains his own suggestions," said Gov. Arthur Capper, when interviewed upon the topic of Friday night. The governor met and formulate their suggestions to the state legislature. As yet I have not had sufficient time to go into a thorough consideration of Sen. Lambertson's report. I was somewhat surprised that the report dealt in some respects with the policy of the state legislature and the committee in the main is to consider the details and business methods of the institutions of the state.
"When the committee meets to prepare its report to the state legislature, the suggestions of the Senator may be reiterated, and they may not. At present It is impossible to say what will be contained." Aaron Ware, Research Work.
The Governor stated that in the future there would probably be need of more graduate and research work if the state is to follow out his suggestions in regard to increasing the manufacturing interests of the state as made in his speech at Pittsburgh recently.
"Our University and Agricultural College will be called upon, then, to aid the manufacturers as well as the farmers of the state along practical lines. This same service has been performed by Universities of other states, and by the Universities of Europe. That will mean an increase instead of a decrease in the amount of graduate and research work done by the University. I do not know the relative amount of undergraduate and graduate work done by the University in these cases, a degree state as to the suggestion of Senator Lambertson upon that point. Governor Capper minimized the idea of there being too much society at the state University.
NOT TOO MUCH SOEIETY
"Probably there are some who spend too much time in the social activities of the University and its different organizations, but the great majority of them work with the serious motive of preparing themselves for life and its responsibilities. It is for such as these that the University and the other educational institutions of the state exist. In time this type of student will receive the state and its citizenship for every cent the state spends upon 'them.'
H. H. RULES OUT RINGERS
At Least Five Players on Field Must Belong to Club
Varsity players, professionals, and baseball "K" men are barred from participation in Hash House baseball games, by rules drafted by the commission at its meeting yesterday. Last year's rules permitted them to play in outfield positions, but this year they are forbidden to play at all.
The rule stating that any club with fewer than thirteen able-bodied men might be permitted to draw outside players was stricten out. The only restriction now is that at least 5 of the players on the field at any one time must be regular players at the club.
Another new rule is that no new players may be admitted in the last game, games or for the first time.
The commission desires to call attention to the rule requiring managers or captains to hand in a list of players, with which few of them have complied. The commission also wants the Daily Kansan. A complete list of rules will be published this week.
Games which were to have been played April 8 will be played at the end of the schedule, when the teams by order decide to settle them before that time.
Board Is in Session Today
The Board of Administration arrives at Lawrence this morning and is in session today with Chancellor Frank Strong.
MORNING PRAYERS
Week of April 10 to 14
Week of April 10 to 14
Leader, the Rev. Rev. Braden.
Subjects:
Meredith. Will it in that in the.
Monday: "What is that in thy hand?"
Tuesday: "Let us go hence."
Wednesday: "Knowing God."
Thursday: "Soul Power."
Friday: "Who is this?"
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
THEATRE VARSITY Tonight—VIOLET HORNER in "The Marble Heart"
A Photoplay of Love and Intrigue with a Powerful Moral
Tuesday—GEORGE BURKE in "The Pawn of Fate"
Wednesday—BILLLE BURKE in "Peggs"
FLOWERS FROM THE FLOWER SHOP
are always a pleasure to receive. Arrangements superior to all others. The keeping qualities are well known. A comparison is all we ask of the uninitiated.
**MR. AND MRS. GEO. ECKE. Leading Florists**
825 1/2 Mass. 87
Phones 621.
BILLY SUNDAY'S KANSAS CITY REVIVAL
Will Begin in April and Last Eight Weeks
The greatest farm paper—Best market reports—Farm questions answered by experts—the news of the world condensed.
His sermons in full, and every detail of his tabernacle meetings, the greatest evangelist of the world in action, all fully illustrated, true to life, as real as if you were there to see and hear it all, will be printed in
THE WEEKLY KANSAS CITY STAR
Five years $1.00; single year 25 cents. Subscribe today and get it all.
Address The Weekly Star, Kansas City, Mo.
Come to our store for anything you need for your
Kodak
Fresh films always in setock, as well as Developing Tanks, Velox paper,—general supplies of all kinds.
And for the developing and finishing of your pictures, our prompt, painstaking service is sure to please you.
Come in and see us. We can give you some valuable pointers.
Evans Drug Store 819 Massachusetts
Tailored Suits
or fancy gowns
depend upon neat
mess as much as
stylish for their successful
appearance.
TRYOUR
cleansing
& Pressing
LAWRENCE PANTATORIUM
Tel. 506 Bell 12 W. Warren
UNIVERSITY WOMEN!
We do Fancy Tailoring and Remodeling.
MRS. EDNAH MORRISON,
Bell 1154J. 1146 St.
EXPERT BARBERS
At Your Service
College Inn Barber Shop
BURT WADHAMS, Prop.
Corona and Fox
Typewriters
are sold exclusively in Law-
rence by
F. I. Carter,
1025 Mass. St.
We have machines for rent
and a full line of supplies.
CITIZENS STATE BANK
We are handling all University accounts, and we solicit your business, deposits guaranteed.
707 Massachusetts St.
PROHIBITIONIST ADDRESS
Dr. D. L. Colvin Gives Anti-Rum Speech at Methodist Church
Dr. D. Leigh Colvin, president of the national organization of the Intercollegiate Prohibition Association gave an impetus to the study of the effect of speech and prohibition in a series of speeches. University men and women Sunday
At 9:30 he spoke before the young people of the Methodist church, stressing the importance of edge of this question. Objections to national prohibition, raised by many people were answered by in a talk with a humble class at the Congregational church.
He met the officers and various members of the University branch of the I. P. A. at Myers Hall in the afternoon and discussed with them plans for the coming year. In the meeting he discussed the national significance of the problem before the Christian Endeavor societies of the Christian church.
Dr. Colvin has been a student in three of the largest American universities where he has spent five years in postgraduate work. Besides this he has also studied the study of economic, political and social problems. His treatment of the prohibition question differs much from that of the ordinary speaker. In all his talks he stressed the necessity of a state problem and the fact that Kansas, as a state must lead in the effort to make the nation dry, because the problem is no longer a state problem but a national problem. The debauchery of the elec- tically in the so called doubtful states, was discussed at length by him.
SUMMER WORK GROWS
Send the Daily Kansan home.
191 Courses Offered to Students Wanting Hot Weather Employment
1ST SESSION OPENS JUNE 8
Large Attendance is Expected— An Increase in Faculty
One hundred and ninety-one courses will be offered in the Summer Session this year which opens June 8. Eighty-nine men will compose the faculty and eight of these will be prominent educators not regularly connected with academic work. This is an increase of twenty-four members over last year's faculty.
New courses are being offered in each of the twenty-seven departments giving summer work. For the first time in the history of the summer session the School of Engineering is offering work. Twenty-eight courses Engineering will be taught and will over every department of that school.
Ten hours credit may be obtained this year by attending the entire session. Last year nine hours was the maximum amount of credit possible.
The expected increase in the attendance is attributed to a law passed by the last legislature which states that no certificate, valid in a four year high school, will be granted to anyone without a four year college education. This law goes into effect next Sentember.
Dean F. J, Kelly of the School of Education, who is the director of the summer session, is expecting an unusually large attendance, judging from the interest shown in the work of the school's conference last week.
While the high school teachers who now hold certificates will not be crowded out of their positions because they have not a four year college education the superintendents over the state are urging their teachers to attend the summer session and raise their qualifications up to the standard. Superintendents at the recent conference showed much interest in the summer session courses and this with the additional number of courses offered, and the increased size of the group required that they not only this year but for several summer sessions in the estimation of Dean Kelly.
The budget for this year's session is 20 per cent larger than any previous appropriation. The budget for this year is $5,000 larger than last year's.
HERE IS THAT STREET CAR SCHEDULE WHICH YOU HAVE BEEN WAITING FOR
The School of Education emphasizes the fact that it is now possible for a student or teacher to be the equivalent of one year's credit by attending three summer sessions since 2016 and then be obtained for the summer work.
The first six weeks session opens June 8 and closes July 19. The second four week's session will begin July 20 and close August 16.
INSTRUCTORS FROM OTHER COLLEGES
The instructors from other institutions who will teach here during the summer are: William T. Bawden, professor of sociology at the University of Maryland; the United States Bureau of Education; Jessie E. Bond, professor of sociology at the University of Idaho; Arthur C. Canfield, professor of Romance languages at the University of Michigan; George A. Dean, professor of entomology at K. S. A. C.; Josiah R. Campbell, professor of George Melcher, director of research, public schools, Kansas City; Louis W. Rapeer, professor of Education, Pennsylvania State College; Harry B. Wilson, Supt. of schools, Topeka; William B. Wilson, professor of biological science. Ottawa University.
Did you ever wait on a street corner for your car until there was nothing left of you but your temper? You begin the wait uncertain whether it will be for ten minutes or only one, and all because you have not made yourself familiar with the schedule in your pocket not only relieves your uncertainty but saves you time.
Below is the approximate time when street cars pass certain points along the line.
Knoblack Avenue (Sample Home)
I. U. Loop. (Sample Hour.)
MASSACHUSETTS STEET.
11th and Mass.
8th and Mass.
Green Hall.
Garden of God.
14th and Tenn.
NORTHBOUND-
(Sample Hour.)
Haskell Park 9:00 9:10 9:20 9:30 9:40 9:50 10:00
Mass. Hall 9:00 9:10 9:20 9:30 9:40 9:50 10:00
Lith and Mass. 9:10 9:20 9:30 9:40 9:50 10:00
Masonville 9:00 9:10 9:20 9:30 9:40 9:50 10:00
Santa Paula 9:00 9:10 9:20 9:30 9:40 9:50 10:00
N.Y. J. 9:00 9:10 9:20 9:30 9:40 9:50 10:00
Woodland Park 9:00 9:10 9:20 9:30 9:40 9:50 10:00
Woodland Park 9:10 9:20 9:30 9:40 10:00 10:10
11th Row, Main Street 9:10 9:20 9:30 9:40 10:00 10:10
Santa Fe depot 9:20 9:30* 9:40* 10:00 10:10
11th Row, Mass. 9:20 9:30 9:40 10:00 10:10
11th Row, Mass. 9:20 9:30 9:40 10:00 10:10
Car barn 9:20 9:30 9:40 10:00 10:10
Harbor 9:40 9:50 9:60 10:00 10:10
*Cars turn back at Santa Fe depot.
INDIANA STREET. (Sample Hour.)
This schedule for Massachusetts street cars is effective from 7 a. m. to 9 p. m. only. After 9 o'clock northbound cars leave 8th and Massachusetts streets 15 minutes past the hour and every 20 minutes. Southbound cars finish and Massachusetts 5 minutes past the hour and every twenty minutes.
4th and Mass. 7.90 7.15 7.30 7.48 8.00
6th and Mass. 7.90 7.15 7.30 7.48 8.00
4th and 1st LB. 7.15 7.23 7.87 7.85 8.00
4th and 1st LB. 7.15 7.23 7.87 7.85 8.00
4th and Ind. 7:08 7:23 7:58 7:88 8:08
5th and Ind. 7:16 7:33 7:59 7:88 8:08
6th and Mass. 7:15 7:20 7:45 8:00 8:30
SOUTHBOUND
NORTHBOUND—
A special feature of this year's work will be a composite course offered in "Special Problems in School Administration." This course will be conducted by five different experts in their respective fields of education, in addition to last fall讲座 above. Each of these men, Messrs. Rapee, Wilson, Melcher and Gwinn, will lecture to the class for one week during the course and in addition will probably make several lectures open to the public.
SCHOOL OF FINE ARTS WILL ENTERTAIN
in the way of entertainment for
the summer sessionists the Extension
Division will provide, without cost to
students, frequent motion picture
shows. A wide variety of films will
be shown, most of which are of an
educational character.
The School of Fine Arts will provide occasional musical and literary entertainments and community singing under the direction of Dean H. L. Butler will be feature of this work. During the latter part of June the well-known Coburn players will preserve three free plays at the University. These pieces were sent on the golf links if the weather permits. The repertoire consists of "The Yellow Jacket," "The Rivals," and "Richard III."
Catalogors of the summer session work have just been received from the state printer at Topeka and will be sent to the registrar's office of the registrar in a few days.
Courses are offered in the following departments: Astronomy, Botany, Chemistry, Economics, Education, Engineering, English, Entomology, French, Geology, German, Greek, History, Italian, Journalism, Latin, Mathematics, Mechanical Drawing, Mathematics, Physical Education, Physiology, Psychology, Public Speaking, Sociology, Spanish and Zoology.
SENIOR WOMEN SING
HELD IN WESTMINISTER
The sing which the senior women held Thursday at Westminster Hall was the most successful of the year. The bad weather prevented the meeting on the golf links as was planned and kept many away.
A plan was brought up before the meeting suggesting that announcements be used instead of invitations. The class brought officially before the class.
This discussion was followed by singing of University songs and an old-fashioned supper was served. A car has been written but not submitted.
Cosmopolitan today at Carroll's.— Adv.
Investigate the merits of tailor made clothing. It's cheaper in the loom than in a factory.
Ladies Tailor Fancy
dresses. Summer dresses of every description.
Will you be satisfied twenty years from now with your present policy of life insurance?
Mrs. Wm. H. Schulz,
917 Mass. St.
L. S. Beughly
ASK FOR and GET
HORLICK'S
MALTED MILK Cheap substitutes cost YOU same price
Arrow Shirts-guaranteed fast color Sold exclusively by Johnson & Carl
THE BOOKMARK
Buy Diamonds Now
Cheap substitutes cost YOU same price.
Confidence in your dealer is never so necessary as when
Numbers of satisfied customers testify to the confidence placed in this establishment.
purchasing diamonds. Usually a good sum of money changes hands, and you are in a great measure at the mercy of the merchant. Your satisfaction depends entirely on your confidence in him.
Every diamond we sell gains a friend for the store. Wont you be a friend?
Gustafson
YE SHOP OF FINE QUALITY
YOU REMEMBER "CHIMMIE FADDEN"
DON'T YOU?—WELL
VICTOR MOORE who immortalized that famous character will appear with ANITA KING in a new story full of fun and thrills, called
VICTOR MOORE
“THE RACE” also a Bray animated cartoon
Four complete shows: 2:30; 4:15; 7:45; 9:15
TONIGHT and TOMORROW at the Bowersock
TOMORROW
"THE STRANGE CASE OF MARY PAGE"
featuring Henry B. Walthall and Edna Mayo
TYPEWRITERS
STENOTYPE
Bought
Sold
Exchanged
Rented
Repaired
See us for anything in the Typewriter Line
Morrison & Bliesner
Eldridge House Corner, Phone 164
Clean floor
Clean chairs
Clean towels
Clean bowl
Clean tools
Clean barbers
Clean talk
A clean place where a gentleman can be proud to be seen. That's
---
THE SHOP OF THE TOWN
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Eleven Shopping Days till Easter
It will be about one hundred years before Easter Sunday will again fall on so late a date as April twenty-third. With every promise of warm spring weather you will be wanting your Easter outfit complete before the last week. Do it now.
A
Tuesday Morning
We will place
on Sale
30 Spring Suits
at
$17.50
Checks, Poplins, Serges, Gabardines and fancy light suitings in the newest shades and smartest of fashions.
Coats of Taffetta, Wool Checks,
Serges, Gabardines, White
and rancy Chinchillas from
$6.00 to $30.00.
Many New Blouses came to us during the past week. Crepe
jacket, Gattee, Tub Silks and White Wash Materials
$1.00 to $12.00
James Bulline & Hackman
Tennis
If you've never played the game get busy
It's Great
And of course we have just what you need
CARROLL'S Next to Eldridge Hotel
Annual Glee Club Concert
Solos Quartet Numbers Club Ensemble
Student Tickets Admit
Fraser Hall
Thursday, April 13
ADMISSION 25c
Without Student Enterprise Ticket
The bad weather Friday was a large factor in the sophora campaign for meat as many freshmen can tell. Charles J. Drake and Earl B. Minturn were two of the victims. Both successfully eluded sophora on the
Hill but when they went home at noon the men at the house gave them a gentle reminder that the rules were to be enforced in all kinds of weather.
Send the Daily Kansan home.
ATHLETIC BEE HUMS
McCarty Has Breathing Space-Looks Squad Over Before Big Games Begin
COLD STOPS TRACK MEN
Robin Tennis Begins Today With Fifteen Candidates
With the first two games of the baseball season tucked away under the Jayhawk's game on hand for a month, Coach Leen McCarty will have a better chance to look over his men before the championship games begin. Bethany college will visit the Lawrence camp Thursday for one game, and play in the third in a bunch of second string men and give everyone on the squad a chance to show what he can do against real competition, Poirier or Fischer may work on the mound in this game.
Those two Ames games were the first two games of one series that have run into extra innings for some of the league conference. Twenty-two players work in a day's work for any team and the Ames aggregation was about as tired as the Kansas men. However, they had a game scheduled with the Kaupas. Agregation but the weather man saved them the workout on Friday.
Owing to the spell of cold weather that has been hovering over Mount Oread for a week, the cinder artists have not been able to take regular workouts. But now that the Drake and the men will have to get to work. This week the team will work in spite of the cold for Coach Hamilton has purchased heavy underwear for each one of his athletes to run in. This will doubtless make a funny look as long as the athletes can cake a good workout and not freeze to death?
The "Round Robin" tennis tournament will be started this afternoon. Fifteen men are working for places on the tennis squad and the four highest men in the tournament will be chosen to represent Kansas this season. Players at present to arrange a meet with Nebraska for the first part of May.
The first dual track meet is yet a month off. Nebraska uses the dual meet season on McCook field May 5. This will allow Conches Hamilton and Willis to reach the month by developing some sprinters, hurdlers and field event men. But even then they are not worrying about the Cornhusker meet. The northerners are reported weaker this year than they may be in last year's score last year of 80 to 29 in favor of the wearers of the crimson and blue.
Guy Chamberlain, the Nebraska star, had a short stay in professional baseball with the Wichita Western League club. After several trials on the mound in practice he was released Thursday.
For the second time of the year Coach Indian Schulte has given out a big story on the wonderful team Kansas has this year in track. Of course, he never mentions his own Tiger bunch. It seems to be a good plan to boost a team on the road and defeat the opposing team at Kansas team that is going to turn the tide outdoors. That's what Schultes says. But does he believe it? He does not.
STATION THEN SCHEDULE
Trial Run Between Lawrence and K. C. Will Follow
As soon as the interurban station north of the Bowersock theatre is completed a trial schedule will be established between Lawrence and Kansas City. A pile bridge to be built between these two cities was used for the tracks until the new bridge is completed. Officials at Topeka have pronounced the old bridge unsafe for interurban service unless strengthened by piling; but as this new bridge tearing up the old bridge a temporary treasile will be constructed.
Buy your tennis shoes and get the best at Carroll's.'-Adv.
Read the May Cosmopolitan. Get it at Carroll's—Ady.
When the plans for the bridge were drawn the county commissioners made provision for a track. The rails were to be layed by the county and leased to farmers. The straining order was procured by the people of North Lawrence on the grounds that the cars would frighten farmers' teams. This order has been followed by the district court, thereby allowing the original plans to be carried out.
PROFESSORS COULD FIX
THEIR OWN GOLF COURSE
"Many professors," said Professor E. M. Briggs, president of the defunct Oread Golf Club, "would support a university golf course. And those students in the club now are willing to use a course on the camp if it were in shape.
"Playing could begin at once, providing a half dozen energetic persons would get out with shovels and hoes. The trees need to be cleared of grass and leveled off, holes must be dug, and the tee flags put up. Mowing on the course would probably not have to be done until the first of May.
"The Country Club fee of twenty-five dollars is prohibitive. With the University paying half of the expense and the members paying dues of five dollars a year, the course could be kept in shape for four hundred dollars. Those who are willing to give more. I know of one who will give ten dollars.
“This amount is enough to defray the expense of mowing and of keeping up the course during the summer fall, not be rough the following fall.”
OFFICERS INSTALLED
New Y. M. C. A. Cabinet Banqued by Retiring
Board
The installation of the Y, M. C. A. cabinet for the year 1916-17 was held at a banquet in Myers Hall Saturday afternoon from five to seven o'clock. Rex Miller, president of the Y, M. C. A. for the past year, presided at the meeting, which was attended by the faculty members of the Y, M. C. A. Board, and by both the old and new Cabinets.
CHANCELLOR SPEAKS
After the banquet toasts and speeches were made in regard to the work accomplished during the past year and the prospects for the year to come. Chancellor Frank Strong, president of the Y.M.C. C. A. board, spoke of the growth of influence of the Association during his years of connection with the University. "Ten years ago," he said it "would have been impossible to have held a campaign on the scale of the Mott-Robbins revival. Such a project would not even have been amended of then. The faculty was so impressed by the success in the life of the University and I can promise on its behalf its support of the various endeavors of the Association."
FUTURE PLANS DISCUSSED
Edward Todd, president of the new cabinet, laid before his hearers the plans for the coming year. He called upon each of those who are to be associated with him to do his utmost in making the plans of the future realization. A stallion service is held. He also set before each member of his cabinet the minimum requirements of men who occupy such a position, as outlined at the state conference of college Y. M. C. A. presidents, which was held in Topeka, March 17.
Hugo Wedell, in the last speech, outlined the work of the past year. He told of the misgivings with which he accepted the secretaryship and how through the effective work of those who assisted him, those misgivings had vanished before the accomplishments of this school year.
WORK OF YEAR REVIEWED
Rex Miller, retiring president, then reviewed the work of the past year.
He spoke of the disappointment in not having Con Hoffman back as secretary, and of the effective work of Woodell who called upon to take the position. He thanked those who had served under him for their support and wished God-speed to the men who were to make the next lap in the relay of Association work.
UNIVERSITY SOCIETY WILL MEET K, U. DEBATERS
At the regular meeting of the University Debating Society Thursday it was decided that on account of the lateness of the season the society could not accept the challenge of the U. Debating Society for an inter-society debate.
Harold Matton, president of the K. U. Society, said this morning: "I am very sorry that such a debate contest has taken place; contests make interest in debating."
A. L. Douglas, president of the University Society expressed himself as being in favor of the clash between the two rival sections but could do nothing since the majority of the members felt that they did not want to take up the work this late in the season.
The Mid-Western Publishing Company has decided to enlarge their sale organization at Lawrence. If you want summer employment see me at 714-650-7281. You should pay the right party. E. C. Babb. - Adv. 128-5
Send the Daily Kansan home.
Bertha Smith, '10 College, spent the week at her home in Kansas city.
Get your Cosmopolitan today at Carrolls.—Adv.
Canot paddles are here. Carroll's.—Adv.
The University of Chicago
HOME in addition to resident instruction in the instructor's convenience. For detailed information, please visit http://study.uci.edu.
34th Year. U. of C. (Ohio). Chicago, IL. Michael Yoon
Indestructo Trunks Bags and Suit Cases Sold Exclusively by Johnson & Carl
Now! Aren't you glad that you "Dressed Up"
Cheat The Ice Man
Soon you will be hanging out a sign every day or so to tell the Ice Man how much ice you will need.
WATER COOLER
Just how often you will have to hang out this sign, and how large the figure indicating the amount of ice wanted will be will depend upon what kind of a refrigerator you have.
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High School Teachers
Does your certificate conform to the requirements of the new law?
Would not a summer term at the University of Kansas pay you big returns in money and professional and social standing? Money invested is what counts, and no other investment for a teacher equals additional training. Prepare for leadership.
University Summer Session Two Terms-June 8-July 19; July 20-Aug.16 Send for Catalogue.
Senior Play April 26. Make Dates Now!
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VOLUME XIII.
UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS, TUESDAY AFTERNOON, APRIL 11, 1916.
TWO PROFS HONORED
Shaad and Whitaker Named by Daniels on State Board of Five
Seven "Wonders" at K. S. U.
FOR INDUSTRIAL SURVEY
Also Associate Members Naval Consulting Board
I WONDER WHO PUT THESE BURRS IN MY BED
I WONDER WHERE MY PIRE HAS GONE
I WONDER WHO HAS BEEN USING MY RAZOR
I WONDER WHY MY SOX ALWAYS GET HOLES IN THEM SO SOON
I WONDER IF THIS THING WILL TAKE THE WRINKLES OUT OF ME, SO THAT I CAN GET A DATE ONCE IN A WHILE
I WONDER WHY SO MANY PEOPLE THINK I'M A NUT
I WONDER HOW I CAME TO FORGET ABOUT THAT MISSOURI-KANSAS DEBATE
Professors G. C. Shaad and W. A. Whitaker have been appointed by Josephus Daniels, Secretary of Navy, as two of a board of five Directors of the State Organization for Industrial Preparedness. In every state in the union five men from engineering circles have been named to serve on a board of three which is to appointing the taking of an industrial inventory of the state in order that Uncle Sam may know just how strong he is in case of war. The five members thus appointed are also to serve as associate members of the Naval Consulting Board. Outside of the K. U. professors named the other three appointments were as follows: O. H. Nixon, A. T. Petter, R. F. Dean and A. A. Potter, the Dean of the School of Engineering at the Agricultural College.
LETTER FROM DANIELS
The following letter sent to both professors Shaad and Whitaker, explains the nature of the work, and has attached to it by the military circles;
Mr. W. A. Whitaker,
University of Kansas,
Lawrence, Kansas.
Mear Dear Mr. Whitaker
NUMBER 133
In requesting you, which I hereby take much pleasure in doing, to serve as a member of the Board of Directors of the Organization for Industrial Preparedness for the State of Kansas, and as an Associate Member of the Naval Consulting Board. I am given opportunity to give you a brief overview and the importance of the work which you are about to take up. At the same time I desire to tender you the hearty thanks and the deep appreciation of the Department and of the Administration for the definite service that you, in the most nonpartisan and free manner are about to render to the governmen- and the people of the United States.
BOARDS IN EACH STATE
There can be no higher service to the country than that contemplated in the plans of the Committee on Industrial Preparedness of the Naval Consulting Board, which has in hand the general direction of the work in question. The war in Europe has taught us that Industrial Preparedness is the foundation rock of the national defense and it is in full measure you can contribute a large and patriotic service for the common interest of this republic.
Very sincerely yours, (Signed) Josephus Daniels,
Secretary of the Navy.
The five members in each state who are to act as the directors of the work force of the state, the secretary of the state are named by the Secretary of the Navy at the recommendations of the Executive committees of their various Engineering Societies. The American Institute of Electrical Engineers, the American Chemical Society, the American Society of Civil Engineers, the Institute of Mining Engineers, and the American Society of Mechanical Engineers were allowed to name one man from each state for the directors of the state work, making a board of directors of five men for every state.
The object of the organization will be to take a complete inventory of the natural resources, manufacturers, industries and the means of transportation and communication over the land or by sea. The national government can place its hands on every available facility from food supply to metals for making bullets within a few hours. They will know at all times just how much of necessity is available for ordinary occasions or in case of an emergency.
Send the Daily Kansan home.
"Doctor?" Peter Kankoff, 18 Medicine has established a reputation for himself along other lines than medical research. He put his knowledge of food chemistry into practice Sunday by making the finest angel food cake that was ever turned out. Those who tasted it agree that the department of Home Economics will have to look to their laurels.
The work of taking this inventory will be under the direction of the five men named by Secretary Daniels, but they will have assistants over the state who will work under their orders. Every man will have charge of a certain work, and while neither Professor Whitaker nor Professor Shaad has received explicit directions as to when how to begin the work, it is certain that the inventory will be more thorough than any other ever taken before on account of having the national government behind the movement.
FACULTY WOMEN TO SAVE
PRESERVES FOR HOSPITAL
The scientific equipment for the University Hospital is supplied by the State, therefore the $13 in cash which we will provide to go for household appointments, Dr. Alice Goetz, says: "At present, we expect to keep this money as a nest egg to which we will add more and more, we may remodel the diet kitchen.
At the last meeting of the University Women's Association it was suggested that each member set aside two or three glasses of jelly or preserves to the hospital. Also each one as to salve all her old magazines for the hospital.
Mrs. Frank strong says that the hospital would be glad to receive any contributions from town people or any one else who would care to donate of their old magazines or any jellies, etc., to them.
EIGHT COSMOPOLITANS ALMOST CAUSE RIOT
Can't Blame Professors.
D'jever notice how urgent his professorship gets when recommending the magazine stuff to be read by his class, how subtly he leaves the impression that he gorges himself every night before going to bed with the Atlantic Monthly, World's Work, and Review of Reviews?
If you want a peep behind the scenes come on over here to the University club. We'll stand in the doorway and while the Professor swings the gavel and talks with his hands we'll listen to the bidding.
"Twenty copies of the Atlantic Monthly, how much am I offered gentlemen? What? Twenty-five cents? Think of it, twenty copies—and all I'm bid is twenty-five cents. Thirty cents. Fifty cents. Fifty cents. Going ___ who'll make it fifty ___ going to Professor But for thirty cents.
"Come on now let's have some real bidding. Five copies of the World's Work. - - - - What, nobody wants them? Well, here we'll the ten last numbers of the Reviews of Reviews. A quarter! Never, we'll burn them.
What's the matter with you pro-
tection? why don't you do some real
bidding? ****
*a dollar* — *dollar sixty-nve*
*two dollars and a quarter* — *two- twifo*
*three* — *three*
"Aw put an honest-to-goodness man." "This in sootty voice from the chorus."
"Here's eight copies of the Cosmopolitan, they're a year old but - - never can die till humanity itself
and no man is left on the planet to
learn from it.
"Professors, be gentlemen, you can't all have them."
SEVENTY STUDENTS START
FOR THE PEN SATURDAY
They rung down the curtain on us then and we couldn't see anything more.
About seventy students of the University will be taken to the Kansas State Penitentiary at Lansing and the Federal Penitentiary at Leavenworth so that those in charge have decided they can not be safely transported without the use of a special train. This will leave the Union Pacific depot at 7:30 in the morning. The students will learn conditions inside the Pen first hand, but will not be deprived of their education either. They are from the department of Sociology and will return Saturday evening.
TALK ON MASEFIELD ENTER THE POP DANCE
George Herbert Clarke Wi Speak on Life of English Writer
Writer
George Herbert Clark, professor of English at the University of Tennessee, will speak at K. U. on the life and work of John Masefield, a present day English poet and dramatist, in the chapel, April 18; at 4:30 p. m. A tencentury address in memory of William Shakespeare is to be given April 9, m. and d. by b. m. April 19, Professor Clark will discuss "The Mystery of Hamlet."
John Masefield is perhaps better known for his narrative poems, "The Everlasting Mercy," "The Widow in the Street," and his bullets of the
Mr. Masefield was born in 1875, and since that time he filled the positions of sailor, farm laborer, and not so very long ago he served as bartender in a New York saloon. When he returned to England, he began to write and the worth of his work was readily recognized. In 1912 he was awarded Poligane prize for poetry by the Royal Society of Literature. Up to the present time he is better known for his poetry than his plays.
Professor Clarke's second lecture will take up the life and work of William Shakespeare, master dramatist, who died April 23, 1616, three hundred years ago. To quote the words of Richard Le Gallienne:
"It was surely a good day for the world when he was born, and to celebrate the day of his death is to announce that he has never really died
The Mystery of Hamlet' will con
cult the varieties of lectures by Profes
s Clarke.
THIRD LENTEN RECITA1
Prof. Skilton and Mrs. Olcott Will be Heard Wednesday
The third of the Lenten Organ Recitals will be given in Fraser Hall Wednesday at 4:30 by Prof. Chas. S. McCann, adjunct professor, cott, contralto. The program will be made up of Wagner numbers. The program follows;
Festal Music from "Der Meister-singer."
Tannhauser March.
Liebestod from "Tristram and Isolde."
Temple Bells and Love Feast from "Parsial."
Magic Fire Music from "Die Walk urie."
The class in High School Administration closely resembles a county teachers' meeting at the present time. The students have all been assigned reports on the best methods in teaching the subjects in which they are majoring, and the enthusiasm which they display in giving these reports is remarkable considering what little experience they have had.
Dreams Orgon
"Parsifal."
Miss Ethel Wilson, of Louisburg spent the last of the week with her sister La Vern Wilson, '18 College.
Student Council to Stage Its First All-University
Party
Now comes the Pop Dance. It is not $\epsilon$ variation of the one-step, Maxiize, Waddle or anything else. Its novelty consists in the fact that it is for everybody—an all-University affair. The pop dance being made with that understanding
Ed Haley and his violinist from Kannan will come up to play for the party.
The Pop Dance is a new thing. The Student Council has planned to give this one as an experiment and if the students of the University show that they are familiar with it, the Student Council will give them regularly this spring and next year.
It is Saturday night in Robinson gymnasium.
Edward Tanner, chairman of the social committee of the Student Council, says that it will take a large attendance to make the dance pay its expenses as the admission price of twenty-five cents a couple will not go far toward defraying the expenses of a student. The committee lives that if 150 couples attend, the Pop dances will become a permanent feature at K. U.
Saturday night, the music will begin at 8:30 o'clock and the program will be on Tuesday.
K. U. Grad and an American Violinist Make Out Program
TO GIVE FREE RECITAL
The School of Fine Arts has made arrangements for a free musical recital to be given in Fraser Hall Thursday, April 13 at 4:30. The recital will be given by Miss Iona Senn, violinist and pianist. Miss Senn is an American artist who has studied four years abroad. She has appeared in a great many concerts in this country and is an artist of large attemtations. Dean Harold L. Lehman, the director of the Jazz Center, and immediately made arrangements for a concert here.
Miss Morgan is a graduate of the School of Fine Arts, a pupil of Prof. Carl Preyer. She has also done considerable concert work.
The recital will be free and open to the general public.
The program follows:
Concerto, D. moll...Vieuxtemps
Preghiera...Bazzini
Gavotte...Gossec
Deutscher Tanz...Dittersdoorf
Abend lief...Schumann
Hgire Kati...Hubey
Sextette from "Lucia di Lammer-
The program follows;
moor"..." Leschetzky
(For the left hand alone)
(For the left hand alone)
Zigeunerweisen...Sarasate
Lawrence friends of Captain Adna Clarke, U. S. A., an alumnus of the University of Kansas, were inquiring today if he had been sent to the canal zone with several hundred men and officers of the coast artillery who sailed last Saturday for the zone. When last heard from him he was staunchly Adna Clarke. I but I was in the hospital in Washington suffering from a wound received years ago in the Philippines which has been bothering him for a great deal for two or three years. Clarke took his LLB. in '97 and A. B. in '06.
George Baerg, as Der Vetter, played the leading part very successfully. Harold Mattono and Edward Kroesch carried heavy parts with good mastery. The two women in the play, Lucile Blackfan and Irma Wohlheim, were also involved. The other "personen," although carrying minor parts, did excellent works.
The three act comedy, Der Vetter,
given by the department of German
Saturday evening in Green Hall, was
enjoyed by a good house in spite of
the fact that many who had tickets were
sent at the交atrentcontinental
reunion.
DER VETTER WAS GOOD
COMEDY—DREW CROWD
"We are always pleased to see the German people down town turn out to our plays," said Prof. W. W. Hawkins this morning. The proceeds go toward defraying expenses of the German Verein.
Each spring the department of German gives a play. It is usually some good side-splitting comedy, and Der Vetter was no exception.
WOMEN TRAINING HARD
Feminine Athletes Preparing for Interclass Athletic Tourney in May
Hurdling, putting the shot, high and broad jumping, running and standing, dashing fifty, seventy-five and one hundred yards, and hurling the baseball and discs, are all being practiced. They are freshman, freshman, sophomore and upperclassmen who expect to enter the interclass journey which takes place in May.
Forty freshman women are turning out with a regularity which bespeaks revenge for the different basketball drubbings administered to them last summer. They marries moores and upperclass women, while not so many in number, are also steadily working. That the women are in earnest is shown by the persistence they grind away, striving to get the proper form for these various events.
Each participant can appear in only three events although the tourneys are now trying out in many different ways and you get a line on what they can do best.
"The girls can come out for practice at any time," said Miss Pratt, who is coaching the different squads. "A woman not only has a chance to break the different women's records, and to win points toward an A, but she has the privilege of helping to win a trophy can for her class."
The records held by women in the different events to be given in the K. U. 40 yard hurdles 4 3-5 s. the course are: 40 yard hurdles 4 3-5 s. 80 yard hurdles 13 3-8 seconds. 120 yard hurdles 18 seconds. Rurring broad jump 16 feet 5 inches.
Standing broad jump 8 feet 10 inches.
Standing high jump 4 feet.
Running high jump 4 feet 9 inches.
Shot put (6 lb.) 37 feet 2-1.2
Basketball throw 88 feet 10 inches.
Baseball throw 205 feet 7 inches.
Hurl ball 67 feet 11 inches.
Miss Edna Davis, of Topeka, was the guest of Mary Nicholson and Grace Woulfe at the Alpha Chi Omega house from Friday until Mon. 15th in the court for the Fri. Kappa Alpha and Acacia dances Friday and Saturday evening.
FACULTY SUFFERSAGAIN
An Assistant Professor Is Appointed to Replace Professor
RESIGNATIONS STILL COME
Board Handles Other Routine Business in Meeting Here
The routine business of accepting resignations, granting degrees and making appointments covered the other work done.
The appointment of an assistant professor to fill the place of Prof. Carl Becker was the most important action he must meet in the meeting of the Board of Administration.
Frank E. Melvin, Ph.D., a graduate of the University of Pennsylvania, was appointed assistant professor of Modem History at the University of Prof. Carl Becker who leaves the University next fall to accept a better position at the University of Minnesota. Professor Melvin is now an Assistant Professor of European History at Cornell.
The resignations of Professors R. M. Ogden of the department of psychology and C. A. Johnson of the department of electrical engineering were accepted. Professor Ogden's resignation takes effect the first of September. Professor Johnson, who is a graduate student in the house Manufacturing Company at Pittsburgh, Pa., will leave the University about the 15th of this month.
The degree of Bachelor of Science was granted to four students. J. L Bliss, G. C. Harding, and R. C. Keeling of the department of civil engineering in the English department of chemical engineering were granted the degrees.
P. W. Claassen, A. B., '13, K. U., was appointed assistant professor of entomology for the first semester next year to take the place of Prof. H. B. Hungerford, who has been granted a leave of absence. Mr. Claassen went to Cornell to take graduate work and is interested here this year. Professor Hungerford will go to Cornell to take graduate work during his leave of absence.
Miss Olive Coulter was appointed stenographer in the University Extension Division and Miss Mille Mann, assistant in Registrar Foster's office.
5. N. G. TO DRILL IN OPEN
Will Practice Field Work— Change Hour of Drill
Company M of the K. N. G. will begin to hold its weekly drills out in the open tonight at 7 o'clock. The purpose of these drills in the open is to practice field work which cannot be performed by members experience in marching over rough ground and in working with greater intervals between two guards in which orders are given by signal rather than by comman. These drills, as described below, Jones are the same as are given at the summer camp for the K. N. G.
The changing of the time of drill to 7 instead of 8:30 also has its advantages. Many members of the company find it impossible to do any work in a half-hour, and still state of 8:30. The men work out for about an hour and a half, the regulation of the war department, and the entire evening is occupied by reporting to the army, drilling, and changing of uniforms. The men then can they be through at 8:30 at the latest with the rest of the evening free.
Miss Hannah Oliver, Associate Professor of Latin, is training the Greek chorus that will recite in Latin the Greek poem around which the May Fete is built. There will be fifty men and women in the chorus. The dancers will interpret the meaning of the verses spoken by the chorus.
Mrs. H. J. Harlyn, of McPheron, whose husband is Dean of the McPheron College, visited her son, P. W. Harlyn, graduate student, Sunday. She was on her way to a meeting of the Federation of Women's Clubs.
According to a report from the office of Chancellor Strong, Easter vacation will be from April 21 to 24, including Good Friday and the Monday after Easter. The ceasing will run as per schedule and will begin again on Tuesday following.
The Weather
The Forecast: Generally fair to
night and Wednesday. Not much
chance of rain.
MORNING PRAYERS
---
Week of April 10 to 14
Leader, the Rev. Arthur Braden.
Subjects:
Wednesday: "Knowing God."
Thursday: "Soul Power."
Friday: "Who is this?"
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Official student paper of the University of, Kangas.
EDITORIAL STAFF
Chas, S. Sturtevant ... Editor-in-Chief
Miles W. Vaughn... Associate Editor
Raymond A. Fagan... News Editor
Raymond Clapper... Assistant
BUSINESS STAFF
William Cady... Business Manager
Chas. Burlevant
Circulation Mgm.
Cyclulation Mgrs
REPORTORIAL. STAFF
MORTGON STAFF
Paul Prismit
Garrilher
Don Davis
Ralph Ellis
Charles Sweet
Glenn Swoger
Josh Moytan
Morgan
Subscription price $3.00 per year in advance; one term, $1.75.
Entered as second-class mail, malt-
labor and a law professor. After
awnings, Kansas, under the
not of Mr. J. E. Farnsworth.
Published in the afternoon five
thirty p.m. by the press of
the department, from the press of
the department.
Address a. communications to UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Lawrence, Kansas. Phone, Bell K. U. 25.
The Daily Kansan aims to picture the undergraduate life of the University, ther than merely printing the students in a book. The University holds; to play no favorites; to be clean; to be cheerful; to be courageous; to leave more serious problems to wiser heads, in all, to teach them how to satisfy the students of the University.
TUESDAY, APRIL 11, 1916
A Dog was crossing the river over a plank, carrying a piece of meat in her mouth and thought that another dog was dropped on her piece and dashed forward. The other meat was gone, and the dog hat the other meat was gone, and the cream. And thus the Dog was left with nothing.
BOOST THE LOAN FUND
Should a senior of the present class which is to be graduated in June, ask help of the Student Loan fund committee, he would be told that the committee had no more funds. There was but $1900 available and it is practically all in use.
Should each class as it is graduated, turn in the amount it has collected as a memorial for the University, to the student loan fund, by 1920 a considerable sum would be available. Were each class to turn in $200, an additional thousand dollars would be added to the fund, by 1920.
And it would do a great deal more good than the buying of useless bric-a-brac for the campus.
THOSE SPARE MOMENTS
"What's gone and what's past help Should be past grief."—The Winter's Tale.
THE WAY a man spends his spare time usually determines his character, once observed a clever interpreter of men. At no time in one's life is this so true as during one's college career. With various lines of activities which may be followed, the index to one's character may well be determined by what he does with his old bits of surplus time.
Is it a clever novel or a certain picture show for which a student wishes he had the time? Does he indulge in a game of cards, a few minutes of pool or a cursory glance through a good magazine, when he has a few spare moments?
The man who forges ahead, leaving the mass of the world behind to drudge and slave, is not the man who has idied away his spare moments.
THAT GAMING INSTINCT
Another proof of the fact that civilization is only a thin veneer was shown last Friday night, when the members of the University Club spiritedly bid against another for the old magazines sold under the auctioneer's hammer. Throwing aside the cloak of education, the members of America's democratic autocracy entered into the gambling spirit to the extent of $26.92. This amount has been added to the library fund through the sale of old magazines which have accumulated.
The earliest instinct developed by the prehistoric Neandertal man was that of gaming. This instinct has remained with us. A game of pool is made more interesting by the loser's being obliged to pay. The society woman must have prizes offered to make the game of bridge interesting An election cannot be an election un
less a wager is made as to who the winner will be.
So even the faculty bid on old magazines, boosting the price little by little, each hoping his bid will be raised so he will not be required to buy those upon the block.
"A horse! A horse! My kingdom for a horse!" - King Richard III.
THE LITTLE THINGS
THE LITTLE THINGS
Two girls elbowed their way through thirty or more men lounging on the steps of Green Hall. The happy, care-free Laws were launching jokes, crude perhaps, at every passby, making voluble and pseudocomplimentary remarks.
The two flushed and embarrassed girls dodged through the phalanx of future Legal Lights and prepared to attack the last human barricade before the closed door. An older man stepped forward, shoved the sheepishly grinning youths aside and opened the door for the girls to enter.
ROMANCE IN NAMES
It's the little things that count.
"A library for every county in the state and a book for every citizen" has been adopted by the State Library Commission of Kentucky as its slogan. The goal has not been reached yet but it is said that the travelling library system embraces many stations as there are days in the year.
The diversity of names of these stations reveals the curious practice of selecting; names that are appropriate for one reason or another known only to the people themselves.
Women evidently have figured in the making of these villages for the names Bertha, Inez, Laura, Livia, Louisa, and Nancy are contained in the sixth annual report of the commission. Patriotism has also been a stimulus of selection for there is the town of Seventy-six. Salt Lick, Sand-lick, Paint Lick may have been chosen for the surrounding geographical peculiarities. And the world's debt to Kentucky is recalled by Horse Cave, Long Run, and Stamping Ground. Then there are other notable names as Alone, Job, Lovelaceville, Nobob, Pactuset, Pine Knot, Savage, and Spider.
Nothing commonplace or colorless about these names and the commission assures us that the same is true of the people who live in the places so designated. Let the libraries be taken to them without stint.
Essays in Tabloid Tablets
SILK HOSE
Silk hose. Are not made. To wear.
But. To look at. They are the
cause. Of the prosperity. Of Lawrence Opticians. And the reason.
Why. So many University men. Wear eyeglasses. They are most. Popular on windy. Days. Sometimes they use silk. Like silk, they are any. Not. Any hosiery. That is very. Thin. May be called. Silk. They are like. A woven fence. In that. They enclose. Calves. Or chickens. They are usually. Bought. At the same time. Short skirts. Are. And they do not wear. Well. Because they are. Beaded. Because. The patches. Cover. The skin. Too much. They cause. Coughs. Colds. Pneumonia. Cross eyes. Broken necks. And. Disgust. And. Big bills. At the ladies clothing stores. They are different. Colors. And Strips. And transparency. They break inmates of the. Diaphanous gown. For thirty-six. They may. Go out of. Style. If the war. Keeps on a few. Years longer. Hence the saying. Peace. Has. Its. Terrors.
FOUND IN A BOOK
“There are, broadly speaking, two kinds of minds—the ratiovicative and the irrational; in other words, the logical and the illogical. The logical mind proceeds scientifically from sure premises to just conclusions, taking no direction and traveling no faster and less purposeful than the wanted and justified by ascertained fact. The irrational or illogical mind, on the contrary, is unable to discriminate between belief and knowledge, between facts and fancies. Consequently, this type of mind proceeds from guess to conclusion, with the recollection of a distorted, warped, and swerved from truth just in proportion as the basic guess is correct or false.”—from “Defenseless America” by Hudson Maxim.
A Corner for the Library Browser
Send the Daily Kansan home.
Robert Browning was born at Cambridge in 1812. He was educated at London University. While his wife was educated at Oxford, most of his time in Florence—last before he met the woman between London and Venice. He died at Venice in 1899. His poems have been collected into several volumes under the titles of "Men and Women," "Dramatic Persona," "The Ring and Dante," "Dramatic Idyls," and "Sordello."
SONG FROM "PIPPA PASSES"
POET'S CORNER
The year's at the spring,
the year of the morning;
Morning's at seven;
The hillside's dew-pearled;
The lark's on the wing;
The dove's in the heaven;
God's in his heaven;
All's right in the world!
Robert Browning.
CAMPUS OPINION
Communications must be signed or evidence of good faith but names will not be published without the writer's consent
SAYS WE NEED SUNDAY
Editor Daily Kansan;
I note by the Campus Opinion column that some of your students are slaying at the proposition of Billy Sun-crest's Lawward hiring campaign at K. The students as reasons that he'll say bad things, and conjure up bad pictures, and draw evil comparisons—all things which not be cast before the K. U. student.
Your correspondent of the sixth, inst.,“H. M.” holds that Sunday is a professed minister of the gospel, and only as such should he be asked—if he is asked at all. But he's afraid he'll say something bad. The examples H. G., gives are rather disgusting taken from his own experience some meaning when in their original setting—clinched some point for which nothing else would avail.
The main point made by the writer is that K. U. students do not want to hear those bad things, because because it will hurt them or because they just naturally don't like those naughty behaviors. He says the first week of March the Mutt campaign was in full blast on the Hill. And the most popular speaker of the score or so who were in the work, was one who walked to the front of the stage and stuck out his jaw and said, "damn" when damn seemed the proper way to be. The students always cheered when he finished his naughty bad words too.
The students might not want to hear Sunday, but the chapel room wouldn't hold the crowd he'd get at the regular chapel time.
If Sunday came up to Lawrence he might be able to shift some of his students who are narrowed by the lack of fraternities and boarding clubs. The fraternities and other social organizations are mighty good things, and work for considerable good. But they have the effect of pulling the visions of students toward a group of classmates, ball players, dancers, school, or such. They need a man of Billy Sunday's breadth to extend their doings and thinkings.
As to any questions as to whether or not Billy Sunday could do any good in the 1930s, he could. So that the students are concerned sisters, not at all. But Billy Sundy is essentially a democratic man, a man who can see the life of the down-and-outer—the man whose lunch is really from a tin dinner-pail.
K. U. wont be hurt a bit by a talk ing-to Billy Sunday.
To the Editor of the Kansan;
Inexpensive tablets can be erected stating the amount left by each class and in the years to come when the classes are finished. The building is lined with these tablets the old grads can return and, after hunting out the date, estimate how much the gift of their class has been given to the enrollment of their Alumna, Mater.
According to a financial report made by the K. U. athletic association this fall, sale association only made a $2 million contribution. Yet Wednesday afternoon when
A stone bench is a very nice thing. Bulletin boards are useful and ornamental and a sun-dial, even if it is broken, is at least an addition to the campus but these things can only be afforded in the library, and the means to attend the University
THAT MEMORIAL FUND
Editor, DailyKonsult
Very truly yours,
A '16 Grad?
If the funds that have been in the past spent for stone and concrete had been turned into the Student Bank, it would be sensible for nearly a dozen more students to take work at the University. In the future, in my judgment, nothing better can be done with the classes that can add it to the Student bank fund.
If as a private individual I could feel that I had helped make it possible for one man to enroll at K. U. I had carried the heavy load he had erected a stone pillar at which those in attendance could gaze. Inanimate memorials are good things but to leave a flesh and blood remembrance, a bigger accomplishment for any class.
Hart Schaffner & Marx
Copyright Hart Schaffner & Marx
Varsity Fifty Five Spring
By Hart Schaffner & Marx
THIS is going to be a Varsity Fifty Five Spring and Summer. Young men who like smart, vital, vigorous style will make it so.
The suit shown here is a two-button coat with patch pockets; vest with soft roll notch collar and athletic shoulder; trousers have tunnel loops and cuffs.
PECKHAM'S
The Home of Hart Schaffner & Marx clothes.
Remember there is an election coming in a couple of weeks so if the present members are indifferent to what is a real abuse, maybe some new people be found. But what do the other students and letter men think about it?
When without a date the matter of grandstand seats is of little importance but I do think that when a K man who has worked for the school in athletics for two years has to shell out thirty cents for seats every time he dates to a baseball game, that he must be heard, and hear what the K. U. students think about it and what the U. athletic board intends to do about it.
the k men attempted to get grand-stand seats as in former years they were informed that along with the other students they would be required to pay the extra fifteen cents. And yet I think it was it we letter men that earned a considerable portion of that twelve thousand dollars profit.
The civil engineering department at Columbia University is inaugurating a movement to secure more and better preparation by the students outside of class. In order that the students may do more work this department has adopted the policy of providing the student shows sufficient knowledge to warrant this exemption.
Track.
Within the past year the latest department to appear in collegiate papers is perhaps the women's page. Especially is this true of the Daily Neraskan and the Daily Cardinal of Wisconsin.
Rank Store
CLASSIFIED
Jewelers
KEELER'S STORE, 932 Mass
ST. Typewriters for sale or rent
Typewriter and School Supplies
Craft supplies units for
10c. Pictures and Plates for
10c.
ED. W. PARISONS, Engraver, Watch,
jewelry.
Bell phone 711, 717, 717
Tnanding
MISS ESTELLE BROWN
BUCH,刺拔
carefully handled. 768 Mass. Phon
carefully handled.
K. U. SHOE SHOP AND PANTEAUTRUM 18.40
K. U. SHOE SHOP and BEST BUY 18.40
PHONE KENNEDY PLUMBING CO.
Mass. Phones and Mazda Lamps.
Mazda Phones.
B. H. DALE, Artistic Job Printing
both bans 278, 1827 Mass.
FORNEY SHOE SHOP 1017 Mass. St.
a mistake. All work
funkled.
PROFESSIONAL CARDS
MRS M. A. MORGAN 1321 Tennessee
taboring. . . . .
C. E. ORBELUP, M. D. Dick Bldg. Eyx
E. O. ROBELUP, M. D. Dick Bldg.
Human guaranteed. Successor to
Human guaranteed.
DR. H. L. CHAMBERS. Office over Squires studio. Both phones.
HARRY REDING. X. D. PHONES. Eye, ear
foci. F. G. D. M. Phones. D. Phone. Bldg.
U. Bldg. W. Phone. Roll 513
A. C. WILSON, Attorney at law. 748
Mass. S. St Lawrence, Kansas.
DR. H. K. HUTCHNSON, Dentist, 308
Perkins H. Bldg., Lawrence, Kansas.
WANT ADS
J. R. BECHTEL, M. D. D. O. $33 Mass
Bathroom. Both phone offices and residence.
G. W. JONES, A. M. M. D. P. Dlessau
college library
St. Louis, MO 63105
1281 Ohio St. Phone
LOST—“Modern Frame Structures”
and a leather I. H. C. notebook.
Friend kindly return to N. F. Bost,
111 Tenn, and receive librarian
ward. 131-8.
Conklin Fountain Pens
Non-Loadable, Self-Filling
Non-Leakable and Self-Filling Sold in Largest Quantity
F. B. McColloch's Drug Store 847 Mass. St.
THESIS BINDING
Engraved and Printed Cards
A. G. ALRICH
Typewriter Paper 744 Mass. St.
PROTSCH
The College Tailor
Watkins National Bank
Capital $100,000
Surplus and Profits $100,000
The Student Depository
1. اكتب الحالة
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
THE VARSITY THEATRE
TONIGHT ONLY
GEORGE BEBAN (Star in "The Alien") in
THE PAWN OF FATE A SHUBERT FEATURE
WEDNESDAY AND THURSDAY
SPECIAL FEATURE
BILLIE BURKE
IN
"PEGGY"
Produced by Thos. H. Ince
SPECIAL MUSIC BY NEWHOUSE AND CHILDLS
ADMISSION 10 CENTS
Produced by Tina H. love
SPECIAL MUSIC BY NEWHOUSE AND CHILDLS
ADULTS 20c CHILDREN 10c
LAWRENCE Business College Lawrence, Kansas.
wants ambitious young people to enroll and prepare for exceptional positions, as bookkeepers, stenographers, private secretaries, civil service. Positions secured as soon as competent. Enroll any Monday. Write, phone or call for catalogue. 645 Mass. St. Two Floors.
E. S. WEATHERBY, W. H. QUAKENBUSH Superintendent. President
BONWIT TELLER & CO.
The Specialty Shop of Originations
FIFTH AVENUE AT 38TH STREET
NEW YORK
Taillleurs Sports Apparel. Hats for Sports, Tailleur and Costume Wear, Blouses.
"Originations"
"Bontell"
Originations in
Footwear,
Hosiery, Gloves,
Neckwear and
Accessories.
Apres Midi and dansant frocks adapted to the leisure needs of the jeune fille. Charming new adaptations of the Goya motif, the Bretone peasant theme, the Louis Seize and Chinese influences.
Tailleurs developed along sports lines with a simplicity in harmony with the tailleur needs of the girl in college.
"SOME BABY"
Shubert Nights 25c to $1.50
Wednesday and Saturday
Matings at $1.00.
JEFFERSON
DE ANGELIS
April 23--Taylor Holmes in "Banker"
The University of Chicago LAW SCHOOL
The Summer Quarter offers special
specialized programs to students, teachers,
and practitioners.
Three-year course loading to degree levels is required. Quarter system, may be completed in College education required for regular college course load. Law Library of over 100 college courses.
1st term June 10-26 July
2nd term July 27-29 College
Offerors courses in the medical branches leading to the degree of M. D.
Detailed course information applied to the DEAN OF NURTURE LAW UNIVERSITY THE NEW CHICAGO
At the Bowersock TONIGHT ONLY "The Race"
Featuring Victor Moore and Anita King
ALSO
"The Strange Case of Mary Page"
MASS MEETING A FAILURE
Quorum Was Lacking—Another Get-Together Later
The amendment, which, if it had passed, would have been known as section six of article seven of the constitution, would be provided that the petitionals of all candidates for cheerleader must receive the endorsement of the Athletic Board and be in the hands of the secretary of the athletic department's o'clock of the third Tuesday in April.
The mass meeting of men students of the University, which was called to meet at noon today to vote upon the proposed amendment to change the method of electing the cheerleader, by actuation on account of the lack of a quorum.
Another meeting of the men students will be held at a later date or the proposition will be voted upon at the time of the spring election.
The outdoor ride season will open for Company M Saturday when a half dozen recruits under the command of staff will go to the range at Six Corners.
Rifle Season Will Open
This is an unusual opening, which is possible only by special permission from General, and the guard as a whistle will not go to the range till May 1.
WOULD TRAIN OFFICERS
Hay Bill Provides for Teaching Military principles in Universities
If the features of the Hay bill, which the House of Representatives has passed, go through the Senate, the University of Kansas will be entitled to an officer's reserve corps, according to Adj.Gen. C. I. Martin of the Kansas State Guard at Topeka, and because it is passed, a joint bill will be made combining the best features of each.
The Hay bill provides for the detailing of an army officer and three army sergeants to the universities throughout the U. S. that adopt the two-year military course into the school curriculum. All students compete in the same unit, a reserve corps, which would furnish officers in time of war. If adopted at K. U., it would be open to the two upper classes; elective, and possibly regular credit would be given and at least gym credit. Similar plans have long ago been adopted at Harrow and Yale, and at many other western schools. The matter has never taken up by the faculty here.
Another feature of the Hay bill is the increase in pay for the state militia from 25 cents to $1 per drill, along with special pay for summer training. The Briggs, first leader of Co. M., this pay for encampments would make the salary of the state militia the same as the regular army pay for the same duty. At the present time regular pay is given only for riot or escort duty.
PROGRAM ANNOUNCED
FOR BIG BAND CONCERT
The following is the program for
the 2014 World War II concert 26
JULY 8, "Grand Army Band"
at the Soldier's Chapel.
Hymn" . . . , *R. Wagner*
(Felix Wagner's Opera) 2.
Selection, from the Opera
"Samson and Delilah"
"C. Saint-Saens"
Vikoren
C. A. Davis
E. D. Carson
4. Overture, to the Opera, "Tann-
hauser," . . . . . . R. Wagne
FIVE MINUTES INTERMISSION
5. Ballet, "Dance of the Hours."
Seniors and Faculty Invited to the Event-Plans Are
SOPH HOP BIDS ARE OUT
3. Cornet Duet, "Nip and Tuck."
Powellbah (From the Opera, "La Gita"i)
6. Selection, "Lucca di Lammero"
Door, she Sextette," from Donietti's Opera, (double
Pringle Will Speak
Kenneth Pringle, the University of Kansas representative in the Ford peace party, will speak at the next chapel meeting Friday morning, April 14 at 10:30 on "The Ford Peace Mission." The time after the meeting will be divided between the 10:30 and 11:30 classes.
number.) . . . . .
Mr. G. R. Porterfield, of Holton,
visited his daughter, Leois Porterfield,
18 College, Sunday. Porterfield is
or he will be OK. Okinawa will
look after business interests.
Invitations to the Soph Hop were sent out Saturday to all seniors who paid their sophomore dues and to fifty members of the faculty. They may be present on Friday, but check stand during the week of April 24-28. Under the direction of John Dyer, chairman of the Hop finance committee, the cash ticket sale has been proceeding rapidly, and the attendance promises to be record-breaking.
In endearingly $\wp$ select dane music which will be the most popular with the guests at the Hop, Harry and a group of gramm委会, has mailed out lists of popular music to all fraternities, sororities, and clubs, and asked that they select music which they like. The groups are included if the dance program at the Hop.
Farce rehearsals are now being held daily, on the main playing floor of the gymnasium. A cast of fifteen and a chorus of twenty, directed by Misses Helen Hoopes and Gladys Elliott, are gradually getting the musical comedy back on the stage of the party. An orchestra of seven nieces will niav for the show.
Frank Hetherington, a junior in the College, and Mrs. Kate Driadson, well known cutter, have contracted to provide luncheon service for three copper lunchheen will be served.
Programs have been ordered from Philadelphia and the copy for them was mailed last Wednesday. Owing to the fact that there is so much matter in the program, however, the management does not expect them to be finished until a short time before the party.
Fifty pounds of confetti and 2,000 rolls of serpentine have been ordered for the serpentine carnival which will occur during one of the dances.
Members of the decorating committee will remain in Lawrence during the Easter vacation to deck out the Gym and other rooms. The name of Crimson and Blue will be used.
IT'S A WHOPPER THIS YEAR
K. U. Graduating Class of 403
Will Break All Records
The largest class ever graduated from this University will receive degrees in June. The of the 403 candidates for degrees, the largest number, 251, will be graduated from the College with the Bachelor of Arts degree, according to a list issued from Registrar George O. Foster's office this week.
The School of Engineering will grant the degree of Bachelor of Science, to the next largest number, 56 graduates; and 51 Laws will wear the purple tassel in June to signify their academic letter write LL. B, after their names.
The candidates for degrees from the other schools of the University, exclusive of the Graduate School, number: School of Pharmacy, 24; School of Medicine, 12; School of Fine Arts, nine.
SQUIRREL OUTGUESES
THE HONEST PROFESSOR
"Chipper, chipper," argued a squirrel as he reached up from the limb on which he was balanced and pulled out of his mouth. The newly formed buds. It was an unintentional interruption on his part. Inside, the class in public opinion did their best to center their attention on the chinny thing from the direction of the platform.
"If a man contributes one phase of an idea on single tax, how much does he contribute to the whole idea? In contrast, has little value to the whole mass.
"No event, no act, no idea, ever falls on entirely sterile soil. Tremendously complex process. That's what I want to emphasize."
"Taint's not," argued the squirrel "It's as easy as can be," and he frisked his tail to recover his balance or another reckless reach for the buds.
"Great, the way he does it," said one student in a hoarse whisper. A number of necks craned in the direction of the snirrel.
Remarks from the platform indicated that the class was still in session, but no one knew it except the professor.
CARE FOR YOUR EYES
Send the Daily Kansan home to the folks.
Naismith Says Studying Does Not Tend to Cause Weakness —It's the Light
Sore eyes are not common among students, nor does college work alone tend to weaken the eyes, as some people might suppose. According to Dr. James Naismith, most of the eye strain comes from improper lighting. Students should avoid "study facing the light." This causes the rays of light to reflect from the white page of the book into the reader's eyes, making a glare which is very injurious. If the light comes from the side of the reader, the rays reflect in the other direction, and the dark page becomes very easy to read."
ENGINEERS EASILY AFFECTED
No estimates have been taken of the amount of astigmatism among University students, but among persons entering civil or military service, and among people with this eye trouble. Considering the different schools of the University, the engineer, while he is no more apt to have astigmatism than students of other schools, discover it sooner on account of the nature of his work, which deals with fine points and exacting lines.
COLLEGE STUDIES SUSPICIBLE Students in the School of Law, while they do a great amount of reading, do not have much trouble because their rearing is in the English language, or doing so in foreign or ingoring in foreign languages, especially German or Greek, are much more subject to eye trouble.
Many people who have astigmatism, according to Dr. Naismith, never know it until some severe strain on eyes causes them to have an examination.
MANY COMPLAINTS IN SPRING
More complaints of eye trouble are made in the spring than any other time. When someone is sick, the work done during the school year, and partly to the bright sunlight of spring. Everyone wants to get outdoors, and eyes unused to the strain more than at another time.
Gym Accident Not Serious
Roscoe S. Harrington, who was injured Friday morning by falling and striking his head against the floor in the basement of the Gymnasium, was able to be on the Hill again Monday. He is still feeling quite weak however, as a result of the 3-inch gash which was cut in his head.
If you cannot spare the money for a Northwestern policy now, how can your estate spare the Northwestern draft it ought to get?
L. S. Broughly
Made that Date Yet?
—Better hurry
—or you'll
—be too late.
—Then some
—other gink
—'ll get
—to take
—"her" to
The Glee Club Concert
—It's Thursday
—night at
—Fraser Hall,
-8 o'clock sharp.
-It will cost
—you are per,
—or better still
you 25c per,
Student Enterprise Ticket
Arrow Shirts-guaranteed fast color Sold exclusively by Johnson & Carl
This is an Advertisement Why Read It?
All that we wish to say is that we carry a full line or the prettiest millinery creations the designers could think up. This fact added to your knowledge that there are just
10 Shopping Days 'till Easter
Had you stopped to think that if you come tomorrow you will have a better stock to pick from than you will the day after?
CHAPTER II
We had almost forgotten the dressmaking department ; it should have been in the first paragraph because Miss Daisy Reed is doing top column work. Oh well this position is alright though because her prices are low.
WHY WAIT LONGER?
TOMORROW WILL BE A PLEASANT DAY.
Mrs. McCormick
831 Massachusetts
Lindsborg Swedes vs. K. U. Baseball, Thursday, April 13 Game Called 3:45.
Two Bit Dance, HALEY and Violin, April 15
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
WALKER TOURS STATE
Head of School of Engineering Studies Industrial Possibilities For Kansas Cities
STUDENTS TO MAKE COKE
Dean Will Go to Mechanicals Meeting In New Orleans Later
Following a week's tour of inven-
tigation in southeastern Kansas
Dean P. F. Walker of the School of
Engineering yesterday announced his
confidence that the industrial posi-
tion has turned positive with success as urged by Governor Arthur Capper in an address at Pittsburg last week.
Dean Walker's work was part of an extended manufacturing survey being carried on by the Engineering Society of the University. This survey is for the purpose of ascertaining not only the extent and condition of present facilities but also the possibility for new manufactures and the possibility of cheaper fuel.
Coke, a necessary fuel in much manufacturing, costs approximately $2.50 a ton at Pittsburgh, Pa., or Burlington, N.J., for $800 per ton; $4 per ton a to吨 to Kansas.
Dean Walker said the department of mining engineering will start soon on a series of tests to determine the practicability of making coke from southern Kansas coal. These tests will be worked out in connection with the Department of Transportation materials. If a washing process can be worked out which will remove sulphur an important fuel problem may be solved for Kansas manufacturers.
In addition, if a good grade of coke can be produced, according to Dean Walker, the market opening to it will cover most of the territory west of the Missouri river and perhaps as far east as the Mississippi.
"I have been touching most frequently on the possibility of successful leather tanneries," said Dean Walker in discussing the outlook for more industries for the state. "Such tanneries would utilize hides from the packing plants. I believe that oak bark can be secured in the section near the state's capital, sufficient and suitable for the tanning businesses in Kansas City, Kansas and Wichita offer the best locations for tanning plants.
"Pittsburgh is a logical place for a cotton mill where there is a supply of foreign labor of the type needed in cotton plants," continued the dean. "And there is the possibility of a sugar refinery at Pittsburgh also."
During his trip in southeastern Kansas, Dean Walker in addition to investigating general conditions, se- tained data regarding the fountain and machin- e building. Cherryvale, Independence, Coffeville and Pittsburg. Investigators working in co-operation with Professor Walker have gathered material regarding the cement, glass, brick and tile, salt, and other industrial plants in Kansas.
"In talks to the business men of Iola, Independence and Pittsburg," said Dean Walker, "I tried to make it plain to all that the School of Engineering is in a position to carry out its mission. And I pointed to the point I stressed with especial care was that the University would take up no problem that was not big enough to have a significance to large communities or to the entire state. Anything that results obtained are to be open to any or all interested groups in the state."
Dean Walker left last night on another trip to gather information. He will spend two days in St. Louis studying the leather tanning business of the American industries of other industries. Later in the week Professor Walker will go to New Orleans to attend the spring meeting of the American Society of Mechanical Engineers, where the question of whether he will be discussed and papers on the utilization of the natural gas supply for manufacturing will be read
K. U. Alumni Banquet
Kansas Citians were given a sample of "Rock Chalk" Saturday night that reminded them of the days when the annual Jayhawker-Tiger gridron battle took place in the city. The event was the annual banquet of the Kansas City Alumni. Two hundred alumni attended the meeting.
Among the speakers were R. R. Brewster, Charles M. Blackmar, Prof. J. N. Van der Vries and Cussin' T Smith of Hiawata. Daniel S. Anderson acted as toastmaster. The menu cards were a feature, being filled with humorous business cards of Kansas City Alumni.
Mu Phi Upson has invited about two hundred friends to the chapter house Wednesday evening, from 7 to 9 o'clock, for an informal musical.
On Wednesday evening, the local chapter will have been established five years. They are intending to build a house next year. The proceeds of the evening will be added to their building fund.
EXPERTS DISAGREE ON
AGE OF MOUNT OREAD
How old are the rocks of Mount Orend? Make your own guess, for it is a case where experts disagree. Some of them think that the top of the Hill is only 3,500,000 years old, while others insist that it has attained the comparatively mature age of 7,000,000 years.
Geologically, the limestone that crops out on the Hill is known as the Oread Limestone of the Pennsylvania period. The shale that lies under it carries the name of the Lawrence shale, and belongs to the same period.
Many different rocks and minerals are found in very small quantities in the Earth. Rock types that find small lumps of zinc, barite, flint and occasionally lead and iron ore. One student found a piece of lead ore that was from North College Hill several years ago.
Most of the load and zinc deposits occur at a lower elevation, however, and the finding of small lumps does necessarily indicate valuable deposits.
MINERS MEET TOMORROW
Banquet Added to Program-
Meeting Starts at 10:30
A banquet for the faculty and students of Haworth Hall has been added to the program for Miners' Day tomorrow. The banquet will be held in Robinson Gymnasium at 6:30 o'clock and will close a busy day of lectures and talks on opening and geological studies. Prof. Ernest Hale has headed the department of geology has been selected to act as toastmaster for the occasion.
Toasts will be responded to as follows: "Changes in Ore Dressing," by R. B. T. Kiliani; "Sure Pop and the Safety Scouts," by A. A. Knapp and "Mining in the Frozen North," by Dr. H. M. Payne.
Two additional speakers for the afternoon were secured this morning. They are Warden Codding of the Kansas state penitentiary at Lansing and Levi Day, superintendent of the state mine at Lansing.
The full program for the day as announced this morning follows;
10:30 a. m., Haworth Hall, Prof. E.
Haworth, chairman.
"Across Japan and Siberia in War Time," Dr. Henry M. Payne, consult engineer of New York, illustrated 2:30 p.m. Mayfin Hall, Proof A.
2:30 p. m., Marvin Hall. Prof. A. C. Terrill, chairman.
"Efficient Crushing," illustrated by R. B. T. Killian, of New York
"Kansas Men That Might Have Been," illustrated, by A. A. Knapp, of the Department of Labor and Industry at Topeka.
"The Convict Problem," by Warden Coding.
"Mining Coal at Lansing" by Mr. Levi Day of the Lansing mine,
by Dr. Henry M. Payne, illustrated.
6:30 p. m., Robinson Gymnasium.
Banquet for the visiting speakers, the faculty of Haworth Hall and students in the department of mining engineering.
Prof. E. Haworth, Toastmaster.
Will Have One More Chance to Order Invitations
The orders taken will be for paper bound invitations, leather being out of the country to be ordered at the price, and the refusal of the leather company with which Mr. Cress is doink business, to supply any more invitations under the old contract price.
Seniors and graduates will have one more opportunity to order commencement invitations on Wednesday afternoon, April 12th at the Fraser Hall check stand. From 1:30 to 3:30; an Elite Ed. Program, secretary of the invitation committee. This will be positively the last chance to obtain invitations.
Under the contract which Mr. Criss made with the company in January, he was to take 550 leather invitations, whether he sold them or not. The 550 invitations have all been sold and no more leather invitations may be received unless someone should desire to dispose of some at a little profit to himself.
Mr. Cress has sold 400 more invitations to barbs than to fraternity students. The number of men and women underlying them has been about equal.
The annual exhibit of the Lawrence Camera Club was opened to the public Tuesday in Rooms 302 and 304, Administration Building. This club has been in existence 17 years, and its art collection for this year is one of four exhibitions it has one of, fenced. The exhibit will last two weeks and during this time Prof. W. A. Griffith will give several lectures about the pictures.
CAMERA AERIAL CUISSION OPUÈN
ADMINISTRATORY BUILTIN
PHI PSIS WIN 2 TO
Battle With Acacias in First Pan-hellenic Game of
Season
It took an extra inning to decide the winner of the first Pan-hellenic baseball game yesterday when the Phi Psis and Acacias met on Hamilton Field. But the Phi Psis came back strong in this inning and scored the winning run before any outs were made setting up a 2 to 1 score.
the game was played throughout in five leagues, in few for fraternity games and bits were not very plentiful. Both pitchers were backed up by good support, and both were ground for the Acacias and Connellly, a freshman, worked for the Phi Pais.
The Acacias got their lone run in the second round after a couple of hits and an error opened the way. The Phi Pais got their first run in the first inning by a group of hits. In the final round Graham drove the ball to left field for three bases and scored on Sproull's single a moment later.
ANNOUNCEMENTS
The Sigma Xi banquet will be held Thursday night, April 13, at I. O. O. Hall. The members, as well as the students, will be wherever the case may be) will be there.
El Atene will meet Thursday evening from 7:30 to 9:30 at 1106 Ohio instead of from 3:30 to 4:30 as usual. Students in Spanish are invited to attend.
I will pay two and a half cents for
the book, mining edition.
Professor Terrill.
The Snow Zoology club will meet Tuesday at 7:30 in the Biology library.
Prof. U. G. Mitchell will speak on the subject, "Is there a scientific basis for religion," at the Y. W. C. A. meeting Tuesday afternoon at 4:30 at Myers Hall. Nellie Kennedy, 16 College, will be leader of the meeting. All women of the University are urged to be present.
Black Helmets meeting at Pi Kappa
Alpha house, Tuesday evening at 8:00
The International Polity Club will meet Tuesday evening, April 11, at the Phi Kapa Psi house, 1140 La street. There will be an important business meeting after which Mr Roland Hugins of Cornell University will speak to the club. Meeting called at 7:30 prompt.
Shinx Society meets Tuesday night at 7:30 o'clock. Pi Upsilon chapter house. Important business. Every member be present.
- No Dramatic Club meeting tonight.
Postponed for one week.
The descriptive astronomy class for last semester will meet for observation at the Physics Building Wednes-
day at 7:30 if the sky is clear.
Seniors are requested to call at the check stand and order their caps and gowns before the Easter holidays.
Black Helmets meet at Pi Kappa Black house tonight at 7:30. Be there!
Sigma Delta Chi, tonight, 8 o'clock Beta house.
FOR NEW MEMORIAL IDEA
Seniors Urge Planting of Trees and Shrubs as Gift
A new idea in class memorials will be brought out when the senior class meets some time next month to determine what the memorial shall be. The idea is to appropriate the money for laying of the flowers of the campus according to the plans in the hands of the Senate Committee in charge of that work.
The gift would be a tangible one, for according to the plan worked out by the Senior memorial committee and in preparation of the institution of ground would be taken and trees planted according to the plans, and a small tablet would be placed in the ground at the extremities stating "In this room were the gifts of the Class of 1916."
The sentiment of the majority of the class as expressed thus far indicates that the pooling of funds of the various classes and then leaving a fine Chairman Mack is himself highly in favor of this plan, but according to his statements the Senior Committee cannot get together with the other class on these issues on any definite plan of action, therefore the plan can not be worked out.
Coach Olcott wants 25 more men out for spring football practice every afternoon. Spring training lasts until April 20.
E. F. Stimpson of the department of Physics has received a letter from the Bureau of Standards at Washington to request measures officials of the state to attend the Eleventh Annual Conference of the United States Weights and Measures Association, to be held at the Bureau of Standards at Washington.
TO MROMOTE UNIFORMITY OF WEIGHTS AND MEASURES
This conference is held for the purpose of promoting uniform practice in the inspection of weights and measures, and to induce legislation in respect to inspection of weights and the inspection in all states. The terms of this resolution provide that all types of weighing and measuring apparatus shall be approved by the Board of Inspection, and that issue a certificate of approval which is good throughout the United States.
CALLS FOR HURDLERS
Hamilton Says More Freshmen Are Needed in Varsity Track Squad
"Not enough men are working out for the annual spring interclass track and field meet to be held on McCook field April 29," said Coach W. O. Hammond, especially are not taking as much interest as they should. We are sadly in need of hurdles, and the best way to get them is to find men in the freshman class who are willing to work with our students to make Varsity material, for next year.
"There are but a few feels left before the interclass games, and it is time that the men were getting into shape. The Varsity men are not answering the call for the outdoor meets spirit I would like to have them show."
K. U. meets Nebraska at Lawrence on May 5, and the showings made in this meet will determine largely who will play in the team for the remainder of the season.
Coaches Hamilton and Patterson will be at McCook Field every evening to coach men who intend entering the interclass contests. All men, es- tended, are expected to advantage of this opportunity of get-expert advice about their events.
There is an urgent need of hurdles and pole vaulters, and a good chance in these events for any man who has reached the peak. There is willing to get out and work hard.
"Aint it the truth," said the cynical bystander, "that some of the professors in the University of Kansas are still the real, genuine pedagogues we have so often read about?" When attention of the professors and instructors was directed to holding classes and were made that the whistle blows off time, he be depended upon. And the clock mechanic stated that the whistle would not blow if the clock was off-time. So there you are.
What is a fellow going to do when he arrives in Lawrence, from the Sunny South, prepared for Spring, without an overcoat and is greeted with a snowstorm? This is the question that Richard Brown, of Pawnee, Oklahoma, who is visiting Oklahoma friends here, asked Friday morning.
Bertha Smith, '16 College, spent the last of the week at her home in Kansas
Send the Daily Kansan home
HIGH SCHOOL DEBATERS
COMING FRIDAY, MAY
Resolved, That the Federal Government should own and operate the public telephone and telegraph systems in the state of Kansas to debate in the Kansas high school bating leagues next year. The debate for the state championship this year will be held here Friday, May 5. For more information, see the question of the Monroe Doctrine.
Four teams remain in the running for the championship. Hoxie, winner of the championship, is teased Minnesota, winner in the Northland of the seventh defeated Newton,
eighth district champions. Rosedead of the second district defeated Atchison county highs, first district champions, and Caney of the third district defeated Eureka of the fourth district. Caney against Rosedead and Hoxie against Ashland will compete in semi-finals next week.
The following new directors have been chosen for next year: first district, G. W. Salissury, prin. Atchison county h. s. Edfingham; fourth district, C. F. Ferris, supt. of schools, Eureka; fifth district, C. A. Yoeman, superintendent of schools, Minneapolis.
Send the Daily Kansan Home
Indestructo Trunks Bags and Suit Cases Sold Exclusively by Johnson & Carl
Usually
flowers go up for Easter. An advance of 25 per cent in cost is the custom. But
This Time
we shall make you the same prices for Easter as at other times. Wholesale prices are higher, but it won't affect you.
Lawrence Floral Company
1447 Mass.
Bell 55.
Roses, $1.50-$2.00 per doz.
CLOTHES INSURANCE
When a man spends ten thousand dollars for a house, he naturally takes some pride in its looks. He also battles against the elements to make it a long time. Every two or three years, he spends $100 to have it painted. Every year he pays out $50 to insure it against fire or tornado.
When you spend thirty dollars for a suit of clothes, you should be interested in knowing that you are doing your part to see that the suit looks like a "thirty-plunker." You should insure yourself against having to throw it away too soon.
30 Years Experience
in the cleaning and pressing line enables us to take the right kind of care of your clothes. Our protection for your suit is as strong as that of the best fire insurance company in America for a building. Call
510 Bell or 464 Home
Today and find out what people mean when they speak of
Owen Service
Your Easter Silk Suit is Here
Many new models in silk taffetas, failles and gros-de-Londres have been unpacked in the last few days. Shades of green, copen, gray, navy and black, trimmed with velvet. Many in the full flare from the shoulders.
Prices from $25 to $45
WEAVER'S
Kathleen
Senior Play April 26. Make Dates Now!
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VOLUME XIII.
MAKING A NEWSPAPER
"Racing the Deadline" Coming to K. U. to Show How Big Daily is Edited
COMBINES ROMANCE ALSO
Shows Difficulties of Young Reporter Making a Scoop
NUMBER 134.
"Racing the Deadline," a film containing many scenes taken from the office of the Chicago Tribune, will be shown in Fraser Chapel Saturday night at 7:15 o'clock. Pop Dance begins in Robinson Gymnasium immediately after movie show.
"Racing the Deadline," a thrilling motion picture, showing the experiences of a young newspaper reporter in getting a big scoop in time to make the last edition will be brought to the University of Kansas for one exhibition Saturday night. The picture will be run in Fraser Chapel where a new up-to-date motion-picture machine has just been installed.
This film was made at great cost and trouble and the scenario was especially written so that in connection with the romantic plot some of the difficulties of getting the news on a metropolitan paper could be shown.
UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS, WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON, APRIL 12, 1916.
SCENES TAKEN IN REAL OFFICE
Every detail of the mammoth task of making a thirty-two page newspaper which contains as much reading matter as a novel and one edition of which requires as much paper as several thousand books, will be shown by the authors of the scenes were taken in the newspaper offices of the Chicago Tribune, one of the largest American dailies.
At various times during the action the city editor of the Tribune and his large staff of reporters are shown working at top speed to whip a big story into shape before press time. In cities of getting information, photographic shows, the mechanical task of getting hundreds of thousands of words set up in type and ready to be printed will be pictured. And the process by which pictures of wrecks are photographed and printed in the extra editions ten minutes later will be realistically portrayed from seven views, each one coming up in Chicago's accidents such as the Eastland disaster.
A ROMANCE WITH IT
Then the pictures will show the battery of mammoth automatic web presses humming monotonously as they throw out over a thousand papers a minute—faster than human skill can count them.
But this is the cutest part of the film. Interwoven with the whole scenario is a romance of a young reporter who goes through tremendous difficulties to get his scoop into the press, and then a name from a phrase common in newspaper offices; the deadline is the time set at which the last pages close and stories coming in two seconds after the foreman of the composing room orders the page sent to the stereotypers cannot be printed. The reporter is raking against time to get information in before the fatal minute comes.
EXPERT OPERATOR AND MUSIC
The films have been leased for one night by the local chapter of Sigma Delta Chi, national journalism fraternity, in order to give the students and faculty of the University an opportunity to satisfy the universal curiosity to know how a metropolitan newspaper is made. Students will learn about descriptive music, will begin in Fraser chapel at 7:15 o'clock on that attending may go to the Pop Dance in the gymnasium which will begin immediately after the pictures have been finished. To defray expenses of bringing the motion-pictures to the University, a charge of 10 cents will be made at the door. Marshall Briggs has arranged good point service which will mean bright, clear pictures and a licensed operator has been employed to run the pictures thus insuring the best of service and quick changes between reels.
Contents in the pocket of a K. U. woman: a chocolate bar, powder box and puff, "K" book, a pencil stick for use in connection with "K" book, one blank check, a Lincoln penny. The small boy with cramped pockets has a long brown arm that comes to using a pocket as if it were a roller-top desk.
---
Easter vacation consists of
the Friday before and the Monday
after Easter Sunday. School will be dismissed at 5:30 o'clock
and parents will resume Tuesday morning,
April 25 at 8:30 o'clock.
Frank Strong, Chancellor.
...
Plain Tales from the Hill
Students of mining engineering are experimenting and testing tons of coal from the penitentiary mine at Lansing. The coal is being put through the coal washer in the department's laboratory.
Naomi Nelson, '16 College, has left the University to take a position in the high school at Sahema for the rest of her career as teacher of German and mathematics.
The door opened softly and they entered.
She stopped and he glanced over her shoulder to look for seats but in the whole room there were no two together. From the class came sub-ringles. She blushed and they both made for near, though separated, seats.
Miss Brown's 9:30 o'clock Rhetoric II section had been successful for the first time this semester in separating the young couple.
The Rev. S. Ollinger, student pastor of the Presbyterian church, went to Great Bend, Kansas, last week to dedicate a $40,000 church. From there he goes to Solomon and Clay Center to attend two Presbyterian meetings.
The boys rooming at the City Y. M. C. A. have established a rule that all members shall chapel at least once a week in a body. The day for all to attend is Friday.
A sophomore on the hill carries five arms, not to protect himself from anyone, he says, but from mere force of habit.
Bernard Gillespie, who was in the University last fall, wrote that he was invited a week for a visit. He is interested in a copper mine at Phoenix, Arizona.
Another way devised by Prof. H. A. Lorenz for getting work out of his gymnasium classes is to offer treats to the enterprising members who will be the hand marks on the backs of some of the lazy ones, when they play swat.
Alpha Xi Delta sorority entertained their patronesses and the parents of the town girls, with a tea Sunday afternoon.
Spring suit and summer hat
The snow comes down And how we frowm
Spring suit and summer hat,
Trees are budding and all that
The snow comes down
But the weather is king for a'that
Mary Smith and Viola Engel have given out invitations for a house party during the Easter vacation, at their home in Abilene. Since this is the fourth house party that has beer announced for Abilene, it ought to be a lively place during the holidays.
George Strickland, of Wellington,
has been the guest of John Fogarty,
'18 College, for the past week. He
came to attend the 'Phi Pi
Society's Saturday evening.
He is a brother of Charles Strickland,
who was in school two years ago.
Prof. W, W. W. Davis says he wishes that we could have as rosy a future as the land-agents picture for the lands which they have for sale.
Harold Higley is visiting at the Sigma Nu house for a few days. Hig hasn't changed since he was graduated last spring and the battle with the cold, cold world has left no noticeable impressions on him.
Earl Bennett, '16 College, who had an operation performed on one leg at the beginning of the second semester, is still at the University Hospital, but is now able to be up and about. Bennett says that it seems fine to be able to get about again and he hopes to be able to leave the hospital soon. So far as can be told at the present time the operation has proved a success.
The electrical engineers have a unique bulletin. They keep it lighted with small electric lights.
Provided there is no high water this spring, students who will go home at the end of the semester by way of Kansas City, may get a taste of a swift Inter-urban ride. According to the city's transportation purpose of building the temporary bridge upon which the cars will cross into north Lawrence, the Inter-urban will not carry passengers until this bridge is completed. It is estimated that this will take two months unless the workers are delayed by high water.
William Studer was "blow up" by a gas furnace during the last cold spell. As he started to light the furnace an explosion of escaping gas blow out into his face, knocking him down. He was in school the next day with a singed eye brow and a burned wrist.
"The cars will be nearly as large an ordinary coach and will make better than passenger time," said the responder of the Heima Interurban company.
Harry Jenkins, a former student in the University, was in Lawrence last week. Jenkins is a senior in the Kansas City School of Law.
Hamilton Hall Will Hold Dressing Rooms and Showers for Athletes
NEW BUILDING GROWING MINERS' DAY IS NOW ON
TO BE READY BY MAY
Accommodation for High School Track Men Provided for
Construction work on the new McCook Field dressing sheds - Hamilton Hall- which started this week, is progressing rapidly and by May 1 the new building costing approximately two thousand dollars will be completed, according to Manager W. O. Hamilton.
The new field house will fill a long felt need for more adequate and better equipped dressing rooms at McCook Field. Although having the largest seating capacity of any University field or stadium in the Missouri, Conference, and round the best player playing field in the Valley, the K. U. field has never had dressing facilities enough for visiting athletes, at even intercollegiate contests, and when high school players were contesting it was practically impossible to provide dressing rooms for half the number. The new field house provides the time for the state high school track meet May 6 is expected to provide ample room for all the visiting intercollegiate athletes.
Workmen have begun to lay out the ground work for the new club-house on Hamilton Field which is to take the place of the sheds on McCook. The new clubhouse is to be forty feet long by forty wide and is to be two stories high. The first floor will be used for sports facilities and for biking tables. The second floor will be open for use as a chalk talk room and for any athletic meetings that may occur. The building will be of frame and will be just south of the sheds.
SCHNEIDER TO LEAD
Famous European Director Will Assist Club Tomorrow
Prof. Max Hammerstein Osor Schneider has been obtained at great expense to lead the University Glee Club in one selection Thursday night. Professor Schneider has an international reputation as the leader of great concert companies, and was observed in a private money in night letters to New York, where the great conductor is waiting until the European War blows over.
Night
"We are certainly fortunate in being able to prescut Prof. Max Hammersstein Oscar Schneider to a Lawrence audience," said Manager Saulutter this morning. "He was rather reluctant about coming, but says now that he has decided, he will give us his very best."
The concert to be given Thursday evening at 8 o'clock in Fraser Hall, is the annual Spring concert of the club. Student enterprise ticets will admit, or ticetex may be bought at the door later 2pm.
The members of the club who take part in the concert are: first tenor, Jacques Boeckel, Eric Thomas Clung, Eber Joly; second tenor, Sautter, George Baerg, Maurice Darby, Chas, Sturtevant; first bass, Marie Smith, Ora Holmes, John Hamm, David Perry. "bass" bass Fred Pausch, Dick Gelben, Warr Barber, Haush Mecinness.
After the business meeting and the installation ceremonies, the outgoing council will give the new girls a spread. The girls to be installed are: Marianne Blyth, vice-president; Merle Cross, vice-president from Fine Arts School; Hazel Carson, secretary; Katherine Reding, treasurer; Grace Beckley and Blanch Simons, senior representatives; Pattie Hart, junior representatives; Millie Carter and Lucile Nowlin, sophomore representations.
The W, S. G. A. is holding installation of the newly elected officers this afternoon in Mrs. Brown's rooms. Both the old council and the new one will be present for this ceremony and girls will each take the oath of office.
The blue grass is quite green everywhere over the lamps now with the exception of the ground in front of Green Hall where the Law students have stamped it out during the winter.
The Architectural Engineering Society met last night at the Kanza house to discuss plans for Engineers' Day. The following committee was appointed for engagements for Engineers' Day; Nigg, Sharrman, Cadmus and Pickering.
W, S. G. A. INSTALLS NEWLY ELECTED OFFICERS TODAY
Miss Ruth Lambertson, of Efingham, visited friends on the Hill Saturday and Sunday.
Lectures Given by Prominent Experts at Meetings Today
BANQUET IN GYM TONIGHT
Prof. Haworth to be Toastmaster at Feast
A crowd that filled every seat in the lecture room in Haworth Hall heard the first lecture by Dr. Henry M. Parker, who gave an illustrated talk this morning. Dr. Payne gave an illustrated talk on his trip through Klondike, Japan and Siberia recently. He also showed several slides illustrating what happened to the Indians in the Klondike and Siberian mines.
The meeting started at 2:30 o'clock in Marvin Hall. The problems confronting the state mine at Lansing were discussed by Levi Day, superintendent of the mine. The second moon was R. B. T. Kiliani, of New York. He discussed fine crushing and its effect on ore dressing.
An illustrated talk on "Kansas Men that Might Have Been," was given by A. A. Knapp of the Department of Labor and Industry at Topeka. Mr. Knapp had had much opportunity for employment in the department at Toneko.
Warding Codding, of the Kansas State Penitentiary at Lansing, spoke later in the afternoon on "Problems at Lansing."
The last speaker of the afternoon was Dr. Payne.
The First Annual Meeting of Mining Engineers, as it is styled officially, will close this evening with a banquet in Robinson Gym. It will be held at the University of Florida faculty from Haworth Hall and the students in mining engineering.
The toastmaster of the evening will be Prof. Erasmus Haworth, head of the department of geology. Toasts will be given by R. B. B. T. Kiliani, of New York; A. K. Knapp, of Topeka and Dr. H. W. Payne, of New York.
PUSH CLEAN-UP DAY
Class Presidents Favor Plan and Promise Co-operation —Everyone Interested
The students favor a campus cleanup day and are willing to do their share of the work if we are to be held accountable even by the students at the college of civic welfare.
C. A. Randolph, senior president,
says: "You can't quote me too
strongly. I am greatly in favor of
the plan to clean the campus."
Linus Fitzgerald, president of the sophomore class, says: "It's a great idea and I think all of the sophomores will back me in making the plan a reality." He will willing to put on her overalls and shoulder the rake for the occasion."
Blondie Jones, junior president,
says: "I'm strong for it. I have talked to many students and the sentiment is serious to do some honest work for the University. I believe all that makes is the system to make a successful team under the supervision of Supt. John M. Shea or if would be possible, to have the landscape artists here for the occasion. I think that the appointment of fifteen or twenty lecturers from the students would make the movement more complete. The students need feedback and I am sure that they will be more than glad to help out in this way.
"I am opposed, however, to May 1, as the day for the cleanup. It is already a holiday, and as this is the case, I'm fraid that the attempt to clean up would fail. Then, too, the day is Monday and the students will go home and not come back until Tuesday. I think the Chancellor should appreciate the movement enough to support a Saturday or a Sunday as a holiday for the purpose."
James Pringle, freshman president,
says: "It is a good plan and I am
sure that the freshmen will be willing
to do their part in the clean-up."
Leland Thompson, president of the student council, endorses the movement in the following: "The plan is a good one and I am heartily in favor to run-up. I am willing to get out and do the 'heavy' to make it a success."
Blanche Mullen, president of the W. S. G. A., says that she likes the idea and assures us that the women of the school will assist their part to make the affair a success.
John Scribner, of Saffordville, and a student on the Hill last year, attended the Pi Kappa Alpha formal Friday night.
William Baerg was recently appointed instructor to assist Dr. Herrick in economic entomology at Cornell University.
TORCH SOCIETY SELLS
FRENCH WAR MEDALS
Have you seen those war medals that are worn by almost everyone this week? They will make excellent souvenirs for your "K" book to remind you in later years that you were in the University during the great war.
The medals are designed by Lalique. The French artist, and represent a woman clasping two little children in her arms. The design comes from the intense feeling that the French orphans must be saved for the naition.
A medal may be had for a quarter twenty cents of which goes to the general fund for supporting French chicle cheese under the auspices of the Torch society.
More than two hundred have already been sold among the students," said Alice Coors, of Torch, last night. "We want to make Friday the big climax in the campaign. There will be a lot of people going to the medals on that day so that every person will be given an opportunity to get one."
ANTI-PILL LEAGUE WILL HEAR ABOUT CIGARETTES
The lid is on tight in Lawrence in regard to the sale of cigarettes, since the K. U. Anti-cigarette League was organized; but previous to this it was possible for anyone to get cigarettes, even minors.
The K. U. Anti-Cigarette League which was organized two weeks ago has developed into an organization with over one hundred and fifty members that the membership will soon include every man in the University.
Prof. Charles Cochran, of the School of Engineerg will lecture on "The Evils of Cigarette Smoking," at a meeting of the K U. Anti-Cigarette League, Wednesday, at 7:30 p. m. in Fraser.
The object of the League is to do away with smoking in the student body, and they have succeeded in in-
creasing the great many to stop the use of tobacco.
The members of the K. U. Anti-Cigarette League hope that public opinion will keep the merchants of Lawrence from selling cigarettes in the future.
WALK ON TOOTHPICKS IF YOU LIKE
"That toothpick heels are the great factors in breaking down women's arches and making them flat-footed is not true," commented Dr. Alice Goetz. Only nurses do we find the greatest number, three per-cent, who are flat-footed and this is due to the fact that these women must be conducive to their work and doing other heavy work. Very few women here at the University have broken arches and many of them have worn high heels for years.
It Wont Hurt—Your Arches.
"These toothpick heels affect a woman's nerves, however. The whole weight is thrust forward on the toes in an unnatural position. This works on one's nerves and some cases of hysteria and other nervous trouble have been traced back to the high heeled shoe.
“In speaking of women's feet, it is remarkable how many of the women here, have distorted toes and imperfectly shaped feet. This is due to the fact that these shoes have been unable to get a good shoe-fit in the stores of their small home towns, and necessity has demanded that they wear ill-shaped shoes. Of course some women heroically pinch their feet for the good of the cause, but often frequently the calls for different kinds of corn solvent at the drug stores.”
New Engine for Power Plant C. E. Hayne of Kansas City, general assistant for the International Harvester Company in Oklahoma and interviewing Dean P. F., Walker of the School of Engineering in regard to installing a distillate burning engine in the University power plant. The engine is to be used in connection with student and research work by the staffs of the department of engineering.
Professor Nevin accompanied each number with an explanation of its meaning. He has made a study of Indian music by living with the Black Crow and the other tribes in the northern Rocky Mountain states for several years.
Prof. A. Nevin in Church Recital
Prof. A. Nevin in Church Recital Prof. Arthur Nevin, of the School of Fine Arts, gave a recital of Indian music at the Unitarian church for the Music Club, Wednesday afternoon.
P. W. Classen, formerly state entomologist here, and William Baerg, an old K. u. Man, who are graduate students at Cornell University, pledged Gamma Alpha, a graduate scientific fraternity recently.
Chase Johnson, who has been attending the medical school at Chicago University, has been forced to return home on account of sickness. Mr. Johnson will be taking work at Chicago this semester. However, he hopes to return in the fall.
A CO-OP STORE AT LAST
Student Council Last Night Approved the Preliminary Plans
STOCK OWNED BY FACULTY
Dividend Will Go to Purchasers, However
"The Co-operative Book Store of the University of Kansas will be incorporated under the laws of the state of Kansas with a capital stock of $600,000. The bookstore will be $5.00, and the 100 shares will all be held by faculty members, who will have the control of the store through a board of directors of seven members, five of whom shall be faculty members, four of whom shall be Men's Student Council, and one a student chosen from the student body at large by the stockholders.
At last the University of Kansas is to have a co-operative book store for the benefit of the students and faculty members. The plans for the organization of the venture were discussed at the meeting of the Men's Student Council last night and the report of the committee headed by Neal Moyle, accepted with a few minor alterations, in the hands of the Chancellor, who will submit them for approval to the Board of Administration.
BE IN FRASER HALL
The bookstore for the first year will undoubtedly be the first room in Fraser Hall. There is no special building in sight for the store this next year unless the Board of Administration makes an appropriation.
The stockholders will not receive dividends from the store according to the amount of stock they hold. Every dividend can be drawn an annual dividend of five or more for each stock in the store and whatever profit remains will be distributed among the student and faculty customers of the store according to the amount of their purchases. The books and supplies required by most students are a regular market price. The faculty stockholders may own more than one share of the stock, but no stockholder will be allowed more than one vote, nor will any stockholder be allowed disclosure of his share or shares without the consent of the directors of the store.
HAVE A BOOK EXCHANGE
A book exchange will in all probabilities be run in connection with the book store, selling books for students on a commission that are one this year. Whatever profits are from the book exchange will be applied toward the expenses of running the store.
AMOUNT OF FUND NOT KNOWN
Just how much money will be required for the starting of the book store is not defied, known as yet. The capital stock will be raised in when the venture is launched, only a dollar or two of each five being necessary to start out on. As the business grows and the scope of the store increases the remaining capital may be called in by the board of directors as they may deem it necessary for the profits may be set aside each year by the directors to serve as a sinking fund.
The plans adopted were the result of much investigation into plans used by other schools. The plan is practically sure of the approval of the Boehringer Ingelheim that much gained, according to New Ireland who has been living co-operative book store for the past few weeks, the rest will be easy. There will be no trouble in subscribing the stock from the company and getting student interest in the store as well as a promise of rebates at the end of the year will ving the necessary trade.
Harold Huntman, special Fine Arts, has been spending the last few days at his home in Falls City, Nebraska. Huntman went home for the purpose of voting and since the Prohibition Law carried in Nebraska by only three votes, he feels that his trip was not in vain.
Announcement
University Convocation will be held Friday morning at 10:30 a.m. Ten thirty classes will meet on Saturday and 11:30 classes at 12 o'clock
Frank Strong, Chancellor.
The Weather
The Forecast: Fair tonight and Thursday, cooler tonight and in east and south portion Thursday.
MORNING PRAYERS
Week of April 10 to 14
Leader, the Rev. Arthur Braden.
Subject: "Soul Power."
Friday: "Who is this?"
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Official student paper of the Univer- sity of Kansas
EDITORIAL STAFF
Chas. S. Sturtevant...Editor-In-Chief
BUSINESS STAFF
William Cady...Business Manager
Chas. Sturveant...Adv. Manager
REPORTORIAL STAFF
Paul Brindel
Don Davis
Ralph Ellis
John Hamer
Jarryy Morgan
Guy Soriyer
Cargill Sproull
Charles Sweet
Glenn Swogger
Vernon Moore
Subscription price $3.00 per year in advance; one term, $1.75.
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
twenty-five minutes after lunch, from the press of
the prominent newspaper.
Address a1. communications to UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Lawrence, Kansas. Phone, Bell K. U. 25.
The Daily Kansan aims to picture the undergraduate life of students who go further than printing the text on paper at the University holds; to play no favorites; to be clean; to be cheerful; to be courteous; to leave more easilex problems to wiser heads, in all, to enrich the lives of the students of the University.
WEDNESDAY, APRIL 12, 1916.
THE GARDENER AND HIS SON
A Gardener wanted his Sons to get used to gardening. As he was dying he called them up and said to them, "What is hidden in the vineyard?"
The Sons thought it was a treasure, and they took some to dig there, and dug up the whole ground. They did not find that treasure, but were so well that it brought forth more fruit.
-Leo Tolstol.—Aesop.
THE BASEBALL BUG
The Great American Game is now in the ascendency. Major league baseball games open within the next week. The Hash House league begins the season officially next Saturday. The fraternity and University baseball openers are already a matter of history.
The next University baseball game is scheduled for Thursday afternoon, 3:45. Be there. The team demonstrated the fact that it plays a good brand of ball when it defeated the fast Ames aggregation in two close games.
Baseball is typically American, and while it does not have the college influence that football does, yet more students are actively engaged in playing.
THE NOBEL PEACE PRIZE
"The eagle suffers little birds to sing."
—Titus Andronicus.
Who will receive the Nobel Peace Prize for the year 1916? A press dispatch suggests that William Jennings Bryan and Woodrow Wilson are the only persons eligible to receive the prize which carries with it $40,000.
The Norwegian Storthing, which holds the right to appoint the committee to choose and to award the peace prize, made no appointment during 1914 and 1915 because of the apparent failure of the movement of universal peace to maintain a foothold. During the past year America has produced three men who have taken a decided stand among nations through their activities to stop the present war, and to secure and maintain peace.
The Henry Ford movement has been unrecognized by either his own government or by those of Europe Many have taken his peace propaganda as a joke. The activity of Mr Bryan, though frowned upon by his own countrymen, may make a profound impression upon the members of the Norwegian parliament. The work of President Wilson will probably rank high in the estimation of the Europeans for having successfully avoided war both in the world sphere and in the western hemisphere.
Theodore Roosevelt, who received the peace prize in 1906 because of his activities in bringing about peace between the Japanese and the Russians, can hardly be considered at this time because of his ardent advocacy to hurl America's strength to the aid of the Allies.
A NEW "OMAR" TRANSLATION Omar Khayyam, the twelfth century poet, mystic, and astronomer, has come in for much favorable and unfavorable criticism of late. An Eastern professor recently declared before
his classes that the quatrains of Omar were anything but poetry; that they were merely the expression of a worldly, lust-loving individual.
There have been several note-worthy translations of Omar; among the well known and recognized versions are those of Edward Fitzgerald, in verse, E. H. Whinfield, in verse, Justin Huntley McCarthy, in prose, and J. B. Nicholas, in the French prose.
An Englishman John Pollen, has just written a new translation and a new verse. The Contemporary Reviews says that there is room for such translations as those of Dr. Pollen, and says of Omar and the translations:
*Edward Fitzgerald has achieved what is generally regarded as an impossibility; he made his translation an original poem that will live as long as the English language lives. . . . The writings of Gmar are exquisite music, but infinitely sad philosophy
. . . . He was one who felt the new materialism, who regarded immortality as an inspiration rather than a hope, and oly saw an aesthetic escape from despair. . . .
"Dr. Pollen has adopted the four-beat (hymn) measure instead of the traditional ten syllables. . . . His position was. . . . to repudiate more formalism in religion and . . . to claim from daily human life the maximum of reasonable enjoyment."
Of the hundred and fifty-eight quatrains translated by Dr. Pollen, the following is a good example of the verse used:
*O 'Sou!' from body's dust set free
now canst thou soa' in midity!
Since th' Empressain is thy home,
Empressain is thy home.
we shame in Earth's confines to roam."
Observations Hermeneutical About Things Academical
"Be frank with me," the coy maiden good
With eyes that showed rebuke.
"I can't be Frank with you," he piped
"My name is Marmaduke."
The literary test bids fair to pass Congress over Wilson's veto, but suspicion lingers in the breasts of some of our good people that there are Congress who couldn't pass it simply as a test, remarks the Daily Texan.
"My love," said the beaver passionately, "will you come and live with me in my newly built house in the stream?"
For a moment the beaver maid was silent, and then, slapping her tail on the bank, she whispered, "Then I will be a dam for me, after all."—Pelican.
The Jester seems to think that Shakespeare must have been a broker after all. For otherwise, how could he furnished so many stock quotations?
Washington University has adopted the modern method of drowning one's sorrow. Sad memories of a recent defeat in debate were washed away with grape juice at a banquet held 'nast week.
"The armory will not leak tonight," is a new song at the University of Illinois. After years and years of failure to close its pores to the relentless rain, the roof of the old structure is again as intact as yore, the university architects having superintended the repair work.
Essays in Tabloid Tablets
-E. W. H.
SPRING PARTIES
A spring party. Is a kind of dance. Held by the Greek letter societies. Of the University. Once a year. It consists. Nippean greek dresses (rented). Low cut gowns. Eating. What there is. To eat. Crabbing at. The chaperons. Some scandal. A lot of. Expense. For the givers. Many debts. For father, made decoration. And much. Worry.
The college boys. Hock. Their watches. To send. Flowers to their. Dates. And sell. Their clothes. To get cab fare. And that is why. Abe Wolfson, Believes in. Spring. Parties.
A spring party may. Be divided into. Two parts. Before. And after Before. Everybody wonders who has been bid. and if he. Or she Will be. And how much. The party is going to cost. And if. There will be favors. And what they. Will be After. The party is Oven. Everybody. Uses the Wheater. Who定制. Because it is. The custom at K. U. To cuss. Everything. From the faculty. To the weather.
POET'S CORNER
John Bunyan was born in Elstow in 1628. He was a tinker, as his father was before him, but finally became a soldier in the parliamentary army. In 1653 he became a nonconformist and went about the country preaching until he was arrested under the statutes against that doctrine. While in prison Bunyan began his well-known allegory, "Pilgrim's Progress." Under Charles II he was released and made at Bedford. He died at London in 1688.
A SONG
He that is down need fear no fall;
He that is low no pride;
He that is humble ever shall
Have God to be his guide.
I am content with what I have,
Little be it or much;
And, Lord, contentment still I crease.
Because then savout such.
CAMPUS OPINION
Fulness to such a burden is
That go on pilgrimage;
Here little, and hereafter bliss,
Is best from age to age.
In Kenyan Hunan
FOR MEMORIAL LOAN FUND
Editary Daily Kansan:
communications must be signed as evidence of good faith but names will not be published.
I notice the Kansan is favoring the turning over of the senior memorial fund for this year to the student loan fund, and I am heartily in favor of such a plan. The sentiment connected with the idea of giving class memories to our students most notably, in practice the idea has not worked out so well. It seems impossible to collect sufficient money from any one class to give the University a decent memorial and our campus is in danger of being cluttered up with too many deceased geogaus which are of no earthly good and which only mar its beauty.
Much of the money that is collected is wasted if it is used for a memorial on the campus while if it were turned over to the student loan fund there would be no need for usefulness. We have at present less than $2,000 available for needy students. Ten times that amount could be used and the class of 1916 will do well to set a good example by turning their memorial fund to the cause. Located men and women are the best memorials for a University after all.
S. E. Nior.
A QUESTION OF GRAMMAR Editor Daily Kansas;
Is it "athetics are," or, **are** "athetics is?" Five out of the six debaters Friday night used "are," "their," and "them." However, the New International dictionary does not recognize a plural.
I should suggest that the "Eh efficiency" part of the Efficiency and Economy Commission investigate to see whether or not the supply of dictionaries at the University is adequate. Perhaps some of the superfluous instructors can be exchanged with this predecessor volume. If one is to judge by the mispromiscion and misuse of words by members of the faculty and by students a number of copies would not be an extravagance.
PSYCHOLOGY, THE WONDERFUL SCIENCE
ology includes everything and psychology the rest. However, I don't agree entirely. While I do think that sociology includes everything, I think that psychology includes even more. There are dogs, monkeys, mice, chickens, ants, frogs, stereopticians, stereoescopes, mirrors, rats, pigeons, tuning forks, fidies, accordions, perfumes, poisons, beeswax, onions, revolvers and storage batteries in the basement of a university in Kansas; and yet the psychology department of that institution is comparatively small. No doubt, in the eastern universities, where the psychology departments are really big, there are elephants, giraffes, hipopotamuses and seventeen-inch guns but that, being purely speculative cannot be used as evidence here. Schoolly psychology tolerates no fictional statistics—look what happened to Dr. Cook.
But, as we were saying, psychology includes everything. If this is true, we can discuss anything in this article without diverging from the subject. If preachers who are accused of getting away from their subjects in their sermons would talk on psychology no one could accuse them of wandering—but let that pass. Of course the theology is included in pay, as well as in art, beeswax and other things; but we prefer to restrict our English this time to things with which most people are familiar, so—
The first topic we shall take up is "dice." Perhaps we had better call it "craps." Caesar called these little white cubes "dice," but people seldom do anymore. They call them "cracks." More modern examples said to be more colorful than ancient ones; so, of course, when Caesar crossed the Rubicon and called: "The die is cast," he used a colorless expression. "Think how much better it would be if we used craps are shot." In view of this fact we rewires our original wording and say that the first topic we shall take up is "craps."
A member of the anti-smoking club of this University recently made some "craps" out of Lenox soap. He borrowed my fountain pen to put the spots on them. My pen was so gummed up with soap grease the next day that it wouldn't write—but that part is unimportant. The important part is that he made the craps, and stairs, and began doing something with another anti-smoker that caused them to say the following things:
Ween. Shake eyes this time!
Craps, what's the matter with you?"
"Ah, 'seven'—crapped out—give me the bones."
"Come on, 'Little Joe!' "
"Come on, very 'Little Joe!' "
"Ah! 'Box Cars!' Come up thi
time, you little two! and little one.
They said a good many more things, but I didn't remember them.
Thus, psychology is a wonderful science. It teaches us how to lay the blame for our wasteful unwise actions at the feet of stimulus, association, perception and motor centers instead of charging them to deficiency in intellect.
The next topic we wish to take up is the subject of psychology is "nipinapp".
Of course these gentlemen were "shooting craps," there is no doubt about that; but why did they talk so much about "Snake Eyes," "Box Cars" and "Little Joes?" Dio Brutus and Caesar, when they used to stroll out on the Appian Way and so cast dice by the roadside, shout things to each other's faces about box cars and snake eyes? No, certainly they didn't. Of course, they were "honorable men"-especially Brutus; but the reason they didn't cry "snake eyes" other wise was that they were wise men, and no wise man will waste his energy rending the air, when it is needed to manipulate the dice so that they will turn up in the desired way.
That is the way an ignorant person would reason it out; but a psychologist would go about it differently. He would say that the mind reacts according to the stimulus. The craps are the stimulus and they stimulate the mind of the crap shooter and cause it to react. When this reaction takes place, the motor centers are also stimulated and so are the association centers. And the power of speech, being a motor affair, works in combination with the stimulated association centers, which associate the craps with the eyes to turn up, when the craps shooter shoots the craps, with the two eyes of a snake, that the centers of perception have at some previous time "percepted," and the individual crap shooter exclaims: "Snake Eyes!"
The psychologist would also say that the fact that the crap shooter exclaims, "Snake Eyes," doesn't indicate in any way that he is more unwise than the ancient crap shooter who didn't exclaim, "Snake Eyes." It merely indicates that modern craps are more stimulating than ancient craps--that if Brutus, the honorable prince of Rome, dug a olive tree and cast dice in silence, it doesn't indicate that they were any wiser that the 1916 model "Snake Eye" crap shooter, but merely that their craps were not as stimulating.
When Roosevelt returned from his tour of the West Indies, he said the affair had been a gastronomical success; but the newspapers said it had been an affair. He velt came back full of bananas and pineapples; but all the "vast and fruitful intellects" of the country seemed to think that he came back full of psychology. There must, therefore, be a subtle connection between psychology and social psychology; as there is mob psychology, child psychology, social psychology, animal psychology, husband psychology, wife psychology, insane psychology, idiotic psychology and fool psychology. There is also pineapple psychology. Yes, psychology is also mental psychology; for, as we said, psychology includes everything and then some.
The psychology of the pineapple must be something like this:
A man—say we take Roosevelt soit sits down on a box of tar soap with a pineapple in one hand and a pocket knife in the other. He looks the fruit over, turning it in his hand. The apple is covered with bumps. The apple has been shaken up with his big stick—the big stick that has been stored away in the woodshed at Oyster Bay for eight years. This is association. When he saw the bumps that was perception. The pineapple itself is the stimulus. The stimulus, the perception and the association together arouse the motor centers and he grips the pineapple in his hand if it were his big stick, and shouts, "Mollycodle" referring to Wilson. The associations and motor centers continue to react until he jumps to his feet and resolves to return to the United States, get his big stick out of the woodshed and with it break the political backbone of the public sentiment that demands a price at any price, and then assume the presidency, demolish Germany, shoot off Villa's other leg and build a navy that can conquer the world at thirty minutes' notice.
You see the psychology of the pineapple is really a significant thing.
Psychology professors know that the psychology of everything is very significant too. That is the reason they write so much about its importance—and talk about it too. They talk for hours and hours about it. They install in their departments courses on everything from monkeys on down to logic. Women's clubs are beginning to take up the study of psychology too. They knit sox for the sojers in Mexico and gossip about Muensterburg, Hegel, Henry James, Herbert Spencer, Kant and the Transcendental Aesthetic. One women's school, Glen Ellen, offers a course in the psychology and husbands. It teaches the young woman how to get to a husband, but how to keep him, bum他 and fleece him without letting him know it.
The cruelest thing anyone could do would be to undermine humanity's faith in this vast and wonderful science.
"Copping the Grapes" is a show, Thi muh you all ready know, *Bourke* is coming.
With a peach is a fate
That'll cause you to be dubbed a boy
CLASSIFIED
Book Store
KEELER'S BOOK STORE, **292** Mas
St. Typewriters for sale or ren
Typewriter and School Supple
and Book Store
100c. Pictures and Picture framing.
China Painting
ED. W. PARISSONS Enneveray, Watch,
jewelry.
phone BELL phone 711. 717. Masson
jewelry.
MISS ESTELLA NORTHRUP, chap.
MISS ESTELLA NORTHRUP, chap.
Hand care handled. 738 Mass. Phon
Hand care handled. 738 Mass. Phon
Chao Chao
K. U. SHOE SHOP and Pantatorium is the best place for best results. 1342
1343
Pinnmhars
PHONE KENNEDY PLUMBING CO.
937-685-4020 Mazda Lamps. 937-
Mass. Phones 937-685-4020
Mazda Lamps.
B. H. BALLE, Artistic Job grinding
both, ROHNE, 238, 1087, Mag.
FORNEY SHOE SHOP, 1017 Mass. St.
don't make a mistake. All work
MRS M A, M ORGAN 1831 Tennessee
taluring. Loving. Prices very reasonable.
taling.
PROFESSIONAL CARDS
HARRY BEDING. M. D. Eye, ear.
E. Ear, ear. U. Blidg. Phones. Bell 613;
612 U. Blidg. Phones. Bell 613;
DR, H. L. CHAMBERS. Office over Squires' studio. Both phones.
J. R. BECHTEL, M. D. D. O. 233 Mass
phone. Both phones office and residence.
A. C. WILSON, Attorney at law 743
Mass. St. Lawrence, Kansas.
DR, H. W. HUTCHINSON, Dentlst. 381
PRinings Bldg. Lawrence, Kansas.
C. O. REALPUP, M. D. • Dick Bldg. Epy
H. C. REALPUP, M. D. • Dick Bldg. Epy
G. H. C. REALPUP, M. D. • Dick Bldg. Epy
Human guaranteed. Successor to
M. D. REALPUP, M. D. • Dick Bldg. Epy
WANT ADS
LOST—"Modern Frame Structures"
and a leather I. H. C. notebook.
He quickly kern回 to F. N. Bost.
11448 Tenn., and receive耳铃
ward. 131-3.
FOUND—A raincoat with initials L.
A. W. Was taken by mistake in
Fraser Hall Friday. Owner please
call 1253W. 134-2.
FOR SALE-One two cylinder outboard motor; good condition; cheap. 251 Bel, Alphin, at Johnson & Carl. 134.3.
ASK FOR and GET
HORLICK'S
THE ORIGINAL
MALTED MILK
Cheap substitutes cost YOU same price.
Come to our store for anything you need for your
Kodak
Fresh films always in setok, as well as Developing Tanks, Velox paper,—general supplies of all kinds.
And for the developing and finishing of your pictures, our prompt, painstaking service is sure to please you.
Come in and see us. We can give you some valuable pointers.
Evans Drug Store
819 Massachusetts
At 900 Tennessee RAYMOND'S
For parties, banquets, committee feeds, etc., call 92 on the Bell for reservations. Let us prepare your next picnic lunch.
The Bowersock TONIGHT
"Joseph and His Brethren"
TOMORROW Fritze Scheff in "Pretty Mrs. Smith"
Mitchell Tower
THE University of Chicago
HOME in addition to resident
work, offers instructional
STUDY features.
For detailed information
about the program,
please visit UChicago
University. UChicago
University. UChicago
Shubert Nights 25c to $1.50;
Wednesday and Saturday
Mattinee $1.00.
JEFFERSON
DE ANGELIS
IN
"SOME BABY"
April 23—Taylor Holmes in "Bunker
Bean."
Conklin Fountain Pens
Sold in Lawrence at F. B. McColloch's Drug Store 847 Mass, St.
THESIS BINDING
Engraved and Printed Cards
A. G. ALRICH
Typewriter Paper 744 Mass. St.
PROTSCH
The College Tailor
UNIVERSITY WOMEN!
We do Fancy Tailoring
and Remodeling.
MRS. EDNAH MORRISON,
Bell 1154J. 1146 Tenn. St.
Watkins National Bank Capital $100,000 Surplus and Profits $100,000 The Student Depository
At Your Service
EXPERT BARBERS
College Inn Barber Shop
BURT WADHAMS, Prop.
Corona and Fox Typewriters
are sold exclusively in Law-
rence by
rence by
F.I.Carter,
1025 Mass. St.
We have machines for rent and a full line of supplies.
Ladies Tailor Fancy
dresses. Summer dresses of every description.
Mrs. Wm. H. Schulz,
917 Mass. St.
"THE BEST AMERICAN MAKE"
"THE BEST AMERICAN MAKE"
an Doncaster ARROW COLLAR
2 for 25c
Cluett, Peabody & Co., Inc. Makers
Tailored Suits or fancy gowns depend upon neatness as much as style for their successful appearance. TRY ON CLEANSING OR PRESSING
LAWRENCE PANTATORIUM
Tel. 569 Bell 12 W. Warren
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
---
THE VARSITY THEATRE SPECIAL FEATURE TONIGHT AND THURSDAY BILLIE BURKE IN "PEGGY"
PRODUCED BY THOS. H. INCE
MAT. 2:40—NIGHT 7:40-9:30
SPECIAL MUSIC MAT.2:40—NIGHT 7:40-9:30
SPECIAL MUSIC
NOTE: All records for attendance were broken at the showing of this production at the Willis-Wood Theatre Kansas City, Missouri
that if I aspired to edge in with the lordly bunch who sprinkle salt on the tail of Opportunity and spear Success on the wing, it was up to me to soak a surplus of the gimp and gumption that's tucked away in—
8
"A Little Bird Told Me"
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original Tuxeau Process retrohves every trace of harshness and "bite".
Get a tin of "Tux" and try it for yourself.
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OSTRICH EGG ON TOAST WAR LOWERED PRICE Only $60. a Dozen Now.
The women at 1346 New Hampshire street enjoyed a rare "feed" Thursday evening when ostrich egg on toast was served up to them. The egg was sent to Josie Trinkle, 17 College, by her parents who live in Arizona.
The long circumference was 17 inches, the short circumference, 15 inches. Its contents measured over a quart. The shell was one-tenth of an inch in thickness and had to be opened with a file. The shell around the edge when broken looked like the edge of a piece of broken china.
Miss Trinkle says that this is the beginning of the "setting" season, and that incubators are made especially for ostrich eggs. Forty-two days are needed to produce a climate like that of Arizona, the little birds can not break the shell. An expert is employed to do this and it requires skill on his part. In fact, he inspects the eggs every three hours, and just before they are ready to hatch.
The posters are reproductions of designs made by Bragwyn for soliciting funds for the relief of the French troops in northern France and windows of Weaver's store last week.
Beautiful Posters on Display
Miss Trinkle also says that the war has lowered the price of ostrich eggs. Good ones can now be had for about $60 a dozen.
The proteges of Prof. W. A. Griffith will adjourn to the open this week to make their sketches of the trees and buildings on the campus, that have been sketched annually for more than a decade, only one difference this year, according to Professor Griffith. There will be no more golf balls to dodge. In the years that Professor Griffith has taught the class he has been struck a cold fuse and is one who does not mourn the demise of the Great Golf club.
Beautiful Posters on Display
To Tony F. Barrigan, by Frank Brangwyn, the English artist, will be placed on display on the third floor of the Administration Building
"The posters are beautiful," said Prof. W. A. Griffith, of the department and drawing and drawing, "and every student should make it a point to see them."
Investigate the merits of tailor
m clothing. Is its cheaper in the
long run?
ATHLETES ORGANIZING
Honorary Fraternity For All Around Men is Coming to Mt. Oread
A chapter of Sigma Delta Psi, an honorary athletic fraternity, is to be installed at the University within the next few weeks. Membership to this fraternity for examination outlined by its officers. Candidates must first pass a moderate test for junior membership, later they are allowed to pass the final examination, at the completion of which are admitted to senior membership.
The events, together with the records a contestant must make in order to be admitted either to junior high or for admission to Sigma Delta Psi, are as follows:
100 yard dash . . .
220 yd. low hurdles . . .
High jump . . .
Broad jump . . .
Shot put . . .
Pole vault . . .
Baseball throw . . .
Football Punt . . .
Two Mile Run . . .
Ten Mile Walk . . .
Swimming . .
Miss Hazel Dratt discovered the other day that The Mother's League of Lawrence had worked successfully for a same Fourth. She tried in vain at all the stores in town to get a small innocent, toy pistol and a box of caps. Determined to have an effective starter for the tub races in the rocation party, she met the gym, she sent to Kansas City for the little popping machine, and is now able to defend her home, life, and property.
Bob Reed, '16 College, spent Saturday and Sunday at the Pi Kappa Alpha house in Manhattan.
There are perhaps twenty men in the University who are able to pass the test for junior membership, and many of them who can pass the senior examination.
In addition to these events, the candidate must turn a forward hand-spring, walk on his hands for ten seconds, on his feet for four feet high, and of be erect of carve.
Sigma Delta Pei is national in character, not local. Chapters have been installed in several schools of the "Big Nine" and others of the larger conferences. There is no chapel or gymnasium; the one to be installed at the University sometime in the near future is to be the first one in the state.
Lois Risinger, '19 Fine Arts, and Viola Jones, '17 Fine Arts, spent Saturday and Sunday in Topeka.
Arthur T. Sewell, '19 Engineer,
spent Saturday and Sunday at his
home in Garnett.
The time of the tryouts has not been definitely set but due notice will be given in the Kansan. Every K. U. man is invited to try out for membership in the new honorary organization.
A class in chemistry had a good laugh the other day when Ray Hargett, who is not a freshman but a junian, "bit" on an old "gag." One of the students store room to obtain a store-stretcher. George King, the store-keeper then had to explain that bottle stretches were in the same class stretches, and the printers' type lines, in other words, "there's no such animal."
ARRANGE SCHOOL SURVEY
Plan Four Year Investigation of City Institutions
A continuous, uniform school survey, which will extend over a period of four years, is being planned for the schools of Kansas under the supervision of the Kansas School of Education. It is the aim of those in charge to interest all the schools of the state in the plan so that reliable figures on the relative strengths and weaknesses of the schools and their weaknesses may be worked out on a comparative basis.
The aim of the survey is to determine the efficiency of the school; to supplement the work already done under the direction of the Bureau of Educational Measurements and Standards at Emporia; determine the teachers; number of months in college; teach hours in professional courses; attendance at summer schools; whether high school education was obtained in the same city in which they are now employed; experience and salary.
IDEA STARTED HERE
On account of the illness of his little son, Prof. R. A. Schwegler is not meeting his classes this week.
Send the Daily Kansan home to the folks.
The idea originated at the recent Schoolmen's conference here when a meeting was held for that purpose. The committee in charge met last Saturday at Topeka and plans of procedure were discussed. Dean Kelly is chairman of the committee. The other members are Superintendent M. E. Burson, President J. H. Prentice, Principal L. A. Lowther, of Emporia; Principal A. J. Stout, of Topeka.
While the plans are still largely in the making Dean Kelly expects the majority of the school superintendents of the state to take up the survey.
Junior Senior.
12 sec. ... 11 3-5 sec.
33 sec. ... 31 sec.
4 ft. 6 in. ... 5 feet
16 feet ... 17 feet.
25 feet ... 30 feet
7 feet, 9 in. ... 8 ft. 6 in.
200 feet ... 250 feet
90 feet ... 120 feet
14 min. ... 12 min. 30 sec.
3 hours ... 2 hours 30 min.
yds. ... 100 yds.
Carl Jolliffe, 17 College, who was on the Hill last year, writes to a friend here that he has eighty-three perfectly good hours of K. U. credit and seven more than he thinks that he is good for at least seven more, so that when he comes back next year he can graduate with his class. Jolliffe studied on the Hill he has covered practically the same week as if he had been here three years
L. B. Flinton, of Kansas City, spent L. B. Flinton, of Kansas City, spent at the Pai Pal hotel. Flinton was a freshman at Hilliard and he be back next year again with a winter's experience in the West Indies and Central America in the interval.
Have you ever devoted one halfhour to careful consideration of your life insurance needs?
L.S. Breighly
K. U. Chemists to Urbana
At least six of the professors of the department of chemistry here will attend the Annual National Meeting of the American Chemical Society which will be held in Urbana, Illinois, next week. The sessions will begin Tuesday, April 18, and will last four days. Those who will represent the University are, Prof. E. H. S. Bailey, Prof. H. P. Cady, Dean L. E. Sayre, Prof. W. A. Whitaker, Prof. F. B. Dains, and F. W. Wruckmiller.
Florence Butler, '19 College, went to Kansas City Monday evening to see Pavlowa in the opera, "The Love of Three Kings."
In spite of the fact that Kansas-Colorado-Oklahoma debaters settled the question of retaining the Philippine Islands, it seems that Congress is going to give them their independence anyway. Now, that Kansas has shown that inter-collegiate athletics should be retained by American colleges and universities, who will rise up and say that we must abandon them?
How badly poor K. U. does need some new buildings—particularly an auditorium—dawned upon a couple of upper classmen in the gym the other day when they couldn't find even a place in which to play catch with the medicine ball. The main floor was filled with the first floor, full of a freshman class, and even the running track and the wrestling room were locked. There remained the alternative of playing leap-frog in the lower hallway.
Miss Ruth Lambertson, of Efingham, was in Lawrence, last week end visiting friends in the University and in Lawrence.
DO YOU KNOW
That a 100,000,000 bushel wheat crop has been predicted for Kansas this year?
Otain comfort, fit and style in your spring clothes by consulting Schulz.
SENIORS—order your caps and gowns before Easter recess at check stand in Fraser.—Adv. 134-3
Arrow Shirts—guaranteed fast color Sold exclusively by Johnson & Carl
FLOWERS FROM THE FLOWER SHOP
are always a pleasure to receive. Arrangements superior to all others. The keeping qualities are well known. A comparison is all we ask of the uninitiated.
MR. AND MRS. GEO. ECKE, Leading Florists
825½ Mass. St.
Phones 621
TEA SET
The Store of Quality
WHEN you think of gifts for any occasion,you quite naturally think of a jewelry store as the place to get them.
We want you to think of our store.—We want you to come in and give us the opportunity of showing you what a fine line of silverware, cut glass and novelties we carry for gifts.
If you are not in the habit of visiting our store regularly, we are sure you will be very agreeably surprised at the large assortment we carry.
As to price—there is only one price in this store and that is the lowest at which high quality merchandise can be sold and still make a living.
Gustafson
YE SHOP OF FINE QUALITY
Tomorrow Night
There'll be singing galore, lots of it and the kind you'll like. It will be good and snappy.
The Glee Club Concert
Is where you'll find your friends Thursday night. Come up to Fraser Hall with your "date" and enjoy the program. It's at 8 p.m. and all it takes is
A Student Enterprise Ticket
(or 25 cents)
Lindsborg Swedes vs. K.U. Baseball, Thursday, April 13 Game Called 3:45 A Good Cause
Two Bit Dance, HALEY and Violin, April 15
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
The piquant effect
of this new Patent or Kid slipper will make a pretty foot prettier. With the present style of skirts the footwear must be irreproachable. The absolutely correct style of this slipper is due to its being one of
Cousins Shoes made in New York for women
which have set metropolitan fashion for more than sixty years.
We have other models equally smart, which are appropriate for any gown or any occasion. The fit of every shoe we sell is a matter of business conscience with us. It must be perfect.
Otto Fischer
Spring Hat Time Here
Fair Weather Calls Millinery Buyers to the Easter Hat Shop Fisks Suit Many Co-eds. "Oh! How Pretty, I Must Try That One On Too."
Say but it is a picnic to watch a pretty girl try on a beach hat. First she is a little doubtful, then the shape begins to please her and finally she is delighted with the picture in the mirror.
Many visitors at the Easter Hat Shop, 813 Mass., are greatly pleased with the new Fisk hats. They soon find however that there are not two in the shop alike and that they have a wealth of models to select from.
The pretty weather has increased the number of visitors at Mrs. McCormick's until she's "Lookie! isn't that a bit embarrassing! I'm the big mirrors almost every minute."
ONE OF THE MANY
"36 Bust and 24—"
These words had no business there—they belong in the Dressmaking Department where Miss Daisy Reed is making some truly "fussy" party gowns—that word—"fussy" is a good word too.
9 More Shopping Days 'Till Easter Why Wait Longer? Mrs. McCormick
Game
BETHANY TO PLAY ONCE
831 Mass. St.
"The Easter Hat Shop"
Lindsborg Nine Comes to Lawrence Tomorrow for One Center
TO USE SEVERAL PITCHERS
Poirier, Fischer, or Smith Likely to go on Mound
The Bethany College baseball team will visit Lawrence tomorrow afternoon for a game with the Jawahyers. Only one game will be played in Lawrence by the Lindsborg team and it will be the only competition Kansans will face this week. Then Mary's aggregation on Tuesday but only game for McCarty's men next week.
McCarty is looking for a hard game tomorrow. But even at that he may run in Poiler, Fischer or Wint Smith on the mound leaving Craig and Smee on the bench to be used in case of an emergency. Mac has been waiting for a chance to get his second string pitchers in real action and it is likely they will be ready to go to the St. Mary's team next week. Possibly they will get into the Chinese games April 24 and 25 but that is to far in the future.
NO LINEUP ANNOUNCED
On Monday and Tuesday Coach McCarty used a varied line-up against the freshmen. Three first basemen and as many other fielders were worn by different players. No Deaver, King, Kug, Taylor, Wood, Gibbons and a number of others were used at the different infield positions. Just what kind of a line-up will be in the game tomorrow will not be determined until the umps yells, "Play Ball," at a quarter to four.
The Jayhawkers are enjoying a rest from the conference series for a couple of weeks. The next conference will be played on May 4 and 5. Meanwhile, Coach McCarty is enjoying the rest more than the players themselves because he is making use of every minute of good batting and fielding combination.
NONE SURE OF BERTHS
No members of the squad have cinched places on the team yet and anyone of fifteen men has a good chance of landing a regular position yet. Especially on the first sack will competition be keen. Andy Groft, Charlie Chase and Bill Weber are lighting up for four in the station and later report from those who know says that Taylor is likely to get into this scrap. Taylor showed his hitting ability in the second Ames game and McCarty wants to give him a chance among the regulars.
The game tomorrow will start at 3:45 o'clock. Poiler and Weltner will meet in the morning, but that, like the remainder of the line-up, is rather undecided at present.
A NEW LEAGUE APPEARS
Professional Fraternities to go After Baseball Trophy
This is the first year that the professional fraternity council has been organized, and they have never had a baseball league before. They, however, intend to make the association a regular feature of their organization every spring hereafter. The first game will be played between the Phi Chis and the Theta Taus with Ward Weltmert and Walter Wood officiating.
The council of professional fraternities, to keep pace with the Hash House League and the Pan-hemlick League has organized a baseball league of their own. Five of the professional fraternities, the Theta Taus, Phi Chi, Phi Beta Pis, Phi Alpha Deltas, and the Alpha Chi Sigmas have entered. A schedule of games in which the team has been arranged. Probably a loving cup will be offered to the pennant winning team by Johnson & Carl.
A new Chevrolet roadster is Manager Hamilton's latest addition to the ornamentation—or decoration—on McCook Field each afternoon. All the visitors admire the new "boat" and some even long to ride in it. But the ones who really long for it are the distance men who speculate on how fast they could cover a mile in the little wagon.
In an effort to get the running track at McCook Field in the best possible shape Manager Hamilton is sprinkling clay over the cinders so he can have it laid out. The heavy rains last spring washed off the packed cinders of former years and the new cinders which were added last fall are too soft to make good time driving around. Filling the track should pack down as soon it has been in other years.
The vicinity of McCook Field is about as busy a place as there is in town about 4 o'clock in the afternoon. Yesterday afternoon three real base players were in program; a tennis game was being played on each court; four men were hurling the disc; a number of track athletes were circling the field and many other students were working but kinks in equipment were working out.
NEW Y. M. C. A.CABINET
FIRST MEETING TONIGHT
The new I. M. C. A. cabinet will hold their first meeting of this association year Thursday night at 5:30 o'clock at Bricken's Cafe. This will be the second opportunity for these men to assemble as a body and the first for them to plan their work definitely for the coming year.
The new president, Edward Todd, has some very definite ideas which he will place before the meeting at this time. Those who are associated with him are determined that the work of this year will boar results.
On the same evening at 8 o'clock the new board of directors for the Meyer Hampshire hold their first meeting in Myers Hall and attend a secretary for the next school year, will be one of the items that will receive the attention of the board. Nothing definite as yet is to whom the organization will hire.
ANNOUNCEMENTS
The Sigma Xi banquet will be held Thursday night, April 13, at I. O. O. Hall. The members, as well as their wife(s) or the man, which the case may be) will be there.
El Ateneo will meet Thursday evening from 7:30 to 9:30 at 1106 Ohio instead of from 3:30 to 4:30 as usual. Students in Spanish are invited to attend.
I will pay two and a half cents for each copy of the mining edition Professor Terrill.
The descriptive astronomy class of last semester will meet for observation at the Physics Building Wednesday at 7:30 if the sky is clear.
Coach Olcott wants 25 more men out for spring football practice every afternoon. Spring training lasts until April 20.
Seniors are requested to call at the check stand and order their caps and gowns before the Easter holidays.
Ornithology Club Meets Wednesday at 7:30 o'clock in the lecture room of the Hermann Hospital, withouth will address the club "meet" Attract Birds Around Home.
K. U. Debating Society will hold its regular program Thursday evening at 8:00 o'clock. A large attendance is urged.
Jurisprudence Club meets tonight
Sigma Nu house. 8:00 p.m.
The Union Pacific special train carrying the class in Applied Sociology to the pentennial leaves Lawrence to 715 a.m. m. instead of 730 c.lock.
Theta Sigma Phi, the honorary journalism sorority, has pledged three new members. The pledges are: Alice Bowley, Natoma; Helen Patterson, John Bowyer; and Jennifer for the new members will probably be held about the first of May.
A Home Investment
POST MILITARY COAST
MUSIC BOX
It is not too early to begin to think about a refrigerator for summer. "The White Mountain Refrigerator, the Chest with the Chill in it," is the right chest for every household.
It is built to give the greatest chill with the least amount of ice, and to last for a life time.
As a real home investment the "White Mountain" is unbeatable. See them here at prices ranging from
$10.00 to $55.00
C.S. Strachan
FURNITURE
BETA DOWNS DELTA TAU
808-810 Mass. St.
And Pi U. Defeats Sig Phi in Diamond Contests
Beta Theta Pi defeated Delta Tau Delta in yesterday's game in the Panhellenic baseball league, by a score of 9-3. The game was played on west Hamilton field.
Both teams played miserable ball in the field which accounted for the big score. Merle Smith was on the mound for the Beta with Gibben baseman based baseball receiving. Paul hurled for the Delta Taus with Shinn catching.
On the east diamond of Hamilton Field Sigma Phi Sigma was defeated by Pi Upsilon 9 to 4, in the opening game of the inter-fraternity league. Lawrence Cazier, who pitched for the Sig Phi, held the Pi Us to four hits but his team mates made eleven errors behind him. Joe Gitskall, who had a wicket and Vardy squad second baseman, also pitched a nice game and was given great support, especially in the pinches. Poier, Varsity second string pitcher, led the hitters with a single and triple in three times at bat.
Henry Payne Lectured
Henry M. Payne, a well known mining engineer of New York city, gave an illustrated lecture last night before the University Club on his trip, "Acrasex Japan in War Time." Last spring Mr. Payne was in Japan and spent the fall in Siberia where he secured a fine collection of views of the two countries in war time. Aside from his travels, Mr. Payne has visited several areas for consultation work in mining engineering in the Klondike and British Columbia. During the past year, Mr. Payne was a member of the board of arbitration between the Lena Gold-fields of London and the Senskoe of Russia.
Elderkin's Last Talk
Rev. Noble Strong Elderin will give his last speech on the Hill for this year at a meeting of the Y. M. and W. Christian Associationsriday at 10am and 8 o'clock at Myers Hall. The theme for the occasion will be "The Christian and the Other Fellow." This address was given in substance by Mr. Elderin at the Estes Park Conference upon those who heard its main students have requested Mr. Elderin to respond he speech.
Send the Daily Kansan home.
A shipment of basketball sweaters was received yesterday by Manager Hamilton for those men who were granted letters for the past season in basketball and four reserve letters were included in the shipment. This is the first time that a reserve letter has been given in basketball and the weariness of the pleasure of wearing something different from anyone else on the Hill.
But the track squad is in need of men. The interclass meet is only three weeks off and the medals are on the way. Still only a few men are available, so the interclass meet will probably determine the entries in the big meets later.
Send the Daily Kansas home to the folks.
A man of many tongues is R. U.
Stevens, '18 College. Three years of
Latin, two of Greek, five of Spanish,
three of German, and a year each of
Portugese and Italian, have made it
possible for him to speak and understand
many languages. Because he
intended to go to South America Stevens took many courses in the language
departments at the University of Cali-
ifornia and here at the University of
Kansas.
And anyway these is not even a bicycle record on McCook. So why not set the time for the fastest mile with the little green roadster?
Miss Avis Gwinn in the class in Home Architecture speaking of good architecture, "A round house is the most ideal and economical."
Indestructo Trunks Bags and Suit Cases Sold Exclusively by Johnson & Carl
Spring Suits for Young Men
Combining style and service at the moderate price of $15.00
Compare in style, fit, tailoring and materials with any $22.50 suit in Lawrence. Our business method of "One price only, that cash" and no end of season sales, make this possible
SKOFSTAD
828 MASSACHUSETTS ST.
Alton Gumbiner "Copped the Grapes" when he pocketed those fifty plunks he won for writing the most acceptable play for the K. U. Dramatic Club Prize this year.
"Copping the Grapes"
will be given by members of the Senior class at the
Bowersock Theatre Wednesday, April 26th Something Different
"Distinctively Individual"-Written around K. U. life.
"Does Not Bite"-No slushy stuff with a personal slam.
"Leaves No Bad After Taste"-The ending is more than happy-it is glorious.
"Process Patented"-Never again such an opportunity.
Make That Date Now
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VOLUME XIII.
COMEDY REEL ADDED
NUMBER 135
Bray Feature to be Run in Connection With "Racing the Deadline"
APPEARED FIRST AS STORY
UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS, THURSDAY AFTERNOON, APRIL 13, 1916.
Newspaper Serial Originally
Printed as Novel
Printed as Novel
In addition to the "Racing the Deadline," film one reel of the latest Bray comedy cartoon will be shipped to Lawrence on special order to be run with the newspaper pictures to be shown in Fraser Chapel at 7:15 P.M. Wiggins wired for the latest Bray picture to be rushed immediately.
For years the newspapers have been telling the secrets of the great dramatic stars, but not a word has been said about the mysteries of the newspaper office. It is the purpose of "Racing the star to show, by show, how the stars in newspapers on large metropolitan dailies, just how the wheels go around."
"Racing the Deadline" was printed as a serial in the Chicago Tribune before it was written as a scenario. The newspaper, a 1930s newspaper picture, the editor of the Tribune gave permission to film the story. The plot centers around the quickness of a young reporter who trying to get his scoop into the last edition.
"Racing the Deadline" will be shown in Lawrence once Saturday night at 7:15 o'clock in Fraser chapel. A Bray cartoon will be added to the program and the concert grand piano will be played with the pictures.
FACULTY MEN ENTER RING
Baumgartner and Foster to Box Friday Night
The first of a series of jubilee meetings to arouse interest in the Estes Park Conference will be held in Myers Hall Friday night at 7:30 o'clock. The meeting is open to all who have been to Estes Park, to those who have admitted to go, this summer and any who are thinking of making the trip.
A boxing match between George O. Foster and Prof. W. L. Baumgartner will be one of the stunts of the evening. Later Justin A. Blount will meet Harry Harlan in a fistic encounter. Songs by a colored male quartet and a banjo stunt will serve to entertain the audience. Eats will be served.
Phases of the Estes Park Conference will be told by different speakers, who in years past have spent part of their summers at Estes. Chancellor Randy Todd, Rex Mertler and Edward Todd are among those who will give speeches.
AntiCigarette Meeting Postnomed
The anti-cigarette cruisers did not hold their meeting last night in Fraser as they had planned. The meeting was postponed until Wednesday, April 19. Prof. Charles Cochran will deliver his address on "The Evils of Cigarette Smoking" at that time.
The most humiliating thing on the campus is not a freshman cap. It's the way you look and the things you feel, when you trip on the small section of pipe that protudes two inches wide. You can't show hall. It takes a man his whole first year at college to become accustomed to this little annoyance.
HEMISTRY PROFS WILL
ATTEND URBANA MEETING
Professors E. H. Bailey, H. P, Cady,
F. B. Dains of the department of
chemistry; F. W. Bruckmiller, water
laboratory chemist; W. A. Whitaker,
associate professor of metallurgy and
L. E. Sayre, Dean of the School of
Pharmacy, will leave Monday night for
Urbana, I., to attend the annual
meeting of the American Chemical
Union. The Chemical Society has more than 7,000 members composed of the leading chemists of the country.
All of the meetings will be held in the new $500,000 chemical laboratory of the University of Illinois, which will be dedicated during the convention. The university's Electrical Co., Governor Dunn of Illinois, and the president of the University of Illinois, will be among the well-known speakers who will address students at the iron ameliorators at Danville to study the exposition of chemical products.
FOUR O'CLOCK A. M. POOR
HELLO HOUR
Hard on Central's "Beauty'
"J'you have anything stiring last night on the wire, Mabel?"
"You tell the world, Violet," the telephone operator made answer between the fourth and fifth clinch with the Spearmint. "Had a fish wake me up from my beauty about four this morning calling for ___"
"Everybody is probably asleep there," the sister person whispers into the rubber, "so please operator don't ring but once," Yknow Violet I c'stand most anything but a woman trying to kitten me at four in the morning and me needin' the beauty. 'Oh I'll get him, rest easy,' I answers, and I'm ready, open until he came down stairs. I know he says, 'he'll be, hells' soft, and easy. He
"Did you flash the night watch?" "Nope, I knew he was harmless—recognized the University bark. When she came in, you guess it? Yep, a sorority house. He says, 'they're all asleep, so only ring once.' I did, four times.
"You're right, they're all asleep," trickled back at him and jerked the plug. I just got settled and was dreaming about a hat for $2.98 but the bauer gotuzer had gone again and I knew that someone up at the ladies' infirmary had woke up."
"Its that you Richard?" she purred I told you she was kittenish didn't Violet? Then he answers, sort o nervous like, "It is I, Helene."
"I just knew it was going to be good. Gee Kid—" Say Violet, lean over here, I want to whisper to you."
CAN ENROLL BY MAIL
IN SUMMER SESSION
According to Dean F. J. Kelly, of the University School of Education, who is director of the summer session, students expecting to attend summer school may enroll in desired classes by mail. They will then be assured of registering in the courses after reaching Lawrence.
This convenience will probably be of value to school teachers and others who want to attend the summer school but who will be unable to come to Lawrence until the opening day, which is June 8. Registration will take place in the dean's office any time after June 5.
The laws have begun to make improvements upon their steps. They have a sette for those who become tired of standing.
SPRING CONCERT GIRLS' ROOMS
Men's Glee Club to Sing i Fraser Chapel Tonight at 8 o'Clock
GOOD PROGRAM PREPARED
The Annual Spring Concert of the University Glee Club will be given this evening in Fraser Hall at 8 o'clock. The club, under the direction of Prof. W. B. Downing, has been working hard the past week and has its program in good shape, according to the Director.
Work Under Prof. Downing Has Prepared Singers
"The program is to be a well balanced one," said Manager Sautter. "Numbers by the entire club, quartet, solo and special stunts, will make up the singing program. A reading will also be given. The leading of conductor Max Hammersstein Oacar Schnelle promises to be the hit of the event."
The program to be followed this evening follows:
Swing Along ... Cook
Club
PART ONE
Solo—Bedouin Love Song..., *Pissuti*
Orla S. Holmes
Club
Solo—Bedouin Love Song . . . Finsuti
Her Picture . . . . .
Solo—The Torreader's Song...Carpu
You'll Remember Me...Balfe
Ray Gafney, Paul Sautter,
Solo- My Heart is filled... De Capua
Reading- Guarda Dia. Kinking
PART TWO
Reading—Gunda Din ... Kipling
PART TWO
Solo—My Heart is Thine…De Capua
Quartet...*Selecte*
On the Toad to Mandala...Speaks
H. Merle Shipley and Club
Club
H. Merle Smith and Club.
Schneider's Band...Mason
Club, (led by Schneider himself)
Solo—Love is Mine...Gartner
Chas, S. Sturtvant
Quartet...Selectee
On The Road to Mandalay...Speaks
TO TALK OF PEACE TRIP
Pringle, at Tomorrow's Convocation, Will Relate Experiences of Ford Party
FRANK STRONG, Chancellor.
University convocation for
April will be held Friday morning
at 10:30 o'clock. Ten-thirty
am and seven-o'clock, and
11:30 classes at 12 o'clock.
Kenneth Pringle, '16, College, will recount his experiences as a member of the Ford Peace Expedition tomorrow. He'll be one of the monthly University convocation.
Pringle is president of the International Polity Club and was chosen to represent the University on the Ford trip to Europe last fall. The trip took them to South Africa and extended over the Scandinavian peninsula and parts of Germany.
The actual workings and aims of the Ford Peace Expedition will be explained in his talk tomorrow and some direct, definite idea given regarding the hopes and ambition of the prominent peace workers on that trip.
NO WE KNOW
That on March 28th we will treasury of
Kansas had $1,365,268.06 on hand?
DO YOU KNOW
Landladies Prefer Men Because They May Keep Their Own Hours
WOMEN BREAK DATE RULE
Committee Submits Rules to W.
S. G. A. Governing Houses
A serious shortage of rooms for girls attending K. U. is threatened, according to Mrs. Eustace Brown, adviser of women, because Lawrence landlades prefer to have boys as tenants.
"The unfair thing about the attitude of so many of the women," said Mrs. Brown, "is that they object to girls because they do not keep the rules such as the eleven o'clock rule, and prefer to take boys who are governed by no such regulations and can keep their own hours."
But the shortage of satisfactory rooms is threatened just the same. At the start of the present school year, six landlords who previously rented their rooms to girls, decided to request a good vacant room for a girl, uncovered the information that only two which would meet the specified requirements were available. Today Mrs. Brown made public five requests made by the recently ordained association of landlords for K. U. girls.
RULES ARE NECESSARY
**WOLES ARE NECESSARY**
"We feel that it is absolutely necessary that such children be adopted if the caretaker at K." booming houses desire women to open good homes to girl students," the committee explains.
The requests are addressed to the Women's Student Government association.
First, That all rooming house rules apply to the graduate students and visiting girls the same as to all other students.
The landlads' committee asks;
Second. That study hour begin at 8 o'clock week nights.
Fourth, that no daytime dates be allowed except that out-of-town guests, must not be allowed to move during a semester until a vacancy is properly filled.
Third, That the hour for closing
rooming houses be changed from 11
o'clock Friday and Saturday nights
to 10:30
g'clock all three nights.
The requests were read at a meeting of the officers of the Women's Student Government Association yesterday, but no action was taken as the new officers were only installed yesterday.
All the churches of Lawrence and the Lawrence Choral Union will welcome in offering to the people of Lawrence and the University a union service to be held in the Robinson Gymnasium, and the community will welcome. The meeting will be after the nature of a community sing with the choral union leading.
TOWN PEOPLE TO SING;
ALL CHURCHES TAKE PART
The soloists of the evening will be Mrs. Herman Olcott, Miss Cora Reynolds, Miss Clara Scheurer, Gola Coffr, R. C. McIlhenny, Mr. Foster, and others to be sung by the audience under the leadership of Professor Downing.
There will be no admission charged and no collection taken.
Send the Daily Kansan home.
FACULTY COMMITTEE
TO CORRELATE COURSES
A committee made up of members of the University faculty, are making frequent trips to the Static Normal Schools at Emporia, Hays and Pittsburg, for the purpose of bringing about a closer correlation of the work of Normal Schools with that of the University. We will be held at the three normals to ascertain conditions and to learn the point of view and the ideas of Normal School faculties on all matters in which co-operation is desirable. Later a general conference will be held, the results of which will be re-examined to identify security issues for such action as they may deem wise and expedient.
Prof. Arvin Olin, instructor in the School of Education said when seen this morning, that little has been accomplished so far.
TO HAVE SPECIAL CAR
Chemicals Will Travel in State on Inspection Tour to The East
A special car will carry Prof. W. A. Whitaker and ten chemical engineers from Kansas City next Monday evening for a week's trip extending as far as Chicago. This is the fourth annual inspection trip made by the seniors and juniors of the department to prepare them to make such a trin before graduation.
The following men intend to go this year: W. Prof. W. A. Whitaker, Drew T. L. Mang, Roy O. Neal, Drew T. Beckley, Walter A. Goldtrap, Lloyd E. Jackson, Paul D. Satterty, Harold L. Lentz, James H. Holden, Ernest A. Todd and Samuel E. Campbell.
"The purpose of these trips," professor Whitaker, "is to give the men an opportunity to gain knowledge of the work done in large manufacturing industries. This trip to them corresponds to an internship for a doctor. They get a chance to see what they have learned in the laboratory worked out in a practical way."
The sight-seeing will extend over an entire week, some being done at stop-overs on the road. Tuesday will be spent at the University of Illinois, at Urbana, where the party will attend the National Convention of the American Chemical Society, and inspect the new Chemistry building.
The largest cement plant, that of the Universal, Portland Cement Co., and the world's largest steel works, are to be visited Wednesday.
Three K. U, graduates will be seen during the trip, J. W. Schwab, an inspector at the Gary plant, and Ellrol M. Welch and L. A. Benn, at the Inland Steel Co, Chicago, to be inspected Thursday.
The University Glee Club
The Standard Oil Co. is giving the students the opportunity on Friday of seeing the processes by which petroleum is refined and, on the same day, they will inspect the Sherwin-Williams Paint Co., noted for its special processes of preparing paint. The process of preparing paint and Karo syrup will be demonstrated Saturday at the Corn Products Refining Co., and a visit to the chemical laboratory of Sears Roebuck & Co. will complete the day.
There will be no Indoor Circus this spring according to H. A. Lorenz. Too many vaudeville shows and other académies have seasoned for not giving the stunt this year.
M. W. HARRISON AND COMPANY
FIRST TENNORS — Gola Coffelt, Rag Gafney, Thomas McClung, Eber Jolly, Hary Harlan. SECOND TENNORS — Chas, S Sturtevant, Ei D Darby, George Berg, Paul Sautier. FIRST BAMERS — Orla Holmes, M. John Music, John Hamilton, Symon Courcrot. SECOND BAMERS — Dilek Govin, Fred Pausch.
500 IN GREEK PAGEANT
The Staging of the Ancient Mythology Will Take a Huge Cast
TO BE PRESENTED MAY 12
Marvin Grove Will Furnish Setting for Production
More than 500 University women are expected to take part in the Greek pageant which will form the afternoon program for the May Fete given May the 12th on the golf links close to Potter Lake.
CHORUS DANCES THROUGH GROVE
An Alma Mater to be chosen by the senior women from among their number, will first enter with her companions, Knowledge, Poetry, Romance, Truth, Music, and Inspiration, and with her attendants the other women of the senior class. Then the Greek pageant begins.
how now.
Pan and his companions first appear among the trees dancing to the music of their pipes. As they sweep across the green, a trumpeter enters announcing the coming of the Bacus the ibibun sacrifice is offered to Baquil by the maidens who are in reality seniors of the class of 1916 of the University of Kansas. At this point a Greek chorus consisting of twenty-five men and women sings a Latin poem symbolic of the revels of Venus before the first of May.
CUPID IS ROBBED OF HIS ARROWS
Then Apollo, represented by J. B. McNaught, with his nine beautiful muses flutter on the scene. Venus, Cupid, or Ray Gafney, with his dangerous quiver of arrows, and the Flower nymphs all shift around on the scene, the Spring nymphs dancing around the Flowers. Diana, who has been a hostess, treats as Venus approaches her. In the meantime Diana's nymphs舞 around the bewildered Cupid and rob him of his mischief-making arrows.
Then down on the mrymakers sweeps the North Wind, J. B. McCunnell, and N. J. McCunnell, less fierce West Wind, the East Wind, and finally the soft southern breezes dance across the scene. Then gray scarf clouds gather and cover the hills and valleys, the raindrops come, human lightning rainbow appears through the gray clouds and the storm is over. At last Bacusch and the Bacachens together with all the nymphs join in one great rush, and moving backward, disguar-
TORCHES MAKE BRILLIANT CLOSE In the gray twilight the red flame of the many torches carried by the senior women in the second University torch ceremony, will bring this pageant to a close.
The different freshman and sophomore gym classes will represent the nymphs and attendants of the gods and goddesses while Pan and his companions will be the nine men in Dr. Goetz's advanced aesthetic dancing class. By the fifteen senior women in the librarianship all will be made by them and the sample now on display in Dr. Goetz's office shows skilful workmanship.
PROF SKILTON AND MRS. OLCOTT IN RECITAL
SKILTON AND MRS. OLCOTT IN RECITAL
Lawrence music lovers were given a rare treat Wednesday afternoon at the Lenten Organ recital by Prof. Charles S. Skilton, assisted by Mrs. Olcott, contralto. This recital was the last of the Lenten series of three which Professor Skilton has been giving in Fraser Hall.
The program was well received by an audience of two hundred. The final two numbers by Professor Skilton were especially appreciated. Mrs. Olcott sang without effort and gave an impression of great reserve power. Her tech is that of a finished artist.
Debate on Republican Vot
Debate on Republican Victory
The K. U. Debating Society will tell the issues and evils in the policies of the Republican party at night. The question for debate will be: "Resolved, that a republican victory in the next presidential election will be to the best interests of the party." The debaters are: affirmative, John Harvey and David Brown; negative, Harold Macdonn and Whison Rogers.
Prof. H, C. Riggs, of the Lawrence high school, brought the girls' section of his physics class on an inspection to the University Tuesday morning. They presented in the large equipment of the physics and engineering laboratories.
The Weather
The forecast: Untitled weather tonight and Friday, probably showers and cooler tonight.
MORNING PRAYERS
Week of April 10 to 14
Leader, the Rev. Arthur Braden.
Subjects:
Friday: "Who is this?"
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Official student paper of the University of Kansas
BUSINESS STAFF
EDITORIAL STAFF
Chas. S. Sturtevant...Editor-In-Chief
William Cady...Business Manager
Chase. Sturtevant...Adv. Manage
Paul Brindle
Don Davis
Ralph Ellis
Joseph Harry
Harry Morgan
Guy Scrivner
Cargill Sproll
Charles Sweet
Cathay Vernon
Moon, Moore
Subscription price $3.00 per year in advance; one term, $1.75.
Entered as second-class mail mast- officer of the United States, Kansas, under the sword of Marrow.
Published in the afternoon five
versities of Kansas from the press of
Kansas.
Address a1. 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 merely printing, the more than merely teaching the University holds; to play no favorites; to be clean; to be cheerful; to be courteous; to leave more problems to wiser heads. In all, the students will satisfy the students of the University.
THURSDAY, APRIL 13, 1916.
THE DOG AND THE WOLF
A. Dog fell asleep back of the yard.
A wolf ran up and wanted to eat him.
But he didn't see it, so now I am lean and bony. Wait a little — my master is going to celebrate a wedding; then I shall have plenty to eat me with fat. It will be better to eat me then."
The Wolf believed her, and went away. Then he came a second time, and saw the Dog lying on the roof and waving to "Well, have they the wedding's?"
The Dog replied, "Listen Wolf! It is ready to eat you." The dog, the yard, do not wait for the wedding, and he will go.
GROWING FAME OF K. U.
The remark is repeatedly heard that "K. U. is losing all her good profs" or words to that effect. Each time a professor resigns to take up work in a new field, the walling and lamenting is heard anew.
Such an attitude on the part of a number of the undergraduate body is uncalled for. In any commercial or other institution where approximately three hundred employees are working, there will be constant changes in the force. We cannot expect to bring an instructor to the University of Kansas, and keep him here for ever and a day. In the majority of cases, those men who leave the University, go to an Eastern school on the reputation they have made while at Kansas. We have had their teaching while they are in their prime, while they are working hard to make the reputation which each professor desires. The University of Kansas is well known in the East from a scholastic standpoint. What one feature makes it so, other than the fact that our faculty is of the best. Isn't it an honor to have men from K. U. constantly sought for by larger schools?
A university may be without fine buildings, it may be lacking in a beautiful campus. There may be few students, and those students may not be rolling in wealth. The instruction rooms may be crowded, and the laboratory equipment may not be the latest nor the best. But all these difficulties are to a large extent overcome by earnest instructors who desire to instill the spirit of learning into the undergraduate body.
Instead of the antagonistic feeling which many of the undergraduates take toward the University of Kansas because it does not pay enough to keep its teaching staff, a feeling of fellowship and "K. U. ueber alles" should prevail. Kansas cannot be expected now, to have so great a University as some of the eastern states. But later—yes, for with the proper spirit, with that enthusiasm for the University which every graduate and member of the student body should have toward his Alma Mater, the University of Kansas will become the educational center of the Middle West.
But only by the enthusiastic support of all, at all times, under all conditions, will the state become proud of her University, and the parents of surrounding states become anxious to give their children a Kansas Education.
THE LITTLE THINGS
Three laughing jolly girls, arm in arm, sauntered up the library cut-off.
They met a student going down the Hill. He stepped off the side-walk to the soft oozy mud, as they passed him. He had to, for there wasn't room on the walk.
It's the little things that count.
"The evil that men do lives after them:
THE SUMMER PEST
The good is oft intered with their bones." -Julius Caesar.
In less than two months the open season for housewives will begin, and already the men students of the University are going over their hunting kits with an eye to a record-breaking bag this year. Some of them are going in search of game singly, but as a rule they will go out in pairs, or larger groups, armed with all kinds of money-separating weapons, from aluminum dishpans to Dr. Chase's Handbook of Health, from hair-dying combs at two-fifty each, to imported Japanese plum trees, with seedless fruit; and from crop insurance to bookyooks.
Statistics compiled by the Y. M. C. A. show that practically all of the men students in the University are accustomed to work in the summer vacation and that they follow a great variety of money-making plans. They earn from fifty to five dollars a week. A few wouldn't get that much if they couldn't say they were college students, for everybody sympathizes with the poor boy who is trying to earn enough to take himself through school.
The records also show that the average student earns about $200 in his three months and that he saves at least half of it to help on his winter expense.
"Had I but served my God with half the zeal
served my king, he would not in mind
**are**
Have left me naked to men enemies.' — King Henry VIII.
Jayhawk Squawks
2nd. L. H. S.: "I think it's barber-outs outrage."
First Long-Haired Stude; "What
first thing is causing the price of
haircuts to go up?"
Prof. Blackmar is taking a class to visit the scene of incarceration at Lansing tomorrow. If you have any friends, Friends, kindly leave it at his office.
Upon reflection, we beg to suggest that Professor Blackmar take some medies along too. They ought to be interested in lancing.
One would gather from reading the news dispatches that there are almost as many lairs in Mexico as there are liars.
Every man should have just enough girls so that they can't all be mad at him at the same time.
Our definition of doolity is when the man of the house makes the beds.
This collyme maintains that we rubbed it in on Missou. First we beat them in athletics, and then last Friday, we moved that athletics were beneficial.
Lord Whta Talker, the gentleman barber, says he had to be bailed out only once, and that was the time he met the creek and swallowed so much water.
A man never gets so lazy that he stretches a stretch to attend a dog fight.
"Yes," said Alec Sommers, "I had quite an adventure while coming from church last Sunday evening. I was walking with old Mrs. Kantherhee brother and I didn't know my brother was classified in college. I said, "senior." She couldn't hear, so I hollowed, louder this time, "senior! Would you believe it? The chap made up of us turned around and said: 'Don't care if you did; we engaged!'
There may be culture in agriculture, but the average girl can't see
IE DIDN'T CARE
The president of a neighboring institution advises all seniors to leave college in debt. There are various funding in" well with the student body.
The average man enjoys grand opera about as much as the average woman does a baseball game.
-G. S.
If skirts continue to ascend
And shoe-tops keep the pace,
I wonder where on earth will end
This bold, immodest race?
Robert Burns was born in 1759, in Scotland. His personal character was rather weak, his fliptations many. His best verse was written at white heat, his poetry so sensitive love affair. He never liked to accept money for his poetry. He died in 1796.
POET'S CORNER
"Why, Jesus was cusked and discussed from one end of the land to the other. All he had to do was to say 'Come forth' and the graves opened like chestnut burrs in the fall."
These fragments of the three addressees of the flavor of the messaged heart.
"Pilate should have been influenced, by his wife's dream. She may have been one of those miserable, plurable, plastic, two-faced, two-by-four, lickable, and clawed women, but Pilate should have heeded her warning and set Jesus free."
John Anderson, my Jo. John.
When we were dead again.
JOHN ANDERSON, MY JO
John Anderson, my Jo, John.
We clamb the hill thegither;
"But Pilate was just one of those rat-holted, pin-headed, plibable, stand-pat, free-lunch, pie-counter politic-ist, machine gang in Jewish politics, and he was afraid if he released Christ he would lose his job."
Now to be properly enjoyed, a walking tour should be gone upon alone . . . . . . . . . You must be open to impressions and let your thoughts take color from what you see. You must have the right to play upon. "I cannot see the wif," says Hazlitt, "of walking and talking at the same time. When I am in the country I wish to vegetate like the country"—which is the gist of all things. There are no crackles of voices at your aboow to jar on the meditative silence of the morning."—From "On Walking Alone" by R. L. Stevenson.
Bumble: "My roomy has stuffed our cushions with his old love letter."
It may be necessary to use such language in order to reach people of the slums but it does not seem that it ought to be necessary in order to reach college students. To the writer of this note some of the language quoted seems objectionable, and he, for one, dislikes to see the University set the stamp of approval upon it by inviting Mr. Sunday to speak here.
The three addresses given on that day were: "What shall I do with Jesus?", "Real Manhood" and "Hot Cakes off the Griddle."
Your bonny brow was brent:
But now your brow is bald, John.
You're not the snaw;
But blessings on your pow,
John Anderson, my 19.
FOUND IN A BOOK
Rumble: "What was his idea?"
Bumble: "Pretty soft, stuff-"
CAMPUS OPINION
"Absence makes the heart grow fonder."
"So do presents."—Harvard Lampoon.
A Corner for the Library Browser
Communications must be signed as evidence of good faith and honesty in耻辱swhilbehold the witness's consent.
"Billy Sunday has had many great days in his life. Doubled the greatest was the thirteenth of March, 1914, when he opened the University of Pennsylvania.
"What Sunday's own impressions of that day were may be understood from the prayer he offered at the close of the night meeting.
I didn't beg either.
And monie a canta she, John.
We've had no way.
Now we main tottier down, John,
But hand in hand we'll go.
Editor Daily Kansan:
"Oh, Jesus, isn't this a fine bunch? Did you ever look down on a finer crowd? I don't believe that there is a mother who is any prouder of this lot of boys than I am tonight. I have never preached to a more appreciative crowd, and if I never preach another sermon, I am willing to do so. I'm always saying that I have helped save the boys at the University of Pennsylvania."
My attention was attracted by a statement made by a correspondent under "Campus Opinion" of your Monday issue to the effect that when Billy Sunday "speaks to an edu- cationist," he styles than when showing the submerged tern the error of their ways" and that, when he spoke at the University of Pennsylvania, "his addresses did not offend the most critical or super-sensitive." I do not suggest an active an audience at the University of Pennsylvania may be or how they are affected by Mr. Sunday's addresses but I submit an account of them, taken from a book written by one of his admirers, Wm. Clement Snyder, Sunday, the Man and his Message", and leave to the reader to form his own opinion as to their character.
F. H. Hodder.
John Anderson, my jo.
—Robert Burns
And thus ad libitum.
"Racing the Deadline"
ADMISSION 50
9 1067 382822
—interesting
A crackin' good motion picture of newspaper life.
SENIORS—order your caps and gowns before Easter recess at check stand in Fraser.—Adv. 134-3
CLASSIFIED
—snappy
Book Store
CELERER'S BOOK STORE, $23 Mass
it. Typewriters for sale or rent
typewriter and School Supplies
for use in school offices
for use in ac. Pictures and Picture frames.
Jewelers
ED. W. PARRONS, Engraver, Watch-
jewelry.
Bell phone 711. 717. Mass
phone
—full of action
—Out in time for the "Two-Bit Dance"
MISS ESTELLA, NORTHTRUP. china
certainly handled. 78, 635. Mass. Phone
certainly handled. 78, 635. Mass.
Shoe Shop
PHONE KBNNEEDY PLUMBING CO.
Mazda. Phones Mazda. Mazda Lamps.
Mazda. Phones Mazda.
K. U. SHOE SHOP and Pantatorium is the best place for best results. 1342 JOB NO.
—dandy plot
Plumbans
Fraser Hall, Saturday, 7:15 p.m. Be there-Admission 10c
Printing
Deasemaking
FORNEBY SHOE SHOP, 1017 Mass. St.
make a mistake. All work
done.
MISR, M. A., MORGAN, IH31 *Tennessee*
injuring: 6 *every* reasonable
injuring: 6 *every* reasonable
B. H. DALLE, Artistic Job Printing
both phones 228, 1027 Mass.
—pleuty good music
PROFESSIONAL CARDS
DR. H. L. CHAMBERS. Office over
Squires room. Both phones.
HAIRK REDING. M D LOS VEW, eye, ear,
frown, face. F C. U Bldg. Phones, Bell 51$ &
face. F C. U Bldg. Phones, Bell 51$
G. W. JONES, A. M. M. D. D. Displeas-
cate colony. 128 St. Phone. Heal
colony. 128 St. Phone. Heal
J. R. BECHET M. D. M. D. O. $23 Maxs
Both phones, office and residence.
OVERSEAS, BROOKLYN, NY. Eat, Nose and Throat Specialist. All glass work guaranteed. Successor to Dr. Hamman.
DR. H, W. HUTCHINSON, Dentist, 218
P窜龄 Bldg. Lawrence, Kansas.
FOUND—A raincoat with initials L.
A. W. Was taken by mistake in Frazer Hall Friday. Owner please call 1253W. 184-2.
A. C. WILSON. Attorney at law, 743
Mass. State Lawyer, Kansas.
WANT ADS
FOR SALE--One two cylinder out-board motor; good condition; cheap. 251 Bel, Alphin, at Johnson & Carl. 134-3.
LOST—Between Spooner Library and 1116 Iad, a lady's gold watch, open, with monogram, "D. M." on back. Finder kindly leave at Kansan arts center.
For parties, banquets, committee feeds, etc., call 92 on the Bell for reservations. Let us prepare your next picnic lunch.
At 900 Tennessee RAYMOND'S PRIVATE DINING ROOM
PRIVATE DINING ROOM
Whipped cream, fruit salad and waters. Ten cents a plate at Wiedemann's.—Adv.
At the Bowersock
Tonight Only FRITZI SCHEFF in Pretty Mrs.Smith
Tomorrow
A diverting comedy drama
Mary Pickford in "The Eternal Grind"
JEFFERSON DE ANGELIS
Shubert Nights 25c, 10c, $1.00
Nights 30c, 40c, midday
Wednesday $1.00
"SOME BABY"
April 23—Taylor Holmes in "Bunker
Conklin Fountain Pens
Non-Leakable and Self-Filling Sold in Lawrence at
F. B. McColloch's Drug Store 847 Mast, St.
THESIS BINDING
Engraved and Printed Cards
A. G. ALRICH
typewriter Paper 744 Mass. St.
PROTSCH
The College Tailor
Watkins National Bank
[Capital $100,000
Surplus and Profits $100,000
The Student Depository
Bring your old suit to me and get twice as much for it.
Money loaned on valuables.
CITIZENS
ABE WOLFSON 637 Mass. St.
posits guaranteed.
We are handling all University accounts, and we solicit your business, de-
STATE BANK
707 Massachusetts St.
The University of Chicago
HOME in addition to resident
STUDY by correspondence.
For detailed information
Sixth Year. U. of C. (Oh.) , Chicago, IL.
Mitchell Fund
中
We do Fancy Tailoring and Remodeling.
UNIVERSITY WOMEN!
MRS. EDNAH MORRISON,
Bell 1154J. 1146 Tenn. St.
are sold exclusively in Lawrence by
At Your Service
EXPERT BARBERS
College Inn Barber Shop
BURT WADHAMS, Prop.
Corona and Fox Typewriters
F. I.Carter. 1025 Mass. St. We have machines for rent and a full line of supplies.
Ladies Tailor Fancy
dresses. Summer dresses of every description.
Mrs. Wm. H. Schulz,
917 Mass. St.
“THE BEST AMERICAN MAKE”
"THE BEST AMERICAN MAKE"
an Doncaster ARROW COLLAR
2 for 25c
Cluett, Peabody & Co., Inc., Makers
Tailored Suits
or fancy yards
incorrect your most
mess as much as
style for their successful
appearance.
Cleaning
in Pressing
LAWRENCE PANTATORIUM
Tel. 569 Bell 12 W. Warren
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
THE VARSITY THEATRE SPECIAL FEATURE TONIGHT ONLY BILLIE BURKE IN "PEGGY"
PRODUCED BY THOS. H. INCE
SPECIAL MUSIC MAT. 2:40—NIGHT 7:40-9:30
NOTE: All records for attendance were broken at the showing of this production at the Willis-Wood Theatre Kansas City, Missouri
are always a pleasure to receive. Arrangements superior to all others. The keeping qualities are well known. A comparison is all we ask of the unimilitated.
MR. AND MRS. GEO. ECKE. Leading Florists
825 jg Mass. St.
Phones 621.
FLOWERS FROM THE FLOWER SHOP
Come to our store for anything you need for your
Kodak
Fresh films always in setok,
as well as Developing Tanks,
Velox paper,—general supplies
of all kinds.
And for the developing and finishing of your pictures, our prompt, painstaking service is sure to please you.
Come in and see us. We can give you some valuable pointers.
Evans Drug Store 819 Massachusetts
LEGAL FRAT PURCHASES
SET OF "CORPUS JURIS"
New Committees Met
The Phi Delta Phi Law fraternity, has purchased "Corpus Juris", a new set of law books valued at three hundred and fifty dollars. Seventy large volumes of recent composition, covering all phases of the law, make up the set. The fraternity has arranged payments of thirty-five dollars each.
It is said this recent addition to the PACA makes it the third largest in the city.
A meeting of the newly appointed committees of the Y. W. C. A. was held Wednesday night in the basement of Snow Hall with Evelyn McNutt the president and preparing Pictures of Estes Park were shown with the stereotypic and Carolyn McNutt talked on the expenses of the trip. Mrs. Lucy Riggs, field secretary of the Y. W. C. A., addressed the group. Mrs. W. C. A., as an institution and the individual responsibility of each member.
Seniors: Order your caps and gowns before Easter vacation at check stand in Fraser .Adv. 153-3
Investigate the merits of tailor clothing, clotheswrappers in the long line. Schutz—Alz
Send the Daily Kansan home.
WOMEN FIND BULL'S-EYE
Shooting at Target Every Afte
noon Develops a Few Stars
Swish! and an arrow quivered in the middle of the bull's-eye target placed near the end of the women's gym. The women archers are becoming so apt in their aim that a target on the wall provides safety near the big target which catches many of the arrows showed toward its broad front. Some evenings at the 4:30 practice hour, twenty upperclass women will be standing the required 140 feet from the target using both b-eye and pulling the lance wood bow.
This continual daily practice under the direction of Ella Hawkins, champion of last year's archery contest, will come to a final climax sometime in May when the different contestants will use their aiming abilities in striving to gain the silver trophy cup now on display in Dr. Goetz's office.
When the women reach the never-miss mark instead of using the small bows, the big five foot arrow senders will be used. These larger bowres handle better in rough terrains when they are strung. When the gentle Kansas zephers get to toe疼 the archers find it necessary to discontinue practice if the target cannot be placed in some shattered spot. The archers often use a torture, but in spite of their difficulties Miss Hawkins believes the women will become real "sportsmen."
K. U. Man To Northwestern
Clark Young, '16 College, of Sterling, has received a three year fellowship which yields an annual income of $30,000. Young will work for his Ph.D. degree in Bacteriology and Medicine. He expects to complete his work for an M. D. degree in a few years.
Alpha Tau Omega at Missouri held an informal housewarming last Sunday when the housekeeper's cottage caught fire. The attendance was large and the early hour brought forth a conglomeration of costumes.
Twenty-five hundred students at Cornell University have been compelled to rearrange their class schedules as a result of a fire in one of their chemical laboratories. The loss of the equipment is estimated at $300,000.
The Oklahoma Agricultural and Mechanical College has already issued a call for baseball players, insisting that the team had before had such need for baseball men.
TO SMOKE COB PIPES
Sophomores to Step Forth With Missouri Meerschaums at Mixer
The sophomores will hold the first one of their bimonthly get-together meetings, Tuesday, April 18, at Eagles' Hall. The affair will be known as a Corn Cob Mixer and the price has been cut down to a dime.
"Prof. Merle Thorpe made a plea for more epen when he spoke at our last smoker," said Bill Koester, chairman of the social committee this morning, "and his appeal had the desired effect." He also argued to have a smoker every two weeks until school closes. They will not be as elaborate as heretofore from the standpoint of eats and smokes, but they will be featured by clever programs and plenty of good fellowship which after all is what we are after. At the mixer next Tuesday each person will receive a pairpipe which he is supposed to fill with his own "makins." Fifteen prominent faculty men will be there and some representative seniors will be invited. During the evening several new Kansas songs together with a new sophomore song, will be taught those present, by a member of the Fairs Arts Department, who will down. A boxing match and the Glee Club are also on the program, together with some good speeches.
PROF SCORES SPELLING
SET DATE OF STUDENT DAY
Speakers Can Air Views on Abuses in Chapel May 19
Student Day was set by the Men's Student Council at their regular meeting last evening for May 19, and the men will be underway to be under way. A special election day in each school will be necessary to choose the speaker from that school, and the president of the various units of the union which the elections will be held.
Greatest Conglomeration of Inconsistencies Ever Invented Says Prof. Palmblad
The Cheerleader amendment to the constitution of the council which was to have been voted upon at a mass vote and then rebound upon by ballot at convocation next Friday morning. Special balloons will be given to every man in the audience and monitors stationed at the doors to collect them when convocation is over. The president, as many men as possible be present to vote upon the amendment.
The reservoir of the Nacaca electric plant, which supplies the City of Mexico with power, is accounted one of the greatest engineering feats in the last century and ranks with the Great American acres, and was opened in 1913, although the country was torn by civil strife at the time.
The greatest conglomeration of in consistencies that was ever invented. That is how H. E. Palmblad, in 1849, described the German, describes the English, languages.
"There is no reason," he says, "why everybody should spell alike any more than why they should dress alike or walk alike. There is at the present time no uniformity of spelling as is shown by the various ways of spelling 'chancellor', 'catalogue,' and other words."
"English spelling is supposed by some to show derivation of words. The persons interested are those who do not need the spelling to show the derivation, but still we make the nine hundred and ninety-nine spend long time on it. But a rhetorical benefit of the one out of every thousand who is interested in it for derivation. The help of modern English spelling for derivation often conceals the etymology as well as reveals it. At once time it was thought that the English word 'foreign' had some connection with the Latin word 'regnum', which it does not. Dr. J.P. Coyle writes: 'I am 'island' with an 's' because he thought it had something to do with the Latin word 'insula,' which it does not.
"There is no etymological reason for having the 'h' in 'ghost'; no logical reason for having the last syllable in 'succeed' spelled one way and that of 'concee' another. If 'receipt' should be spelled with a 'p' to show its derivation from the Latin 'receptum', then to be consistent we ought to spell 'deceive' with a 'p' which is derived from the Latin 'deceptum'. But we consider the Latin 'deceptum' as pairs of words alike as illiterate, and a vart amount of time is spent in *la* the schools to make our children observe a uniformity which is not uniform.
This advocate of reformed spelling says that "pronunciation should be the basis of all spelling, as it was originally. The divergence of English spelling from its pronunciation is largely due to the fact that pronunciation changes but we fail to let the spelling change with the aid of pronunciation. The idea that good spelling and a good education go hand in hand is a misconception dating back from the time when only a few were able to read and write and were acquainted with the English writings of the time. Today so-called 'correct spelling' means the memorizing of certain combinations of letters forced by the development of pupils, and it is no more a sign of culture than the ability to repeat rules of conduct from a book of etiquette is a proof of good reading."
FACULTY ALUMNI MEET
Will Decide Fate of Annual Commencement Dinner Today
Prof. L. N. Flint, secretary of the University of Kansas Alumni Association, yesterday called a meeting of the alumni on the University faculty to be held at 4:30 o'clock today. It will be decided at this time, Mr. Flint expects, whether there will be an alumni dinner as part of the commencement week festivities this year. The alumni are required to attend State Auditor, and S. M. Brewster, Attorney General, that the money paid by K. U. seniors to defray commencement entertainment expenses, could not be legally used to pay for the annual alumni dinner, Mr. Flint, through the Graduate Magazine asked the sentiment of the alumni concerning the continuation of the dinner as a paid affair. What response has come in has been favorable. A final decision probably be made at this afternoon's meeting.
SSISTANT REGISTRAR FOR FALL SEMESTER
Greater efficiency in his office being one of Registrar George O. Foster's pets, he has already laid plans for a new assistant registrar, Miss Mann, who will take up her work July 13. The new manager, Miss Mann, the whole work of the office will be re-arranged so that it can be more quickly and easily done. All of the changes will be in force before the new fall term, so that the freshmen of next year may never know what it is to stand in line for their turn on the bus at the end of the semester nor to wait long minutes for the refund of their lab fees if they still have something coming at the end of their lab work.
Mrs. Green Is Better
Mrs. Green is Befter
Mrs. A. Green is wife of Deat
Green, who has always ill the
past three days, is much improved
She rested well last night.
Obtain comfort, fit and style in your spring clothes by consulting Schulz. Adv.
Seniors: Order your caps and gowns at the chapel or at chair stand in Fraser — *vacation* at the hotel.
Fridays and Saturdays are fruit salad days at Wiedemann's—Adv.
Send the Daily Kansan home.
Send the Daily Kansan home.
Hutchinson Has Welfare Institute
Hutchinson Has Welfare Institute
Prof. Wm. A. McKeever returned from technician's morning where he has been conducted a welfare institute. The institute lasted four days from April 9 to 12 and was the first of the kind that has been held in Kansas. Questions covering many different phases of child welfare were discussed by prominent speakers and the work they is being done will be discussed. It was described and discussed by the delegates. Mr. McKeever is responsible for the institute and intends to make it an annual event.
Special—Pineapple ice at Wiedemann's.—Adv.
L. S. Beughly
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SEE OLD K. U. IN ACTION
Make a date with her now for April 26th. Then wheel yourself down and buy a couple of tickets for
"Copping the Grapes"
Written by Alton Gumbiner
A play with two acts, with a prologue and epilogue. The prize winner of this year's Dramatic Club Contest. Written by a K.U. student around K.U. life
That Directory Is Handy and Central Is Waiting
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
1946
HERE'S THE "BELTER"
One of the best styles for young men this season.
We are showing it in the new
English Homespun fabrics, at . . . $20.00
Others at $17 and $25
Today we received two new Arrow collars—The "Lexicon" (2½ inches high) and the "Ashby" 2½ inches high)—These are the new space styles and are good for the new "Piping Rock" tie or Four-in-hand.
Another new arrival today is the new "Piping Rock" bow, ready to sell, to sell at 50c. A great assortment of beautiful patterns to select from.
News of the Newest for Easter
Yesterday we received a new shirt which is made of fiber silk—one of the best wearing material to be found—A beautiful striped pattern with a touch of "Jonquil" yellow. $3.
We've a new Easter hat which is called the "Firing Line." It has flat brim and low crown—Comes in four colors—Pearl, Glen Gray, Carbon and Ivy. $3.
A good companion for this new shirt is the beautiful new plaid Barathea scarf at $1.
In our shoe department you will find a dandy new oxford called the "Hyde Park." It has low drop toe and white rubber sole and heel—Tan or black calf skin—$5.
This is "Styleplus" $17 Week from Maine to California.
Ober's HEAD-TO-FOOT OUT-FITTERS
We are the "Styleplus" store of Lawrence.
GRAMMAR NOT ESSENTIAL
German Can Be Learned With Little Memory Work
Almost all the German instructors at the University agree that German can be learned without an extensive study of grammar. The easiest way to do this, they maintain, is by constantly reading and speaking German. The new direct method, which is being tried out, is proving successful all over the country. It emphasizes the practical use of German.
Prof. Harry C. Thuruna, head of the department of German, says: "It is possible to learn to speak and read German without an extensive study of grammar, but some principles of German are useful, such as wish to speak or read it." He recommends the use of books which use every-day words over and over.
Prof. E. F. Engle, when asked for his opinion on the matter said: "Go to Germany. If you would learn the language as the natives do, live with them, read their papers, converse with them, until the language becomes a part of you. If this is imminent, I will travel in America by applying yourself and making use of the words as you learn them."
Miss Emma Palmer thinks that the new direct method which is being attempted here is proving successful. However, it takes a much longer time to teach university students in this way than it does by the grammar method.
"Instructors formerly thought the only way to teach a language was by filling the student's head full of useless rules," said H. V. E. Palmbild. He could realize that only a few details of grammar are essential."
GRAMMAR METHOD FOR COLLEGESE
For college students the grammar
method is best, says W. H. Hawkins.
"Such a short period is allowed this one subject that it is impossible for teachers to use the language in class and make any headway unless they are a good command of constructions."
Mrs. Caroline B. Spangler says that in many junior high schools one and a half years is given to teaching German by the natural method. This means reading short texts, using short words over and over and acting out the words until they are made sound. They never forgets them. Practically to grammar is taught during the first year.
The Sigma Xi banquet will be held Thursday night, April 13, at I. O. O. H. The members, as well as their wives (which whichever the case may be) will be there.
El Ateneo will meet Thursday evening from 7:30 to 9:30 at 1106 Ohio instead of from 3:30 to 4:30 as usual, and students in Spanish are invited to attend.
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Coach Olecott wants 25 more men out for spring football practice every afternoon. Spring training lasts until April 20.
Seniors are requested to call at the check stand and order their caps and gowns before the Easter holidays.
The Union Pacific special train carrying the class in Applied Sociology the penitentiary leaves Lawrence Statsbury 7151 a. m. instead of 7303 o'clock.
K. U. Debating Society will hold its regular program Thursday evening at 8:00 o'clock. A large attendance is urged,
Special—Pineapple ice at Wiedemann's—Adv.
CLOSE WITH A FEED
Miners Wind-up Day of Lectures With Banquet in Gym-
About thirty of the faculty and students of Haworth Hall were present at the banquet given in Robinson Gym last night at the close of the first annual Miner's Day at the University. Two of the visiting speakers were unable to attend, but otherwise the attendance of advanced students in geology, mining engineers and faculty was nearly complete.
Prof. Erasmus Haworth acted as toastmaster for the evening. R. B. T. Kilian discussed flotation as a process of ore treatment that offers a promising field for development. This study considered similarly studied by K. U. men.
Safety first was the topic that was dealt with by A. A. Knapp of the Department of Labor and Industry at Topeka. Dr. Henry M. Payne discussed the problems and opportunities that confront a mining engineer when he goes to work in regions far from civilization.
The Ohio State University Geology classes will not make their annual trip to see Mammoth Cave this year on account of the shortness of the timeframe. Four students spent five days studying the mysteries of the cave.
At the afternoon session of the miners, the address of Levi Day, superintended of the State Mine at Lansing was omitted for lack of time.
dressing and fine grinding machinery, illustrated by lantern slides. The afternoon session closed with an illustration lecture on the Pondlike and Si-landic formations of Jayne. We discussed conditions and mining methods in those countries.
A. A. Knapp of Topeka lectured on Safety First, using lantern slides to show various means of protecting men from dangerous machinery.
The problem of teaching the city convict how to work is the one that confroites the officials at Lansing, accuse them of mistreatment and the State Penitentiary. The majority of the convicts there are city men who do not know how to work but when they are sent, they are more anxious to work in the city than elsewhere, Warden Coding said.
Columbia University will have over $4,000,000 with which to pay its running expenses next year according to an associated press dispatch. This means an increase of over $200,000 in the budget of this current year.
Seniors; Order your caps and gowns before Easter vacation at check stand in Fraser.—Adv. 135-3
R. B. T. Kiliann of New York gave the miners a technical on one ore
We have individual molds for your Easter dinner. Call us about them.
NEW FRAT EXCLUSIVF
One Must be Some Athlete to Make Sigma Delta
“K” MEN MAY GET LEFT
Some Football Stars Can't Pass Membership Tests
If a chapter of Sigma Delta PSi, the athletic fraternity, is situated at the University this spring, there is going to be a howling mob of applicants. Almost every student and his brother has done some of the real work, in last night's Kansan but very few have a turn at all of them. In fact, some of the many students may even practice up a bit before the tryout.
About this time last year a movement was started to create a little interest in the organization but it was short-lived. The pushers of the movement this year, however, are not going to let it drop. The athletes are anxious to see a tryout held some distance in the near future and most every one will want to get into the tryout. This will ranged for soon by the instructors in the department of physical education.
TWO CLASSES OF MEMBERS
There are to be two classes of membership in the fraternity: The regular members and the junior members. Of course the junior members will not have no little honor in being a junior member. Then the junior members may make the regular fraternity by a little extra work in each event so in either case they may eventually place in the organization. The requirements for the two classes differ very little but this little difference in each event makes a lot of different points which an additional point which will keep the membership down is the fact that all the stunts have to be done in one day.
In looking over the requirements for membership the average student is amazed at the low requirements for junior membership. He is possessed with an idea that he can go out to the field and do every one of the stunts without any trouble. But that's all in his mind. By the time he runs through the hurdles, the high jump pole vault and ends up with a ten mile walk he will be convinced that he has been doing considerable work. But then he is only going good for the gymnasium stunts are yet to be pulled off.
The spectators will have their fun during the tryouts—more so than will the contestants. Of course, there will be no competition. The contestants will care little about what their opponents are doing for last place counts as much as first so long as it is within the time limit for the event. But the real fun will come when the players get to pole vaulting; Leland Fisher tries the shot; Grutzmacher tries to high jump. And speaking of comedy, how about Dick Small high jumping or running two miles?
But let no one think that the frat is to be limited to track men. Kicking the football is necessary, so is kicking the gridron heroes and diamond sharks will have a nice time running some of the faster or longer races and some of the tracksters will furnish a lot of them. Lindsey on the football stunt.
We'll be Sublime.
The "K" must have the advantage—slightly. A university letter may be substituted for any one of the requirements except the tumbling. But only one letter may be substituted although a member may possess a half dozen sweaters. This will not help things much exertion in the high jump or Dan Lindsay in the two mile run.
Just how the athletes themselves feel about their chances to make the "boat" cannot be definitely learned, but they can help by willing to give it a trial but whether
they would appear in the line-up at the time for the tryout is a different question. In this respect they are like the average boarding club or fraternity man. They believe in talking and no athlete seems to be quite as good in another man's mind as he is in his own.
But there are a number of men in the University that will have fine chances to make the team. One esse places the probable number of junior women twenty while others think that it is foolish any case that will be a good start and if it once gets started the interest in the organization will keep growing. And it is sure to get started if we practice in tumbling and other things at least ten students should be able to pass the senior membership test.
Treweeke is good in all departments except tumbling and he expects to overcome that with a little practice. Dick is a jumper known throughout the middle west; he is a hurdler of ability; a swimmer; a fair distance man; and when it comes to pole vaulting—well, he is right there. He even broke the pole a couple of blocks ago while trying to do nine feet. He is also an all around athlete as are the other mentioned in the list. But the list is in no sense complete and some of the University dark horses will have a fine chance to show their skill when the tryout is announced.
TREWEKE LOCKY CANDIDATE
One of the most enthusiastic workers for the frat and the most manly for to make it is Dick Treweke.
Home Herrritt is another man close in line. Fred Campbell, now attending the medical school in Rosedale, is anxious to get back to the tryouts.
Grady, Reber, O'Leary and a number of other track men would work for the honorary fraternity.
The feat will have the support of the coaches and physical directors. Every man connected with the athlete department is interested in the organization, and places such an organization would have in his athletic life of the institution.
"indeed, he who loves himself, not in idle vanity, but by a plenitude of knowledge, is the best equipment of knowledge." neighbors."-Robert Louis Stevenson.
Seniors: Order your caps and gowns before Easter vacation at check stand in Fraser—Adv. 135-3
University Women
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Another Important Thing
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Owen Service
means a lot more advantages, too. Call us up and find out what they are.
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JUST 8 MORE SHOPPING DAYS TILL EASTER
MRS. McCORMICK ASKS
WHY WAIT LONGER? "The Easter Shop" 831 Mass.
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VOLUME XIII.
TO SING "REDEMPTION'
NUMBER 136
Lawrence Choral Union Appears in Robinson Gymnasium Sunday Night
ALL CHURCHES TO UNITE
UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS, FRIDAY AFTERNOON, APRIL 14, 1916.
Evening Services Give Way to Union Concert
Music lovers of Lawrence will hear Gonald's "Redemption" sung by the Choral Union at its last song service of the season next Sunday night at eight o'clock in the gymnasium. Selections from this sacred oratorio have been chosen and arranged by the choral Union under the direction of Prof. Arthur Nevin and Prof. W. B. Downing of the School of Fine Arts.
Churches of Lawrence have combined to make this a union meeting of all the churches. The quartet parts of the "Redemption" will be sung by Miss Cora Reagan, Clara Scheruer, Goffeff and Mr. Olcott, Flower, the solo parties by Prof. W. B. Downing, and Mrs. Herman Olcott.
The membership of the Choral Union is made up both of University and Lawrence people who have worked under the President of Pressor Dovine since their organization last fall. There is no admission price nor will a collection be taken.
BOUQUET TO GLEE CLUB
Big Annual Spring Concert Made Hit With Audience Last Night
That Max Hammerstein Schneider has a well trained band is the opinion of those who attended the Annual Spring Conference at the Club in Fraser Hall last night.
From the time the club swung into the opening number until they went off "On the Road to Mandalay" the whole program was set up of Solos by Orla St Holmes and Ray Gafney and the selections by the Club's quartet were the features of the entertainment. A reading by Harry Han was given and the stunner was pleased with the performance. The sturman's please is "Love is Mine."
When Prof. Schneider's number had arrived every neck cramped toward the door as the tail figure of the famous conductor entered. The playing of the human band was the hit of the evening and every one was delighted with Prof. Schneider's directing. As the last number of the program arrived however, a one vacant chair on the stage. A tall man cancels and the crowd recognized the graceful hand leader as Fred Pausch, who smiled as he took his place.
"The concert was a great success," said manager Sam Saunders, inter-介员 for the evening "pleasing."
TO DESCRIBE LIFE IN
TENNESSEE MOUNTAINS
Professor Glocker has spent much time living among the poor whites in the Tennessee hills and knows their ways of living and their mental life thoroughly. He will also tell of efforts being made into civilization and into the currents of which ordinary Americans experience.
Picturesque life among the mountain whites of Tennessee will be described by Prof. Theodore W. Glocker, of the department of sociology at University of Tennessee in Fraser Hall, Monday afternoon at 4:30 clock.
COMMITTEE TO REPORT
STATE'S INDUSTRIES MEETS
Professors G. C. Shaad and W. A Whitaker together with O. H. Nixon of Iola, O. G. Whitman of Pittsburgh, and A. A. Potter, dean of the School of Engineering at the Agricultural College, the other members of the board of five directive organizations, Industrial Preparedness which was appointed by Josephus Daniels, Secretary of the Navy, will meet in Lawrence Saturday at 10 o'clock to begin working on the complete inventory of natural resources, manufactures, industrial equipment of transport and communication these five men will also serve as associate member of the Naval Consulting Board.
Mrs. Catt to Speak
Mrs. Carrie Chapman Catt will speak at the First Baptist Church of New York. Mrs. Catt is the president of the National Equity Suffrage Association.
Edmondson Luman, '18 College, is expected to arrive this week from Beloit to visit Howard Brown, '29 College, and Edward Patterson, '18 College.
Ida Perry, '16 College, returned Tuesday from a visit to her home in Kansas City.
REV. NOBLE S. ELDERKIN
SPEAKS IN MYERS HALI
"The Christian and the Other Fellow" implies that there should be a difference between the Christian and the other fellow," said Nevil. Noble S. Elderin before an audience of 75 women in Myers' Hall last evening.
"This truth has always been recognized. Accordingly the men of the Middle Ages erected dogmas, the acceptance or refusal of which were supposed to distingish the Christian and the non-Christian. Atonement, the ten commandments of church government were a few of the artificial distinctions laid down by men. But we today realize that that which should divide these two classes must be a fundamental, more far-reaching distinction. These distinctions are not only in words of Jesus, and these will in time be accepted by all as the true criterion of Christianity and the "Christian."
Plain Tales from the Hill
Beatrice Dimond, of Wichita, is a guest at the Pi Phi house for a week. Miss Dimond can attend to the Pi Phi dance, Saturday evening.
The baseball fever has struck Law rence at Last. Everyone of the five practice fields on the campus was busy last night and there were also several bunches practicing on the gol links.
Mu Phi Epsilon, will give their spring party April 29 in Eckle's Hall.
Byrd Powell, who was graduated from the School of Pharmacy in 1913, was here Tuesday for a drug room at the Bell Memorial Hospital in Rosedale.
Laura Levi, Nellie Foster, Lola Lehman, Harriet Stephenson and Mabel Anderson attended the wedding of their daughter, the late matron of theirs at Olnath Wednesday.
Dean F. W. Blackmar spent Tuesday in Emporia with the Committee of Visitation and Affiliation of Colleges visiting the State Normal School.
Mu Phi Epsilon entertained from seven to eight Wednesday night at the chapter house, 1347 New Hampshire Street.
W. E. Woolsey, '16 College, who accepted a position as principal of the Wichita county high school at Loeti, Kansas, at the beginning of the second semester, writes to his friends on the Hill, that the teaching profession agrees with him, and that from all present evidences he will be able to stay at his present position for another year.
Prof. H. A. Lorenz has a plan for making his ten-thirty sophomore gym class useful as well as ornamental. The class promised to level off the ground west of the Administration building for track work if they were supplied with shovels. Mr. Lorenz is taking advantage of the offer and will bring shovels to class tomorrow morning.
Joe Casey, 119 College, is very absent-minded. In his rush to an 8:30 class the other morning, Joe inadvertently slipped the razor that was shaving with into his vest pocket. The professor of the first class asked Joe for a pencil, and Joe, still studying, handed him the razor
Dr. Alice L. Goetz, Bertha Smith,
Viola Engle, and Mary Smith went to
Kansas City Thursday to attend
a grand opera and se Mlle. Pavlova.
A house party was given by Ravena Brown, '19 College, Saturday and Sunday, at her home three miles west of the Country Club. A number of K.U. students were guests. The house was given Saturday evening. The guests included: Hazel Martin, Nellie and Mary Lucile Smith, Fredrick Johnson, Ivah and Ethel Kirkendal, Cora Lindsay, Alice Bowley and Margaret Mitchell, Harry Martin and Rosece Howe, Aaron Pipenberg, Floyd Stambaugh, Wilfred Martin, John Bowman and Charles Topping.
Prof. P. T. Sisson, who has been a member of the faculty at Colgate College for several years, has been visiting his son, Prof. L. E. Sisson, for the past week. Prof. F. B. Dains attended classes under Prof. Sisson when he was taking the preparatory course at Colgate.
Prof. A. J. Boynton—What did the States do with the money distributed to them by the national government? Don't. Put it in the bank.
Professor Boynton—Not necessary they cont'd dig hospital the ground and tie them up.
Student—Wouldn't that be in the bank?
Phi Delta Kappa fraternity will hold a reception and party for Pi Gamma Sigma sorority Saturday night at Westminster Hall.
A telegram received this noon from the Chicago Tribune stated that the film, "Racing the Deadline" would not arrive in Lawrence in time to be shown Saturday night as advertised.
"RACING THE DEADLINE" FAILS TO ARRIVE
The film is being sent direct from Chicago but cannot arrive in time. The date for the exhibition of the film will be announced in Monday night's Kansan.
sixty-four Guests Enjoy Big Annual Event Last Night in I. O. O. F. Hall
The banquet of Sigma Xi, honorary scientific fraternity, was given last night at the I. O. O. F. Hall. It has been the custom of the society ever to celebrate with a marriage or celebration to which the husbands or wives of the members are invited.
SIGMA XI'S BANQUET H. H. LEAGUE IN ACTION
"Why the Ache in Cake" was the theme on which Miss Myrtle Greenfield, gave a humorous dissertation; and Prof. H. A. Wenhofen, gave a discussion on "Why Blue Grass is Green." An exciting debate between Prof. A. C. Terrill and Prof. P. F. Faragher, on the subject "Does a House Burn Up or Down" ended the program.
The speeches which followed the banquet were the best feature of the entertainment. Dr. H. P. Cady, the toastmaster, produced a show called Larry, who would speak on the subject "The High Cost of Living Low."
Sixty-four guests attended the banquet.
PROFESSORS TO LECTURE IN NORTH LAWRENCE
Dean F. W. Blackmar, of the Graduate School, will give a lecture on the Woodland Lecture Series tonight at North Lawrence Continuity Methodist Church, North Lawrence.
This lecture is the first of a series in connection with the Woodlawn night school which has recently been started.
These lectures will be given from time to time in churches and various buildings in North Lawrence during the winter when he will speak who will speak are C. H. Talbot, secretary of the Municipal Reference Bureau and Prof. H. P. Cady of the department of Chemistry. Professor McGraw will introduce some of the principles of liquid air.
SOPH HOP POSTERS LAND
PUBLICITY JOB FOR DAVI
"It pays to advertise." If you don't believe it ask Don Davis, Soph Hop manager. For the fame of the daily posters Davis has been putting out advertising his entertainment, has spread. Yesterday Davis received an award from the movie company George Kleine, the motion picture producer, offering him the position of advance agent for a new serial picture to be released late this spring, featuring "Billie" Burke. Davis has not decided whether it matters that the salary of twenty-five per and expenses looks mighty attractive.
Stereoptican machines are becoming popular at the University. The department of chemistry owns its own machines and slides numbering over 150. Because of the technical nature of the work, the various departments in science make use of slides more than other departments.
STEREOOPTICAN MACHINES
406-801-0392 406-801-0392
WIN POPULARITY AT K. U.
Anna Gill, '16 College, entertained a number of her business college friends at her home at 1508 New York on Tuesday evening with a tacky party.
"If you walk on your heels," said Prof. Mauice H. Rees, of the department of physiology, "it's a sign that you are either egotistical or nervous." Most of his class decided that they were nervous.
The professors believe that the pictures shown on the screen are a great example.
Ernest Friesen, of Hutchinson,
stopped off Tuesday to visit William
Stewart, Lawson May, and Fred Prouble,
students from Hutchinson. Mr.
Friesen was on his way home from
Kansas City.
John Traver has a new and rather pleasing name for an irate teacher's private lecture concerning a student's extraordinary work. He calls it an interview.
Ruth Kelley, 18 College, visited at her home in Independence, Missouri the latter part of the week. She attended the annual conference of the Reorganized church of the Latter Day Church. Her father is bishop of this district.
To Play Opening Series on Ham
ilton Field Saturday
Morning
The Hash House League will begin its series of games for the championship Saturday morning at 10:00 o'clock. The first games were to be played last Saturday but they were postponed on account of the snowstorm. Twelve teams will play in the opening games on Hamilton field.
Star v. Hefflebower, Hamilton East, c'clock.
Walling v. Nemo, Hamilton East,
10 o'clock.
Grady' v. Draper, Hamilton West,
4 o'clock.
Midway w. Oread, Hamilton West,
10 o'clock.
Stoic v. Garrett, Hamilton East,
2 eckl.
Stevenson v. Dunakin, Hamilton West, 2 o'clock.
Those teams which have not yet turned in a list of players should do so.
SEENTHE PICTURES YET?
Camera Club Has Opened Its Exhibit in Administration Building
The pictures now on exhibit on the third floor of the Administration Building are not only of local subjects but also of various parts of the United States, Canada and Italy. In all there are more than one hundred enlargements, the most of which are pictures of landscape.
Miss Anna Weight, a music teacher of Lawrence, has, in the opinion of Prof. W. A. Griffith, the best pictures in the exhibit. Each summer Miss Weight goes on a journey and always takes her camera. She has been in Alaska, Europe and various parts of the United States and pictures on exhibit are a Canadian mountain, a mission in Italy, Lake Como, and Ute Pass.
E. S. Weatherby, of the Lawrence Business College, has several pictures of the University campus in the exhibit, the walk thru the pines being the best. Another fine one by him is the picture of several swans taken at Topeka.
A picture admired very much by Professor Griffith is that of a little girl doing washing which was taken from an unusual picture and scenes taken by Prof. R. H. Beamer, of the department of entomology, of a copperhead snake, a parasited tomato worm, and a student examining seve-
Arthur Evans, of the Evans Drug Store, has two pictures of Kansas animals, one of a group of hogs and the other a herd of angrora goats, which were taken to the Santa Fe tracks west of the bridge are very realistic.
Prof. H. O. Kruse, of the department of German, entertained his class in German I at his home, 1538 Kentucky street, yesterday afternoon. The time was spent in "just being sociable" and getting better acquainted. After listening to a number of German speakers from the sources of the class attempted to make a few records themselves. Later in the afternoon refreshments were served. About twenty-five were present.
Prof. C. A. Shull agrees that "it is sure to touch have to stay in doors this kind of weather," although he did not say it in just that kind of an expression, so he took his class in Plant Physiology out on the campus for the lecture Tuesday morning. The women of the class sat on the 1914 bench, while the men lounged on the grass.
The Ornithology Club held its third meeting Wednesday night, at 7:30 in the lecture room in Snow Hall.
H. Weaver, of Baker University, was a guest at the Kappa Sigma house Sunday.
Mrs. S. E. Smith of Abilene, who spent the week-end at the Alemann house with her daughter, Mary, left for Topeka Tuesday to attend the annual convention of the Kansas Federation of Women's Clubs.
Y, M. C. A. CABINET DINE AND DISCUSS BUSINESS
The Y. M. C. A. Cabinet, after dining at Brick's, held its first meeting for the Association year of 1916-17, in Myers Hall last night at six o'clock. President Edward Todd presided and laid before the members of the cabinet the minimum duties of their position as formulated by the State Conference of College Y. M. C. C. A. Presidents.
Count was then made of the number who had either attended the Estes Conference and of those who were intending to go this summer. It was not until the fall that he yet been to Estes, Hugo Wedel and Edward Todd are trying to get every man on the cabinet to attend the conference this summer.
PRINGLE TELLS OF TRIP
K. U. Member of Ford's "Dove of Peace" Expedition Speaks in Convocation
"WE DID NOT SQUABBLE."
Reported Dissensions Nothing But Friendly Arguments
That the quarrels and fights attributed to the members of the Ford Peace Party were the invention of news-seeking reporters, was the statement of Kenneth Pringle, in his talk on the Ford Peace expedition at the monthly convocation this morning. Because of the extremely short preparation for the trip and the poor or no warm arguments arose when the members began to discuss their views in regard to obtaining peace, but there were no such disagreements as pictured by the press, Pringle declared.
"We found Mr. Ford a quiet, unassuming, very democratic man," the speaker continued. "A man who had not cared for others believed that something ought to be done to further peace even though official action was impossible.
"Our trip through Germany by train has perhaps been the most misrepresented," Pringle said, "for though we had many restrictions—we were forbidden to carry cameras, letters, or written documents of any sort, and we treated as convicts, and the windows of the train were not boarded up.
Pringle then told of the experiences in the blockade in England and of their reception in the various neutral countries, some of which were hostile to British rule. In neutral countries, the party stopped and took on at least five delegates.
"Whether or not the peace expedition will prove of value remains to be seen, but if the program of peace which we submitted to every belligerrent country is considered in the final settlement—and I, for my part, believe it will—then the Ford Peace expedition will not have been in vain."
"The Origin of Calculus"
Laura J. McKay talked to the Mathematics Club Tuesday at its regular meeting in the Administration Building. Her subject was "The Origin of Calculus." Miss McKay told of the history of calculus and Antibion and Archimedes to approximate a circle by increasing the sides of a palygon. Our modern calculus begins with Leibniz and Newton. These two men worked wholly independent of each other and Leibniz was one of their greatest Newton is usually considered the father of modern calculus. Leibnitz also invented our modern notation.
Grad Gets Government Job
Roy S. Springer, who received his A. B. degree last year, has been appointed as an assistant in the government medical department of the Philippines and will sail for the Orient from Vancouver May 10. Mr. Springer's home is at Eldorado where he has been in the drug business the past year. He was a member of the Kappa Sigma Fraternity, of the Pan-hellenic Council and president of the Butler Co. Club.
Don Davis, '18 College, is the proud uncle of Daniel William Humfville, born last Saturday. Young Humfville lives in Los Angeles.
Museum Open Longer
Officials of the Dyche Museum have asked that the building be left open from 2 to 6 o'clock instead of from 2 to 8 o'clock. The reason assigned by Mr. C. D. Bunker, curator of the Museum is that many persons who come in from the country on Sunday afternoons arrive too late to enjoy many parts of the museum. Students, too, often wish to visit the Museum later than 5 o'clock.
The Greek Chorus that will render the Pervigilium Veneris at the May Fete will meet Monday at 4:30 at the gymnasium to go over the poem in a first reading and to receive preliminary instructions.
RODKEY OUT FOR YEAR?
Sprained Arch May Keep Star Off Track Remainder of Season
GIVEN TWO WEEKS' REST
Last Effort Being Made to Get Him Into Shape
Fred Rodkey, star distance man,
may participate in no more track
events this season for Kansas. A severe strain in the arch of his left foot is the obstacle that has loomed up to cheat K. U. out of the services of its best track athlete and to wreck otherwise excellent chances of coping the Missouri Valley Conference track championship.
Rodkey's injury happened several weeks before the indoor meet with Missouri in Kansas City. In the Convention Hall battle the sprain both thighs and knee eventually not noticeable. Since then, despite care and attention, the sprain has grown steadily worse and yesterday Rodkey was ordered to take two weeks of absolute rest in a final effort to return to shape and then into shape in time for the Drake Relay games in Des Moines Saturday of next week. Unless the sprains better soon, there is a possibility that it may result in the arch fallin- ing, in which event Rodkey's track would be over, at least as a star.
Coach W. O. Hamilton, admitted yesterday that Rodkey's condition was giving the coaches no little worry and that every effort was being made to get the star into shape as soon as possible.
WILL NOT BE CHEATED
Seniors and Alumni to Banquet in Spite of State Auditor's Ruling
"It is settled, there will be an alumni dinner," said Prof. L. N. Flint, secretary of the University of Kanada, in response, "but it will be a pay dinner."
At a meeting of the alumni of the University faculty held yesterday at 4:30 o'clock, it was decided that the seniors would not be deprived of the dinner, in spite of the ruling by W. E. Davis, state auditor, and S. M. Brewster, attorney general, that the money commencement U.S. offers commencement entertainment expenses could not be legally used to pay for the alumni dinner.
Details of the dinner were not set-
tied and it is uncertain whether it will
be given Tuesday or Wednesday,
June 6 or 7.
There was but one objection among the many responses to the article in the Graduate Magazine, asking the sentiment of the alumni concerning the continuation of the dinner as a affair. The alumni will use all influence possible to have the dinner arrangements restored next year.
This feature of the commencement
occurences is as part of the University
and Faculty Expansion Plan.
Last year eleven hundred sat at the tables in Robinson Gymnasium. About 10,000 attended.
CHANCELOR TO DELIVER
FOUR FIRST ADDRESSES
Chancellor Frank Strong is scheduled to deliver four commencement addresses this spring and will probably arrange more later.
He will speak at the Nickarson high school commencement May 25, at Dodge City, May 81; at Stevens College, May 81; at New York City, May 81; and at Leavenworth June 2.
For those who did not obtain senior commencement invitations and desire announcements may order the announcements at the cheek stand in Fraser, Monday and Tuesday, April 17 and 18.
The Weather
MORNING PRAYERS
Week of April 17 to 20
Leader, the Rev. J. P. O'Brien of Kansas City Missouri, head of the religious educational work of the Congregational churches in the south and
General subject; "The Conquering
Lake—Four of its Essentials." Daily
subject.
Monday: "A living Faith in a Living God."
Tuesday: "A Clear Vision of Need."
Wednesday: "An Infallible Remedy."
edy." Thursday: "The Battles that May
Thursday: "The Battles that May Be Necessary."
Friday: Vacation—no chapel.
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Official student paper of the University of Kansas
EDITORIAL STAFF
Chas. S. Sturtevant...Editor-in-Chief
BUSINESS STAFF
REPORTORIAL STAFF
William Cady...Business Manager
Chas. Sturtevant...Adv. Manager
PORTIONS OF
Paul Brindley
Garry Serviren
Don Davis
Cargill Sproull
Ralph Ellis
Charles Sweet
Glenn Gee
Jarry Morgan
Vernon Moe
Subscription price $2.00 per year in
advance: one term. $1.75.
Entered as second-clasl mail master September 17, 1910, at the post office at Lawrence, Kansas, under the act of March 3, 1879.
Published in, the afternoon five
widely known journals, from the press
of the department.
Address a1, communications to UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Lawrence, Kansas.
Phone, Bell K. U. 25.
The Daily Kansan aims to picture the undergraduate life of the students, but more than merely printing the books they read at the University holds; to play no favorites; to be clean; to be cheerful; to be courteous; to leave more serious problems to wiser heads, in all, to have a positive attitude to the students of the University.
FRIDAY, APRIL 14, 1916.
THE MOUSE UNDER THE GRANARY
A Mouse was living under the granary. It was a little hole, and "the grain cell" was a little hole. But it was easy life of it, but she wanted to bring it home, but she had no money in the floor, and invited other mice. "there will be plenty to eat for every mouse."
When she brought the mice, she saw
their heads up. They noticed the big hole in the floor,
and pushed them into the hole.
ON WITH THE DANCE
—Leo Tolstoi.—Aesop.
With the fad of having "pop" concerts now comes the latest in dances. The "pop" dance announced for Saturday night for Robinson Gymnastics is to be given a trial. It is to be given under the auspices of the Student Council.
Part of one's success comes from the ability to meet people in a social way. Many a man is kept from occupying the place in the world to which he is entitled merely because of his inability to "mix" with his associates.
CARING FOR WAR ORPHANS
The report of the efficiency committee notwithstanding, events which all K. U. may attend are beneficial.
The part taken by K. U. and other American colleges and universities in the adoption of French war orphans is commendable to say the least. The alleviation of the suffering and misery in the distressed French nation by the whole-hearted contributions of college students shows clearly the bond of sympathy existing between the two peoples. There is more involved in this the mere binding of wounds and the filling of little fellows' stomachs; there is the preservation of French ideals, art, literature, music, and drama. The spirit shown by the contributors leads one to believe that there is more practice than theory in the doctrine of the brotherhood of man.
The number of adoptions to date here at the University number thirteen. The lead taken by the local chapter of Phi Kappa Psi fraternity, was followed quickly by other organizations in Lawrence. It is notable that in the midst of school work and social gayeties, students should stop long enough to contribute to a cause so remote as this. But it appeals to the American's love for mankind, and so he responds.
"One fire burns out another's burning,
One pain is lessen'd by another
anguish."——Romeo and Juliet.
WHENCE THE FLUNKER?
The flunking student is getting to be such an important fellow that the passenger plugger feels the nagle. This interest in the flunker has grown in the last few years until today he is studied as is no other candidate for scholastic honor, and his failures do not summon up "unspeakable scorn" but rather a fast developing interest.
A professor and his assistant at the University of Illinois recently visited schools in the state, tracing flankers back to their prep schools to see if the high school had anything to do with it. They discovered that it did.
The records in the Illinois regis.
trar's office of 3250 freshmen from 315 schools were inspected and it was found that "21 private schools with 54.62 per cent of flunkers made up the 70-class". These are the schools that fill the "educational directories" in the foyer of magazines.
"Schools with three to five teachers came next with 43.70 per cent failures. Schools with six to ten teachers 42.08 per cent. Then came the north central association schools 37.76 per cent; all accredited schools about the same; township high schools, 36.94 per cent; Chicago schools, 33.14. But the grand prix went to schools with 11 or more teachers -per cent of flunkers, only 32.54."
The investigators went a step further and endeavored to find what studies gave the backward students the most trouble. English was found to be the great destroyer, for 32.47 per cent fell before it. Mathematics, physical sciences, modern languages, social sciences, and manual subjects followed while only half of one per cent lost their way in ancient languages.
"Cursed be he that moves my bones."
—Shakespeare's Epitaph.
THE LITTLE THINGS
"Much obliged for the use of the phone," he called as he slammed the receiver down and hurried out of a down-town drug store.
"That guy's been talking over the phone to some girl for a half hour at least," said the business man disgusted. It was a phone which ordinarily is in use constantly.
It's the little things that count.
THOSE GOOD K. U. PROFS
Another proof that the professors at the University of Kansas are better than those in other schools, is the following want ad clipped from the Columbia daily:
"LOGIC TUTOR WANTED—A patient, slow-speaking, flegmatic philosopher, who knows Jevons backwards, and who can sympathetically inject his definite practical knowledge into an eager mind, too busy to puzzle out the details of this work in the factory. Student will meet tutors Tuesdays and Fridays between 5:30 and 7 p.m. State in own handwriting age, sex, weight and terms."
Essays in Tabloid Tablets
RAIN
Now comes. The Gentle, Falling rain. And makes. The green grass. Greener. It makes. The campus look. Quite clean. And dirty urchins. Cleaner. It makes. The coeds. Gladly sigh. When. They see. Muddy crossings. And college fellas. Whoop with glee. When. Skirts and hose. Go tossing. The rain. Is sent. By God. They say. To cool. A fever forehead. In truth. We Has grown. For mine. Has grown. Quite turtles. days. The birds. Don't sing. But sit. With mien. Dejected. And fewer. Dates. Go strolling. Down to cozy spots. Selected. The rain. Makes. Class attendance. Slim. And breakfast. Eating. Slimmer. But it must do. Some good. You see. Because. We all. Sleep longer.
Statistics show that the student body at Purdue was guilty of 8,583 cuts last semester. It is further reported that the average student cut 8 per cent of the time during the week before Christmas.
The Agricultural College at Manhattan has every kind of tree that can be adapted to this climate growing on its campus. The idea is not only to make it convenient for the study of nature but also to beautify the campus.
FOUND—A raincoat with initials L,
A. W. Was taken by mistake in Fraser Hall Friday. Owner please call 1253W. 134-2.
FOR SALE--One two cylinder out-board motor; good condition; cheap. 251 Bel, Alphin, at Johnson & Carl. 134-3.
WANT ADS
LOST—Between Spooner Library and 1161 Inc., a lady's gold watch, open face, with monogram, "D. M." on back. Finder kindly at Kansan office.
LOST—On the campus Tuesday morning, a gold bar pin. Please leave at Registrar's office in Fraser Hall. 136-3*
PROTSCH
The College Tailor
Japanese students at the University of Chicago publish a "Review" in which they say
The Methodist Bulletin
Tonight! Methodist Church
High class musical entertainment given by Prof. Paul Laurel and other artist(s).
University Sunday School at 9:30.
Promptly at this hour the Methodist University choir will give a twenty minute musical program.
At 10:30 Dr. Hargelt will presch
Palm Sunday, Subject, "A Palm
Sunday Preschool."
The Epworth League and regular evening service will be dismissed for the Easter Music services in Robinson Gymnasium.
Subject for the "Modern Man's Bible" Class: "The Bible as Literature." Rev. Thompson, teacher. University Sunday School Easter.
Just Compare Our Prices For
Easter
flowers with those of any other firm. They are from 20 to 25 per cent lower. We will ship and guarantee flowers 500 miles. Order early.
Lawrence Floral Co.
Bell 55 1447 Mass.
Roses, $1.50—$2.00
Faster Lilies, 20c per bloom.
Watkins National Bank
{Capital $100,000
Surplus and Profits $100,000
The Student Depository
Bring your old suit to me and get twice as much for it.
Money loaned on valuables.
ABE WOLFSON 637 Mass. St.
MRS. EDNAH MORRISON at 1146 Tenn. St., Does Fancy Tailoring and Remodeling for University Women. Bell Phone 1154J.
INVESTIGATE
the merits of CORONA AND FOX TYPEWRITERS
Sells Them Exclusively in Lawrence
Carter
Buy your paper here
1025 Mass St.
DRESS UP!
For EASTER
What Your Fashion?
YOU College Men who appreciate the significance of the occasion will surely be among the first to express your individuality in clothes tailored expressly for you by Ed. V. PRICE & Co., Chicago. See our handsome fashions and woolens and have us measure you TODAY. Prices reasonable.
SAMUEL G. CLARKE
707 Mass. St.
CLOTHIER
Eldridge Hotel Bldg.
Exclusive Local Dealers for Ed.V. Price & Co., Merchant Tailors, Chicago
At Princeton a committee of six men has been appointed to recruit undergraduates for the Plattsburg military camps next summer.
Shubert Nights 25c to $1.50;
Wednesday Saturday
Matteus $1.00
DE ANGELIS
JEFFERSON
"SOME BABY"
SOME BABY
April 23—Taylor Holmes in "Bunker"
Conklin Fountain Pens
Non-Leakable and Self-Filling
Sold in Lawrence at
F. B. McColloch's Drug Store
847 Mass. St.
THEISS RINDING
THESIS BINDING
Engraved and Printed Cards
A. G. ALRICH
Typewriter Paper 744 Mass. St.
Kuppenheimer clothes have distinct individuality.
Kuppenheimer clothes are quality clothes made of lasting and serviceable material.
Kuppenheimer clothes are good 365 days in the year.
Kuppenheimer clothes offer style, variety.
Kuppenheimer clothes are properly tailored.
Kuppenheimer clothes are sold in Lawrence by
Kuppenheimer Clothes Are Right
ROBERT E. HOUSE
See the special Kupppenheimer film at the Varsity tonight and tomorrow
Have You Your Suit or Dress for the Easter Parade?
One week only remains for your"preparedness"for Easter.
THE HOLIDAYS
Several lots of Suits that are new, at special prices, $12.95, $17.50 and $25.00.
Other Suits of Taffeta or Wool, at $20.00 to $45.00.
Several New Models in White Chinchilla Coats New Sport Coats
Onkes Bullene Hackman
EASTER BLOUSES
BEST FASHION WORLD
-
We have just received 50 new models in lace and Georgette blouses. Honestly, these are the prettiest lot of blouses we have shown this spring and you know we have sold many nifty blouses to the girls on the Hill.
Prices. $3.98, $4.98, $5.98, $6.98
WEAVER'S
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
TRAINING HOUSEWIVES
Home Economics Department
Gives Practical Information
for Use in Home
From a handful of students in 1910 to an enrollment of nearly 400 in 1915-16 is the brief history of the department, which was enriched by its cession six years ago. Because of this rapid growth, new quarters, or at least an enlargement of the present quarters, seem necessary, as well as a larger equipment for the use of students.
A larger laboratory for textiles, a laboratory for the special research work that is being carried on, and a dining room for the purpose of teaching classes in serving as well as for general use, are needed.
The department uses gas entirely.
There are no electrical appliances, nor is there room to install a coal range. The water supply being the principles of cooking with fuel.
GAS USED ENTIRELY
One of the most practical features of the department is the model kitchen, which has three distinct advantages. It can be thrown open to the classroom by removing the folding partition between the rooms, it serves as an experimental kitchen and as a sink for dishwashing. The kitchen is artistic as well as sanitary and it affords the worker plenty of room. The department has little use for the cramped kitchenettes so popular with young house-keepers.
NOTHING BUT ALUMINUM
NOTHING BUT ALUMINUM
Aluminum ware is used almost entirely.
Aluminum oilcloth, a white marble slab for kitchen knives and jars for spices are a few of the little things that give the kitchen its immaculate appearance.
The pressure cooker is one of the interesting things to be found in the model kitchen. It was first invented for use in Denver where the high altitude interferes with cooking. The cooker is absolutely airtight. Twenty pounds of steam pressure produce a thick layer of which the cooks food in a very short time, while the fireless cooker uses a low temperature for a long time. In the pressure cooker, navy beans will cook in fifteen minutes.
The two food laboratories and the demonstration kitchen are equipped with thermometers and scales. The two food laboratories are also "hand-in-the-oven" method. Stu
dents are taught by the use of scales to weigh out all materials, which insures accuracy. The prophecy has been made that cook books in the fumarine were invented by weight rather than by the cup and spoon method of the past.
BLACKMAR WILL PROBE
INDUSTRIAL SCHOOL
Dean F. W. Blackmar has received notice of his appointment by Governor Arthur Capper to serve on the Board of Superintendent of charges which have been brought against Superintendent H. W. Charles of the Boys' Industrial School, by Dr. Eva Harding of Topela. Dr. Harald Bohnen with inefficiency in management.
Dr. Charles M. Sheldon and Mrs. Margaret Hill McCarter, both of Topeka, are the other members of the committee. A meeting of the committee will be held sometime next week.
BIRD CLUB WILL SPEND
SATURDAY ON WAKARUSA
If you like birds and wish to know more about them, pack your lunch and go with the Bird Club Saturday for its first field meeting. It will take the 8:25 o'clock Santa Fe train to the Wakarusa to visit the birds in that valley and hear their habits explained by Prof. Herman Douthitt. The party will walk back to Haskell and take the car.
"Even though you are not especially interested in birds, you may have a longing for an outing Saturday. The Bird club," said Professor Douthitt. "I expect to return until afternoon so everyone is asked to bring a lunch."
Mrs. Louise Davis, of Downs, who has been visiting her son Donald, '18 College, since Friday, returned to Kansas City Wednesday.
Members of the class in sanitation and hygiene inspected the Lawrence water plant Tuesday afternoon and are afraid to drink Lawrence water.
Send the Daily Kansan home to the folks.
Isn't first-class life insurance really income insurance? Is any insurance more important?
L. S. Broughly
THEATRE VARSITY
TONIGHT ONLY
The Peerless Emotional Actress
OLGA PETROVA in
THE SOUL MARKET
Five Acts of Romance, Realism and Thrills
ALSO A GOOD "KEYSTONE" COMEDY
Arrow Shirts—guaranteed fast color Sold exclusively by Johnson & Carl
Mister Man It's Up to You!
Up to you to stop at
"BRICK'S"
when you're looking for a chance at a genuine feed. Every item of our service is an attractive one. Every item on our menus is a distinctly good one. If you're wearying of the boarding house regulars, drop in and know the joy of an appetizing meal properly served.
THE OREAD CAFE
Just a Step from the Campus
Leadership consists in being superior in quality as well as style. Easter is but one week away and it is the time to select the Easter apparel.
Our beautiful Third Floor with its wonderful assortment of fine merchandise beckons to you. Here are shown all of the things which delight femininity.
It is a matter of great pride to this store that the women who select their apparel here are considered beautifully dressed.
Good taste is not a matter of price—our merchandise is always as low or lower in price than elsewhere, quality for quality.
3.
Emery,Bird,Thayer Company
Kansas City, Mo.
"Copping the Grapes," April 26, Call Her Now
25 Cents
50 Cents
75 Cents
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Too Late to Classify in yesterday's News of the Newest
A new Crepe cloth shirt came in this morning by express. It's a "Highland" plaid in beautiful color combinations. See it in our window — #2.
Sizes $ 1 3 \frac{1}{2} $ to $ 1 5 \frac{1}{2} $
Ober's HEAD TO FOOT OUFFITTERS
Fresh Strawberry Ice Cream for Sunday Dinner Also Brown Bread, Caramel Nut, Chocolate and Vanilla Ice Cream, and Pineapple Ice
REYNOLDS BROS.
Order early to insure early delivery
Indestructo Trunks Bags and Suit Cases Sold Exclusively by Johnson & Carl
RAIN PREVENTED GAME
Muddy Field Made Bethany
Contest Impossibility Yesterday
W. O. Hamilton, manager of athletics, proved a good weather prophet yesterday after predicting an end to the ten-hour rain, finally lost his job and made a comeback at a mud on McCook Field diamond and ordered the Bethany game cancelled.
Although cheating Kansas out of what would have probably been an easy practice game, Coach McCarty's athletes will have a chance of another practice contest Tuesday of next week when St. Marys comes to Lawrence for a one game series with the Crimson and Blue diamond athletes.
Granger Teaches at Chicago
Granger Teaches at Chicago
Mishall Granger, who took his
masters in economics from the
University last year and who is now
a fellow in economics at the University
of Chicago, has been promoted to
mentor of teaching assistant for
next year.
K. U. Grad To Northwestern Clark E. Young, a graduate in the department of bacteriology, has been awarded a fellowship in the department of bacteriology at Northwestern University. The fellowship provides five hundred dollars per year for three years.
Arthur Rowman, who was a senior this year, but accepted a position in the office of the city engineer of Topeka in preference to completing his engineering course, visited Lawrence friends Sunday.
Dwight Gregory, '19 College, is one freshman who says that by gosh, if he'd known that he had to wear his freshman cap this spring, he sure wouldn't have bought that new three dollar hat.
Lois Risinger, '19 Fine Arts, is ill with an attack of tonsilitis and is confined to her room.
Bowersock Theatre
TONIGHT
and
TOMORROW
Mary Pickford
in a drama of humanity
The Eternal Grind
EasterOpening Sale
Just because it's Easter Time is no reason why prices should be sky-high.
The Jones Easter Sales of stylish new apparel for Men, Women and Children will this year make another low-price record, for we've prepared marvelously well.
Our connections with the largest Apparel and Dry Goods buying organization in the world gives us buying opportunities unpossessed by the ordinary store. And so it's greatly to your profit to attend the Jones Easter Opening Sale that
Jones pays your Railroad Fare to Kansas City and back home by refunding out-of-town customers $5% of their purchases up to the amount of their Round-trip Railroad Fare.
Starts Monday April 17th
Make next Monday a Holiday and Come to Kansas City at our Expense.
You are invited to come-you are invited to make use of the splendid saving opportunity now offered you.
Whatever in clothing you may need-for men or boys-women or girls-will be specially priced during this Sale.
Come to Kansas City At Our Expense
THE JONES STORE@
Kansas City's Profit-Sharing Store
and
Emery, Bird, Thayer Company Kansas City, Mo.
"Our Store for Men" Walnut Street Floor
Clothes that
are preferred
by men who
appreciate the
finer things
in life
Haberdashery-
- for the man who
has good taste -
- and wants to show
that he has.
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VOLUME XIII.
DEAD TONGUES RETURN
NUMBER 137
Latin and Greek Regain Lost Favor in World's Universities and Colleges
TRUE CULTURAL CONTACT
Individual's Education Must Correspond to Race Evolution
"The disciplinary studies, Latin and Greek, are returning to favor in the universities and colleges of the world," said Prof. C. S. Skilton, of the School of Fine Arts, where asked the faculty these students to the schools of the higher schools.
"There are many reasons for this. The chief reason), I believe, is the one set forth by Herbert Spencer many years ago—that the education of the young is the greatest evolution of the race. The Greek and Roman periods represent much that is highest in the intelllectual things, at least, and it is only a natural tendency that we learn more from people to be even to learn more of the things that serve forth by a study of these poep. Only the best of their work has survived and it is a very good thing that we should come in contact with the best of the Greek and Roman culture."
GREEK SOUGHT BEAUTY
Prof. U, G. Mitchell, of the department of mathematics, said: "The Greeks were not the greatest people in the things that they accomplished, but they were and are the greatest in the spirit which they showed in their acquisition of knowledge. They were intelligent, lay within them, not merely for their substance. They were great mathematicians. They studied sections of cones because of the beautiful curves that they presented. This subject they worked out in great detail. It lay before us, and a great advance was made in astronomy. Yes, Kepler could not have done his work without the curves of the Greeks, but they in their turn had done nothing with their works. The Greeks gave students, but they were not the greatest in accomplishments.
UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS, MONDAY AFTERNOON, APRIL 17, 1916.
"their chief greatness, however, how in their spirit—the spirit of intellectual beauty and beautiful intellect."
Pref. M. W. Sterling, of the department of Greek, said: "While this is taking one mother suddenly and I have no witty things just on the tip of my tongue, I can endorse the views of the individual should be parallel to that of the race. I do not wish to decry other peoples at all, but we are inclined to think that we are the great inventors of the ages. We have made many wonderful things, which are splendid, yet they are only application of what has been definitely stated or at least thought of by the Greeks. In literature they not only have given us nearly all of our forms, but much that is best in thought and expression. The translations of the Greek lyrids and epics are among our best pieces of literature. This verse remains practically undangled. The philosophy of Photo stands alone both as philosophy and as prose.
"We all know the value of the Greek sculpture, and the Greek painters are not negligible. In the matter of government, also, the Greeks were not morally manicured for morality for more years than our government has existed. The Greeks tried all forms of government, and found the weak and strong places in all. For these reasons I believe that the Greeks should be in contact with the Greek directly, they cannot get away from it indirectly."
DEAD LANGUAGES HAVE THEIR VALUES. Prof. Wardill Watches, of the department of English, answered when asked about the connection between college and language languages: "Any subject properly taught becomes a disciplinary subject. Though it seems to me that no college subject has quite the value of a thorough course in Latin or Greek, I believe that science with its insistence on accuracy, good journalism with its demand that every statement be verified, or free-hand drawing with its demand for perfect co-ordination—any of these, or any other, becomes a disciplinary subject when properly taught.
"Greek and Latin are valuable in that they present to us a type of civilization that is unlikes ours in many countries, in which ours is based on a large degree.
"From the point of view of an instructor, these studies are no more and no less valuable than any other two, for if he knows these things and, in addition, knows life, and really cares whether his students make good progress, he can demonstrate the proper mental discipline, no matter whether his subject be Greek or Geometry, Physics or Football Philosophy or Domestic Science."
Send the Daily Kansan home.
WALK FASTER NAISMITHS
ADVICE TO STUDENTS
ADVICE TO STUDENTS
The walking done by students in climbing the Hill, and in going to and from classes is not really beneficial exercise is the opinion of Dr. Naimshif, who says that a student walks enough, according to Dr. Naimshif, but the walking is not done in the right fashion or fast enough to be of any actual benefit. The average time it takes to walk up and a half miles daily depending upon the distance he lives from the Hill.
"To derive beneficial exercise from walking, a person should dress himself in loose fitting clothes, a pair of trousers and a scarf. He starts out, he should walk at a fast gait," said Dr. Naismith. A person should walk at least four or five miles at a time, and a trip of ten miles at a time has become accustomed to long distances. Fast walking up the Hill is a real injury to any student.
WANT TRADE ESSAYS
National Foreign Council Offer First Prize of One Hundred Dollars
CONTEST CLOSES JUNE 15
Manuscripts Must Be in Chan
celeror's Office Thea
The National Foreign Trade Council has announced through Chancellor Strong two prizes of $100 and $50 for the two best essays submitted on the subject "The Commercial Necessity for Developing Foreign Trade Through an Adequate American Merchant Marine."
The contest has been placed in the hands of a committee of three consisting of Professors Millis (chairman), Shand, and Dykstra. Those wishing to enter the contest should confer with the committee as soon as possible.
The committee will see to it that the more important sources of information are brought together in the Library and will give bibliographical aid to them. The papers may be observed by contestants have been announced: "Papers must be left at the Chancellor's office not later than June 15. They are to be signed with the Secretary. The authors may be identified after the papers have been graded and the results submitted to the Chancellor, each essay should be accompanied by a envelope containing the author's name and that which he has written.
"The essays are (1) not to exceed 3000 words, (2) to be typewritten with wide margins, (3) to be preceded by an analytical table of contents, and (4) to close with a list of sources used."
POP DANCE IS POPULAR
Biggest Crowd of the Season in Attendance
The Pop Dance, at the gymnasium, Saturday night, was the most successful All-University party of the year. There were good crowds at the dance. Prom but at no other party this season has there been a better University attendance. The people who attend the regular Varsity and College dances were there, but, as never before, the people who have not in any of these other parties were out in full bloom at the Pop Dance.
An executive committee of nine members has been appointed to arrange plans for the semi-centennial anniversary next fall. The details of time and general arrangements will be worked out by the committee. The members are: A. T. Walker, chairman; Chancellor Frank Strong, Professors A. Olin, L. N. Lint, U. G. Mitchell, H. L. Butler, J. N. Van der Vries, Alice Goetz and Leland Thompson, '16 College.
"I am greatly pleased with the party," said Edward Tanner, chairman of the social committee of the university, who knew a hundred and sixty couples were present—enough to defray expenses and have a couple of dollars over. The time is so much taken up for the rest of the year that we cannot get a date for the party. If the idea will be taken up again early next fall. My idea of the most successful party that could be given would be a fifty cent dance at the gym. This would not enough to hire a minister or a bishop; my wife would be almost an ideal party.
"There are a great many people on the Hill who cannot afford to attend the Varsity parties, but they would come to such a Pop Dance as I have suggested. The fact that so many people, who have not been to a party in the gymnasium Saturday night prevent my point."
CONCERT DRAWS WELI
Record Crowd of Year in Robin son Gymnasium for Choral Union Oratorio
WAS A UNION SERVICE
All Lawrence Churches Unite it
Giving Program
More than 1,600 persons packed Robinson gymnasium last night to hear the Lawrence choral union of 120 voices under the direction of Arthur Nevin, assisted by Mrs. Herman John Nevin, gifted by Gounod's "Redemption."
Long before 8 o'clock, the hour announced for the beginning of the concert, music lovers began to fill the gym. By the time the singers took their places on the platform, so large was the crowd that many were forced to wear the rostrum back of the chair and scores stood during the entire program.
Prof. Nevin's control over the chorus and his interpretation of the Gound masterpiece more than made up for the poor acoustic properties of the gymnasium, which detracted from the extent From the volume of the voices.
The singing of Mrs. Olcott, who delighted the audience with her rich contralto voice, should also be mentioned Gola Coffelt, tenor, a student in the University, made a favorable impression.
The Lawrence choral union is an organization of townpeople and University students, organized last fall by Professor Nevin as a part of the statewide choral movement now being organized in Los Angeles, the hope of reviving interest in musical affairs. The concert last night was the third given ky the society.
BILLY SUNDAY ACCEPTS
Kansas Editors Will Hear Evan gelist During Newspaper Week—May 1-6
Billy Sunday, noted evangelist, probably will be one of the speakers who will address Kansas editors during Kansas Newspaper week at Lawrence University this time. The same Sunday will be starting an evangelistic campaign at Kansas City.
Merie Thorpe, who is in charge of the arrangements for the new newspaper men's program, has received a letter from his brother to welcome him new at Kansas City stating that Mr. Sunday would come to Lawrence if a satisfactory time can be arranged. Other new speakers added to the editorial committee included Strickland Gilland and H. L. Bullen.
DEDN'T LIKE STATE PEN
Kansas Prison Inferior to Federal Institution, Visits Say
Prisoners or Lansing are suffering from un sanitary and inefficient housing, waste of steam power, labor power, inefficient lighting and power plants, and sewer system, it was painted out.
The most striking feature of the trip, to the Federal Penitentiary at Leavenworth and the State Prison at Lansing, made by eighty sociology students of the University, Saturday, was the glaring contrast between the two prisons, members of the party said today.
It was also explained that the officials were doing their best with the material at their command. Being mixed with politics has saddly hindered the penitentiary for years. Scant appalling cases have been filed in penalties for guards, and thus prevent getting the proper type of men for such places.
The seismograph in Blake Hall recorded a minor disturbance Sunday afternoon. The estimated distance of the earthquake is 1350 miles, placing it in the Villa district of Mexico. The shocks covered an hour, the preintimate magnitude was 4.32:47 by 4:36:22 allowed at 4:36:22 by the secondary wave. The main wave came at 4:39:21. The last noticeable disturbance ended at 5:11.
In contrast is the system at Leavenworth, the modern building and the two modern cell houses now being built by prisoners. The cells are large, admit fresh air, and have modern equipment. There is a school where the ignorant are educated. The whole plant is a great hospital, where patients can be a turn out, and broken diseased creatures, fanning with resentment against society, but men better equipped mentally, morally and physically, capable of taking up an independent, self-supporting, law-abiding life.
All kinds of prisoners, the ignorant and educated, the professional and the novice, the healthy and the diseased and the uneducated, must be handled without any attempt at classification.
LANDLADIES RISE UP
Submit Petition to Newly Elected Board on W.S.G.A. For New Rules
DON'T LIKE THE MOVING
Want Women to Fill Rooms Left
Vacant During Semester
Just when the W. S. G. A, thought they had the eleven o'clock rule settled for life, here come the landlady themselves requesting that it all be fought over again. At the initiation of the newly elected members of the W. S. G. A, they were commissioned by the committee of the organization of girls' rooming houses and it was turned over to the new members of the W. S. G. A, for consideration. A copy will be given to the Pan-hellenic at their next meeting. The W. S. G. A, has not decided as yet what action will be taken.
We, the committee from the house organization of girls' rooming houses petition the Student Government to consulate and pass on the following rules:
First. Resolved, that all rooming house rules apply to the graduate student and visiting girls in our houses, the same as to all other students enrolled in the University; and if necessary to make this rule, that there will be a tentative appointed from the graduate student body on the student council.
Third. Resolved, that the hour for closing our houses be changed from eleven o'clock and Saturday to ten o'clock night to 10:30 o'clock all three nights.
Second. Resolved, that study hour be extended to a clock and quiet continue through this week.
Fourth. Resolved, that no daytime be allowed in any of our houses.
Fifth. Resolved, (this is subject to decision of Pan-hellenic) that no girl be allowed to move during a semester until vacancy is properly filled. We feel this is absolutely necessary if the committee at K. U. on rooming houses desire women to open good homes to girl students, and we also feel that many problems that have confronted us would be solved if such rules prevailed.
Respectfully submitted,
Mrs. J. Van Arnsley,
Mrs. Anna Buchanan, Secy.
Mrs. J. L. Custor,
Mrs. W. H. Kelley.
LECTURE IS POSTPONED
Prof. Theodore W. Glocker Will
Give Lecture Wednesday
Prof. Theodore W. Glocker will not be able to deliver his lecture this afternoon at 4:30 as planned. He will speak, however, Wednesday afternoon at 3:00 c'clock in Fraser Chapel.
Professor Glocker in connection with his work as a sociologist has spent much time among the whites in the Tennessee hills and knows their ways of living and mental life thoroughly. In his lecture in Priser Chapel Wednesday, he will talk about how these men them into civilization which ordinary Americans experience and describe their picturesque life in the Tennessee mountains. The hour for the lecture will be arranged later.
Word was received this morning by Dean F. W. Blackmar stating that Prof. Theodore W. Glecker of the University of Tennessee, who was to despatch this afternoon at 4:09 o'clock will not be in Laurenti until Wednesday.
The Woodlawn Night School, organized recently through the efforts of several University men and conducted by Wint Smith, a sophomore in the College, is to have all the adjuncts of an ordinary day-time instructor appointed to formulate a yell that will arouse pep for the school all through the north part of Lawrence. A baseball team will keep the organization alive during the summer months after the classes have been discontinued. A motto committee has been selected to devise a motto for the people in the classes the will attend, so as not to miss our couragement. Other living influences will be created from time to time as they are needed to make the conditions as favorable as possible.
NORTH LAWRENCE MIGHT
SCHOOL GETTING UP PEP
Instead of holding class as usual, Prof. H. O. Kruse entertained his oral composition class Thursday afternoon by showing them a series of short stories and films gathered while abroad. The pictures were interesting and instructive.
THREE TONS OF LANSING
COAL BEING WASHED
Three tons of coal from the state mine at Lansing are being put through preliminary tests in the coal washer of the mining laboratory to determine the amount of improve-ments required, and that is made by the washing process.
At present the mine at Lansing has no coal washer, and it is not known whether it would be profitable to install one or not until it is known how much more efficiency could be added by the process.
The tests that are made of the Lansing coal are merely preliminary. The final tests will not be made for some reason, but they will encourage, other and final trials will be made later. About three tons are being used now. This coal will be used under the power plant and can also be used by engineers are through with it.
RAIN HELD UP H. H.
Only Three of Six Scheduled Games Played Last Saturday
Rain prevented the playing of three of the six opening games of the Hash House League Saturday. Hamilton Field was too muddy to play upon. The field did play resorted to Nite Field when leading conditions were far from good.
A peculiar coincidence of the three games played Saturday was that all the games were won by the same score, 7 to 6. The results of the games
Star 7, Heffelbower 6.
Star 7, Heffelbower 6.
Garrett 7, Stoic 6.
Stevenson 7, Dunakin 1.
Walling vs. Nemo, postponed.
Grady vs. Draper, postponed.
Midway vs. Oread, postponed.
GET CHAUTAUQUA JOBS
Students to Earn School Expenses on Platform
Chaitunaua is claiming a share of the students of the University for work during the summer vacation. The work is attractive not only because it pays well but because it is an interesting traveling experience at the same time. Most of the men will travel with the crewman but a few will go on the platform.
James Butin, '16 College, better known on the Hill as "Whistling Jimmie," has been in chauntuaqua work three seasons. He is the leader of a company of entertainers and travels for the Midland Chauntuaqua Competition, Iowa. His circuit will take him through the north central states.
Roy Gafney, 19 College, will sing tenor in a quartette of mixed voices. This is his first season on the platform. He is signed up with the White-Meyers Company, of Kansas City.
Charendron Havinghurst, '18 College, will be platform manager for the Coit-Alber Chautauqua Company, of Cleveland, Ohio. During the early part of the season he will be seven day advance man. His circuit will take him through the north central states as far east as New York and Manhattan. Havinghurst has been with the same company three seasons.
Willian Waite, 17 College, will be crewman for the Red-Porth-Rathorn Company, of Kansas City. His circuit takes him through the western states and extends to California. He will handle the gate receipts for the Ellison-White Company, of Portland, Oregon. He will travel through the Pacific coast states. Robert E. Martin, 19 College, will be crewman for the Red-Porth-Rathorn Company in Kansas City. His circuit extends through the west central states.
HOME ECONOMICS CLASSES
TO HEAR FOOD LECTUREF
Prof. Ava Milam, head of the department of home economics at the Oregon Agricultural College, will talk to the students of the department of Home Economics at the University of Kansas, Tuesday, on "Dietetics," and "The Selection and Economic Uses of Foods."
For the benefit of the students who were not able to see the domestic science display in full or to hear the lectures March 17, the exhibit and illumination will be repeated Wednesday afternoon in the basement of Frasier Hall.
K. U. HOUSES INSPECTED
Send the Daily Kansan home to the folks.
Phi Delta Kappa, the honorary education fraternity, held a pledge service Monday evening for Odis H. Burns, '16 College; James Maillin, graduate student; George Bearg, '16 College; William Mullan, A. Swanson, '17 College; Ralph Smith, '16 College, and Chester Travis, '16 College.
Hotel Inspection Act Becomes Effective Where Five Rooms Are Rented
FEE OF $2 IS CHARGED
Greek Letter Houses Will Not be Taxed
Rooming houses for University of Kansas students where live or more rooms are rented must hereafter come under the Kansas hotel inspector's office when an inspector from the board of health in Topeka began making the rounds of all residences in the University district where rooms are rented. The inspector later will go to the towns to enforce the same regulation.
The Kansas legislature three years ago passed a hotel inspection act. Miles Mulroy was appointed state hotel inspector by Governor Hodges, and he oversaw the work and the work under the control of Dr. S. J. Crumblem, dean of the University of Kansas medical school and secretary of the state board of health.
Under the state board of health, the scope of the state law has been broadened, many more rooming house proprietors having to abide by the stringent provisions of the state law which demand the meeting of sanitary refinement houses. Herefore school rooming houses have been considered exempt.
As the first step of his investigation in Lawrence, the state inspector took a K. U. student directory and listed students enrolled in the University students residence. Of the first seventy he visited only five which had five rooms rented. If this rationale for the building houses will have to pay the annual hotel inspection fee of two dollars.
NHS EXEMPT
It is possible that the inspection work will be carried on by the state department in connection with that done by the University committee on roaming houses. Fraternity and sorority houses will not be expected to pay the inspection fee as they are not operated for profit.
Previous to starting the survey of K. U. rooming houses, the state inspector last week visited all Lawrence hotels and restaurants which he says have a constant condition. However he condemned them in open rooms, or rooms without outside opening. These are prohibited by the state law because of the danger from fire.
MUSICAL FESTIVAL MAY 2
Concerts Afternoon and Night With Change of Solists
The Annual Music Festival, by the Minneapolis Symphony Orchestra and soloists, will be given on May 2. The orchestra is well known here and is one of the best in the country. There are to be concerts both in the afternoon and evening with a change of soloists at each concert.
The soloists will be Leonora Allen, soprano; Jean Cooper, contralto; Albert Lindquist, tenor; Louis Graveur, baritone. Leonora Allen has gained importance for herself in the East, and Jean Cooney has secured scholarship from among 500 contestants. Albert Lindquist, the young Chicago tenor, is known to University students as he has sung in several works. Louis Graveur has never been heard of West yet, although he has attracted attention by his work in other parts.
Prof. Joseph E. Farrell, associate professor of voice in the School of Fine Arts, will also sing with the or. Miniature Suite, by Prof. Arthur Newman, played by the orchestra and conducted by the composer himself. This suite has been conducted by Macdowell and has also been performed in Europe.
The Weather
The Forecast: Unsettled weather tonight and Tuesday, probably showers, not much change in temperature.
Mr. and Mrs. R. W. Hemphill, of Norton, are in Lawrence visiting their son Bob, a senior in the School of Law.
MORNING PRAYERS
Week of April 17 to 20
Week in April
Leader, the Rev. J. P. O'Brien of Kansas City Missouri, head of the religious educational work of the Congregational churches in the south and southwest.
General subject; "The Conquering
Literature of Its Essentials." Daily
subjects;
Tuesday: "A Clear Vision of Need."
Wednesday: "An Infallible Remedy."
Thursday: "The Battles that May Be necessary."
Friday: Vacation—no chapel.
UNIVERSITY DAJLY KANSAN
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Official student paper of the University of Kansas
EDITORIAL STAFF
Chas. S. Sturtevant...Editor-in-Chief
William Cady...Business Manager
Chas. Sturtevant...Adv. Manager
REPORTORIAL STAFF
BUSINESS STAFF
Paul Brindle
Don Davila
Raquel Ripley
John Gleisner
Harry Morgan
Guy Scriviner
Cargil Sproull
Glenn Sweet
Glen Wagner
Vernon Moore
Subscription price $3.00 per year in advance; one term, $1.75.
Entered an second-class mail mat-
entered the first-class mail. plans, under the
header Marion Winters.
Address all communications to UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Lawrence, Kansas.
Phone. Bell K. U. 25.
Published. in the afternoon five
twelve months after he was born.
variety of articles from the press of
Kansas, from the press of
Missouri.
The Daily Kansan aims to picture the undergraduate life of the class, and to thereby more than merely printing the book, in mind for the ideals the University teaches, for the favorites; to be clean; to be cheerful; to be a generous; to leave more serious problems to wiser heads, in all, to serve its mission; to identify the university of the University.
MONDAY, APRIL 17, 1916
THE PEASANT AND THE WATER-
FLOWING
SPRITE
A Peasant lost his axe in the river, down on the bank in griet, and began to dig. The Water-Sprite heard the Peasant say, "Get gold axe out of the river and said, 'If I don't dig, it will be mine.' The Peasant said: "No, it is not mine." The Water-Sprite brought another, a silver one. Again the Peasant said: "It is not my axe." Then the Water-Sprite brought out the peasant, who said, "The Peasant said: 'Now this is my axe.' The Water-Sprite made the Peasant an ox, gave him three axes, for having told the truth. At home the Peasant showed his axe, and told them what had happened to his. One of the Peasant made up his axe, and purposely threw his axe into the river purposefully threw his axe into the river, down on the bank and began to dig. The Water-Sprite brought out a gold axe and then digged down on the bank and began to dig. The Water-Sprite brought out a gold axe and then digged down on the bank and called
The Water-Sprite did not give him what he wanted, either, because he had told an author, either, because he had told a man.
-Leo Tolstoi.—Aesop.
A NEW ENTERPRISE
After years of planning and hoping, K. U. is at least falling into line behind the other universities of the country which have co-operative book stores. Such a store has been promised for next year. In all other schools such stores have been successful
Those who are behind the movement have had a hard fight to interest enough capital to put the store into operation. Still harder work will be required before the store is fully established. The plan is feasible, the professors who have been asked to take stock have signified their willingness to back the plan with as much capital as is needed. They realize the importance of such an institution to the University.
With a purchase amounting to twenty-five cents or more, the student will be allowed a percentage of the dividends. The profit sharing plan to be followed will enable the students to buy their books at lower prices. As the store becomes thoroughly established, its scope may be broadened, other articles being added as the need is shown.
When the faculty is offered stock next fall, the students, too, should be allowed to invest should they care to. A co-op stair should have as many stock-holders as possible There should be no restriction. Blocks of stock, with a minimum of $5, or even of $1 could be offered to the students. Several thousand dollars could easily be raised in this way, and the student body would feel as if it were financing its own store.
Those friends thou hast, and their adoption tried.
Grapple them to thy soul with hoops of steel."—Hamlet.
HAIL TO RODKEY
And now comes the announcement that Fred Rodkey, Kansas star distance man, may be obliged to withdraw from track work temporarily, perhaps permanently.
The old saying, "We never miss the sunshine until the shadows fall," is again applicable. Rodkey has given Kansas his best. He has helped put K. U. on the map, as having one of the best track teams in the country. Rod-
key's running was taken as a matter of course. Not until he is forced to withdraw in his worth brought home to use.
The whole University wishes Rev
key a speedy recovery.
A PLAIN, PLUG SUCCESS.
A PLAIN, PLUG SUCCESS
It has often been said that a university is measured by the success of its graduates. Assuming this to be true, the question of what is a successful graduate arises. The usual answer is that the successful grad is the one who has gone out from the university, made a great name for himself and is much in public life.
But is this the real type of grad, and is he the most successful? All are proud of him and his achievements. His being in the public eye helps to bring his Alma Mater to notice. Many attribute his success to his university training. However, while they sing his praises, they overlook the "just plain grad."
This type may also be a great success in life and still be practically unheard of after graduation, except in his own community. Like the "popular grad," the "plain grad" owes his success to his university. The fact that he doesn't get national applause is no reason for calling him a failure. The thousands of "just plain" K. U. grads, who are making good as American citizens, are the University's best asset—they are the typical grads and the successful ones, too.
"He that dies pays all debts,"—The Tempest.
OLCOTT RUNNING WHEAT CROFT
The following outburst, clipped from the Ellis County News, shows the sentiment of the wheat district; "Couch Olcott of K. U. says that football players should avoid harvest work because after a summer spent in the harvest field they are not in good condition to play football. Sure Herrman! Let us have a good football team at the University even if we have to let the women save the wheat. What is the use of paying taxes to support a university if it cannot turn out a winning football队?
"Now wouldn't you like to see dad's face along about two days before harvest when he has one hundred acres of good wheat, only half a crew and no chance to get more men, as son, fresh from college, gently breaks the news to the old gentleman that he cannot work in harvest because it may give him spain, ring bone, or ingrawing toe-nails so that he will not be in prime condition for football?"
Jayhawk Squawks
Applause for the prof's. jokes is beginning to pick up again.
1st Idiot: "What are you doing with that cat?"
2nd Idiot: "I'm taking it to the mews-eum, of course."
One thing you can always take without incurring envy is blame.
After all, it doesn't take much of a man to perceive another's insignificance.
About all the average woman wants with a diamond is to have something to give back after the quarrel.
Ananias was an amateur and a humbug when compared with the man expressing his opinion of a girl's picture.
There is nothing amazing in the case of the bigamist who jumped off a train to elude his pursuers. A man who wants women is brave enough for anything.
When a man stops to see how far he can, he usually begins to slip back.
"No matter how captivating he may be, a freshman who is capless is soon captured."—No it's too late to doctor a just, loud the ambulance.
The University of Minnesota has an athletic board composed entirely of students. Each school has one representative. The president is elected at large. All men in the University are eligible to vote.
We expect to get in bad for than one.
In an article in its columns, the University Missouriian finds out that Missouri leads in the number of A. B degrees bestowed upon the faculty of the school, Harvard in the A. M's, and John Hopkins in the Ph. D's.
POET'S CORNER
PORTIA'S SPEECH ON MERCY
PORITA'S SPEECH ON MEI
The tatteriness of mercy is not strand'n,
it drips the gentle rain from heaven
It drips place beneath. It is twice bleet;
it bites him that gives and him that takes.
Tis munghest in the snightest; it becomes
the throned monarch better than his
His scepter shows the force of tem-
perature. The attribute to save and majesty.
Wherein doth sit the dread and fear of but Mercy is above this sceptered mercy. It is enthroned in the hearts of kings,
and earthly power doth then show
And earthly power doth then show
When mercy seasons justice.
Perplexed.
This is not told in a spirit of unfavorable criticism but because the author believes that the hospital is not fulfilling its entire duty. Isn't probable that a more complete equipment is needed, and that the physician will be forced to devote to her duties at the hospital? I am told that they are only there at certain hours of the day, that they do not make calls, and that they furnish no medicine. I should like very much to know the facts of the case. If we are to be required to pay a hospital fee it seems only fair that we are to get for our money. I have articles in the Kansan, published last September, and do not find answers to my questions in them.
WANTS HOSPITAL INFORMA-
Essays in Tabloid Tablets
Sunday after. 'Noon is, A time when. All. K. U. Goes A. Walking. The pretty. Co-eds can. Dress up in their. New sporty. Walking shoes. And show. Them off. Without. Fear of. Having. They stepped on. As they are. When the pretty. dances. With some. Ungainly. Farmer is. From Pondum. Sunday after. Noid is. From Pondum. Diatys too for. They don't. Have the rule. And. The thought. Of Mr Brown to. Make them think of. Time. The Kaw. River. Is a. Busy place. Sunday after. Noon up. Above the. Damn. Some profs use. It to make. The garden. Or to. Play penchile in. Sunday after. Noon at. Any time. But. Spring. Is. Hades.
SUNDAY AFTERNOON
CAMPUS OPINION Communications must be signed on evidence of good faith but names will not be published without the writer's consent
Oh no, they will find out later—when they graduate—what the real world offers and needs. If there were a summer school, a Sunday would be needed. No, but he tapes, K. U. would be satisfied with men who speak but the classical lingo.
William Shakespeare
LET SUNDAY TELL US Editor Daily Kansan:
Billy Sunday has been criticised pr and con in "Campus Opinion." And up to date the criticism (con) has been quite childish. From the drift of the discussion it seems that Billy Sunday has a financial speaker that in one talk to the staff of the university of Kansas he will undo all that graceful use of the English tongue that has been so laboriously instilled into the youthful minds. Indeed there is grave danger that if the University of Kansas should set its "stamp of an educational day" by inviting him here many of the sons and daughters of Kansas would cease to indulge in artificialities and insincerities, and become frank and laborsers in the master's vineyard. Perhaps so. But going on to the real point. Billy Sunday is a man with an education. He is a man who deals with the way that gets results. In other words Billy Sunday, "Delivers the Goods." And no doubt he will throw a sort of the genuine, "brass tricks" sort of thing at K. U. students. Oh yes, he does not be the stums, saloons and vices of all the schools. Is visible, is it, that cultured K. U., students be permitts to listen to that sort of thing?
I would appreciate it very much if your paper would run an article telling exactly what service the University hospital is supposed to furnish students, and what its function is. He would pose as a critic of the hospital, but I knew in case in which I am inclined to believe that the hospital was lacking. A man in the University was slightly ill and went to the hospital for treatment. He had been suffering from a slight indisposition for two months with the physician in charge to diagnose the problem, what medicine was needed. It took the M. D. just five minutes to tell him. But the student had already tried the medicine recommended thoroughly and had received no benefit from it whatever. He told theician so but was advised to try it at least instead, he went to another doctor and in a week his trouble had disappeared.
A. E.R.
Editor Daily Kansan
TION
A FRESHMAN'S COMPAINT Editor Daily Kansan;
I am a freshman and do not know everything yet. Recently I asked three different instructors in the College which Marvin Hall was, and not one of them could tell me. Why this ignorance among our faculty?
Another thing. Some professs up and say: "You can have three cuts in a three hour course and five cuts in a five hour course; and if you take any more than you are allowed you will have to take a special examination, no matter if you are a 1 sturge in the course." There is no such rule in the course. There is University Law Books that anybody knows of. There may have been in the remote past does not concern us. Are professors going to be allowed to continue to threaten their students in this manner?
Another thing: Can't the University afford some oil to be put on the hinges of the door in Fraser chapel so that they will quit that irritating noise and rectacls when people insist on coming and going out in the midst of things?
Another: Why are people compelled to take gym work when they do not wish to do so? There are more gym classes than the gymnasium in any other place. What better way to spend all this time it takes to go back to school, undress, dress for gym, play a little at baseball, (being watched through spy-glasses by inquisitive engineers and having your hands covered in the meanwhile) then undress or be on the street? It is pure foolishness to waste all this time (which might be spent in the library) for what is called "physical training." If we had decent chairs to sit in, in the class room, we would have a hump over in those sawed-off, back-room things that pass for chairs, we wouldn't need to take physical training.
From Other Campuses
Injured.
The senior engineers in the University of Texas at Austin have abandoned their distinctive uniforms of khaki trousers, blue shirts and black ties because they could not keep the other students in the University from wearing the same outfits. The class finally voted to do away with their uniforms after four seniors were put on probation for two months for having tried to keep a freshman from wearing the senior "regimentals."
The University of Wisconsin is offering through its extension division a correspondence course in telephone apparatus and methods. At present there are thirty-six employees of Wisconsin telephone companies enrolled. The telephone Company is showing consistent interest in the course, and doing all it can to enroll many of its men, speaks for an increase in the enrollment.
At the University of Nebraska nearly 600 men have entered classes in military tactics. Movements, rifle use, and other regulations are discussed.
Coach C. E. Van Ghent of the University of Missouri has accepted a position as head coach at Texas University. The new job carries with it an increase in salary as well as a promotion from assistant-coach to head coach. Mr. Van Ghent has been of course the Tigers especially in the development of the baseball machine which defeated Kansas in three successive games. His resignation has been accepted at Missouri to take effect September 1.
*Celebrate* by Y. W., C. A. Jubilee Day "Girls of Yosemite," the name of the organization, was the name of C. A.'s jubilee day, at Oklahoma A. & M. Stillwater, Oklahoma. The pageant was composed of girls in costumes of all nations and times. The first figure was a Virginia Reel, the representative of the organization of Y. W., who presented present day activities. The costs were varied and strikingly handsome.
Wrestling is a recognized intercollegiate sport at the University of Indiana, the team, composed of ten men, defeated virtually the University of Illinois wrestlers.
A race in which the women will be more cultured than the men will be the result if the preponderance of women in the art's arts continues to be maintained.
The largest university band in the United States, that of the University of Illinois, gave its twenty-sixth anniversary concert on March 21. The band consists of about 200 pieces.
Of the thirty Ann Arbor students who took the examination for certificates of the American Red Cross society in the first aid, nine failed.
Exchange reports in the Spectator that a moustache epidemic is raging in one of our western universities. The exchange further states that this epidemic has just been warm reception and wild imitation on the part of a noble member of the School of Journalism. Wonder how they found out about the department of journalism at K. U? It has been said that a man can spare enough time from his studies to use the razor, this ornament will disappear.
BONWIT TELLER & CO.
The Specialty Shop of Originations
FIFTH AVENUE AT 38TH STREET
NEW YORK
"Genee" -Collar, cuffs and revers are edged with picot f rills. In white or flesh Georgette creme.
5. 50 Straw turban with crown of roses—in flesh, white or coral.
5.50
Hemp tricorne with grosgrain band ribbon and loop. All colors.
12. 50 "Villars"— Sports blouse of dish or chine piped de chine piped with white or all white. Big pig button
10.00
Mail orders carefully and promptly filled—Be sure to state size and color when ordering.
FLOWERS FROM THE FLOWER SHOP
are always a pleasure to receive. Arrangements superior to all others. The keeping qualities are well known. A comparison is all we ask of the uninitiated.
MR. AND MRS. GEO. ECKE, Leading Florists
Book Store
MEN WANTED--For summer work at $4.00 per day guaranteed. See Chas. Campbell at Eldridge Wednesday, 137¹
LOST—On the campus Tuesday morning, a gold bar pin. Please leave at Registrar's office in Fraser Hall. 136-3*
CLASSIFIED
FOR SALE--One two cylinder out-
board motor; good condition; cheap
251 Bel, Allphin, at Johnson & Carl.
134.3
LOST—Two keys attached by string,
one a Yale key. Return to Sturte-
vent.
Jewelers
KEELER'S BOOK STORE. $33 Mass.
St. Typewriters for sale or rent
Paper for printing and supplies.
Paper by the pound. Quiz book.
10c. Pictures and Picture framing.
ED. W. PARSONS, Engraver, Watch-
her, jewelry. Bell phone 711. 717 Mass.
Jewelry.
WANT ADS
MEN WANTED--For summer works at $4.00 per day guaranteed. See Chas, Campbell at Eldridge Wednesday. 137-2
Shoe Shon
MISS ESTELLA, NORBURUP, china
MISS ESTELLA, NORBURUP, china
cateriously handled. 738 Masse. Phone:
010-242-7596.
K. U, SHOE SHOP and Pantotorium is
best place for best results 128
Plumbers
PHONE KNNNED PLUMBING CO.
MASS MAZA and Mazda Lamps.,
Massa MAZA.
Printing
B. H. DALE, Artist Job Printing
Both, phone: 238, 1837, Means.
FORNEY SHOE SHOP, 1017 Mass. St.
Don't make a mistake. All work
MHS AA, A. MORGANKANI 312 Tennessee
takungke, K. PARKS 313 reasonable
tkungke, P. VARROSSI very reasonable
"Jeune Fille" Blouses
DR. H, L. CHAMBERS. Office over Squires studio. Roth phones.
PROFESSIONAL CARDS
HARRY REDING. M. D. Eye, ear,
face, face, F.A. U. Bldg. Phones, Bldg 613;
G. W. JONES A. M. M. D. P. Diasseau
1825 1825 1825 1825
1825 1825 1825 1825
Heal-
sth Phone Number
J. R. BECHTEL, M. D. D. O. 833 Maa
Both phones are office and residence
A. C. WILSON, Attorney at law, 743
Mass. St. Lawrence, Kansas.
DR. H, W. H. BUCHHONSON, Dentist. 308
Perkins Bidg. Lawrence. Kansas.
C. E. ORBELUP M. D. Diek Bldg Eyes to
Humann Gauaranteed, "Successor to
Humann Gauaranteed."
1025 Mass. St.
F. I. Carter,
are sold exclusively in Law-
Corona and Fox Typewriters
We have machines for rent and a full line of supplies.
Phones 621.
PROTSCH
The College Tailor
Watkins National Bank Capital $100,000 Surplus and Profits $100,000 The Student Depository
THESIS BINDING
Non-Leakable and Self-Filling Sold in Lawrence at F. B. McColloch's Drug Store 847 Mass. St.
THESIS BINDING
Engraved and Printed Cards
Conklin Fountain Pens
The University of Chicago
HOME in addition to resident work, offer instruction by correspondence.
STUDY For detailed information,
26th Year. U. of C. (Oh.) Chicago, Illinois. Mitchell Tower
typewriter Paper 744 Mass. St.
The Univ
HOME
STUDY
24th Year
UNIVERSITY WOMEN!
We do Fancy Tailoring and Remodeling.
EASTERN TERRITORY
MRS. EDNAH MORRISON,
Bell 1154J. 1146 Tenn. St.
CITIZENS STATE BANK
We are handling all University accounts, and we solicit your business, deposits guaranteed.
707 Massachusetts St.
University Women
We do ladies tailoring and dressmaking at very reasonable prices. Competent assistants.
MRS. M. A. MORGAN
1321 Tenn. Phone B 1116W
for 35°
Ashby-y-½"in. Lexicon-y-½"
ARROW
COLLAR spring
style, in two heights
CLUFT PEABODY & CO. INC. MAKERS
11
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
THEATRE VARSITY
WILLIAM FOX PRESENTS
THEDA BARA
IN
"Gold and the Woman"
SIX REELS
Arrow Shirts----guaranteed fast color Sold exclusively by Johnson & Carl
BOWERSOCK THEATRE
TONIGHT
JESSE L. LASKY presents
Cleo Ridgely and
Wallace Reid
who appeared in "The Golden Chance" and "The Chorus Lady"
in a photoplay of exciting adventure and love
by Jeanie MacPherson and Cecil B. DeMille
"The Love Mask" Melodramatic recital of a woman's struggle against the world.
BRAY CARTOON—The Stone Age Roost Robber
At 900 Tennessee RAYMOND'S
PRIVATE DINING ROOMb
For parties, banquets, committees feeds, call 92 on the Bell for reservations.
Uses us prepare your next picnic lunch.
Order Early
and we will ship and guarantee your flowers anywhere within a radius of 500 miles. Roses, sweet peas, carnations, pansies, easter lilies and many other kinds to select from.
A comparison will prove our prices lower and our service better.
The Lawrence Floral Co.
Bell 55 1447 Mass.
Come to our store for anything you need for your
Fresh films always in setok, as well as Developing Tanks, Velox paper,—general supplies of all kinds.
Kodak
And for the developing and finishing of your pictures, our prompt, painstaking service is sure to please you.
Come in and see us. We can give you some valuable pointers.
Evans Drug Store
819 Massachusetts
We have individual mola for you
when dinner. Call us about them
Winter.
Seniors: Order your caps and gowns before Easter vacation at check stand in Fraser.-Adv. 135-3
BY THE WHISTLE WE LIVE-AND FLUNK
A Little Rope Does It
No, a man doesn't stand guard over a clock to see that quizzes stop on time or classes change at twenty minutes after every hour. It's a neat little invention that says when the whistle shall blow.
When the minute-hand of a large clock on the second floor of the power plant gets 'round to four, an electric circuit closes, ringing a series of large bells about the plant. Then, one of the engineers at work throws a cord outward and with the bells it continues and forty pounds of steam runs through the bell-shaped contrivance and havoc results in every class-room.
BEEN BLOWING 15 YEARS
Charles Griffith, chief engineer of the power plant, will tell you that this is the method in use for fifteen years and he cannot remember when the whistle didn't blow unless it was some other time that the apparatus was out of order.
"You see that bell-shaped shape of metal," he says pointing to the whistle, "well. the steam has to hit that bellow before it can pass right kind of a tone and if the edges are worn the result is a hoarse shriek. That's the same bell that was put fifteen years ago but every three or four cylinders the cylinders must be filled smooth.
"The clock system is necessary," he continued, "where we're all busy this way. We get into the habit of pulling the cord and can almost guess the time to but so accustomed do we become to the task that I often wonder several minutes after I've blown the whistle if I have really blown it and I am not sure I can see if the students are going back and forth to and from their classes."
When asked how the classes were warned before the whistle was installed, Griffith went to the door and looked out on the campus but seemed disappointed when he did not see what he was trying to find.
MUST HAVE GRAD WORK
"I thought I could locate one of those old posts that used to do the work but they're all gone now I guess. There used to be a master-clock over in Blake Hall and when the time came, a giant gong would ring in each building and the wires would be draped over the wires that would carry the electric charge to ring the bell. This method proved very unsatisfactory however. The nervous professor began to decry the gong because he "rude awakening." Then, too, there was never much assurance that the bells would be in order. If some plotting student wished to temporarily 'bail up' his classes his only trouble was to climb the poles and cut the wires."
Griffith glanced toward the sun and started back in the door when it seemed that there were a dozen bells ringing at the same time. "Here's how it works," he said and he grabs the spade-handle on the end of the cord and as he pulled down the familiar sound floated across the campus.
No American University Can Claim Full Standing Without It
"No American University can now claim full standing without providing for graduate education," says Dean F. W. Blackmar. "This is one of the chief marks of distinction in our American institutions, between a school and a university. However, no American university work have made it impossible to push graduate work in the University of Kansas."
Investigate the merits of tailor made clothing. It's cheaper in the long run. Schulz—Adv.
There are, in general, three classes of students in the Graduate School. First, there are those who are preparing to teach in high schools or universities and wish to specialize in some line of work. This class of students is the majority and very few of them go further than a master's degree.
MAJORITY OF FUTURE TEACHERS
Another class of graduate students are preparing to do research work in the laboratories of public institutions or private corporations. Still others are seeking technical positions and want to prepare for that work.
TRAINS FOR INVESTIGATION
One of the greatest objects of the Graduate School are men and women to carry on research or investigation in a chosen scientific field. Many of the great discoveries which have made modern civilization possible have been brought about by graduate work at laboratories or educational institutions.
Enrollment in the Graduate School of the University, for the past year, has reached 260. So far the increase in enrollment has been estimated as equal to 80 and 90 graduate degrees will be conferred at commencement this year.
K. U. HAS 600 ON DIAMOND
Baseball League Keep Students in Active Athletics
Nearly six hundred men are competing for positions of baseball teams at the NCAA championship.
This fact is disclosed by the summing up of the number of organized teams there are entered in the different intra-school联赛 together with the number of candidates on the Varsity and freshman squads.
The number of hopefuls on Coach McCarty's first team squad is forty. Approximately an equal number are trying for positions on the yearling aggregation directed by Coaches Bond and Sproull.
The Hash House league schedule has been completed with sixteen teams competing. The Pan-hellenic league has twelve teams, the inter-fraternity four teams and the professional fraternity six teams.
A conservative estimate is that at least twelve men are competing for positions on every one of the Hash House and fraternity aggregations. There are forty-one of these. Simons has said that 492 which added to the eighty on the Varsity and Freshman squads, brings the total up to 572.
Probably better evidence of the wide hold which baseball has taken at the University is the number of practice games going on. Saturday the regular schedules of the different universities are open space in Lawrence big enough to hold a baseball game will be busy until June.
The natural method, better known as the direct method, is one of the oldest methods of teaching German. "Instead of giving students a lot of grammatical rules to learn and a lot of hard reading and work of that nature, the employment of the natural method tries to teach students the most basic rules, with examples illustrating each rule. This is accomplished through copious practice of hearing, speaking, reading and writing the language thus trying to develop a feeling for the language and an instinctive feeling of what is right," said Prof. Harry Palmbuld, instructor in the department of German this morning. "We can't use this method if we want to speak time. It is a hard method to use but when properly taught proves very successful."
SENIORS—order your caps and gowns before Easter recess at check stand in Fraser. —Adv. 134-3
Seniors: Order your caps and
screens before Easter vacation at
the airport.
for summer work at $4.00 per day.
Call C. E. Campbell at Hotel Eldridge
WEDNESDAY.
20 MEN WANTED
SHUBERT NEXT SUNDAY SEATS NOW SELLING
ANNOUNCEMENTS
SEAS NOW SELLING
Direct from 6 months in Chicago
Direct from 6 months in Chicago.
TAYLOR HOLMES
In a new comedy—Brimful of fun.
HIS MAJESTY
Seniors are requested to call at the check stand and order their caps and gowns before the Easter holidays.
Coach Oletti wants 25 more men out for spring football practice every afternoon. Spring training lasts until April 20.
The Union Pacific special train carrying the class in Applied Sociology to pententitive leaves Lawrence to Saturday 7:15 a. m. instead of 7:30 o'clock.
The postponed meeting of the K. U. Anti-Cigarette League will be held Wednesday, April 19, at 7:30 p. m. in Fraser, room 110. The meeting will be addressed by Prof. Charles Cochran.
The International Polity Club will hold a business meeting Wednesday evening at the Phi Kappa Psi house, 1140 Laiwania, at seventh-thirty oclock.
Lee Wilson Dodd's Dramatization of
Harry Potter on Saturday
Evening Poet's Stone
The University Club will give a smoker Tuesday evening in honor of Prof. Geo. Herbert Clark, who is here to give a series of lectures on Shakespeare Tuesday and Wednesday. All members of the club are invited.
Black Helmets have important meeting at Delta Tau house Wednesdays.
Corn Cob Pipe affair set for to-morrow night has been postponed.
Seniors: Order your caps and gowns before Easter vacation at check stand in Fraser-Adv. 135-3
High grade clothing for less money
We are opened and ready to SUIT you. Our line of $1.50 and $2 hats will please in shape and quality as well as in price. When selecting anything in Men's~ Clothing remember the place.
MEN
"High Grade Clothing for Less Money"
James Bloom, '19 College, went to Midland Wednesday evening where he staged a boxing match with one of the city Y. M. men. It was a no-decision affair given before the Central Protective Association of that place.
A new business with a new line of goods. Open evenings for your convenience.
Miss Lucy Riggs, field secretary of W. Y. C. A. was on the Hill, Thursday and Friday, doing Association work. Miss Riggs has her headquarters at Denver and pounds most of her time traveling and visiting the associations in her field.
Seniors: Your caps amoug
nices before Easter - Arrive in
chairs at Arsenal - Aeropostale
820 Mass. St.
Queer freaks are often performed by raincoats, parasols, and divers other articles of rainy-day apparel at the University. Last week it was a rain coat belonging to Harold Cox, "18 which became enamored of another man, Friday and returned Monday ready to obey the will of its rightful master.
Send the Daily Kansan home to the folios.
Six men at the Y. M. C. A. house, 941 Indiana street, accompanied by six girls who were not afraid to "toot it" enjoyed an early morning walk to Baldwin Sunday. The party started at six o'clock, ate breakfast over a bowl of soup that the Woman lived at Baldwin in time to attend the latter part of the morning services. They returned to Lawrence on the 5:20 train.
Do you see any similarity between a policy in a good life insurance company and a good umbrella?
L. S. Beughly
Ideal CLOTHING CO.
ASK FOR and GET
ASK FOR and GET HORLICK'S
THE ORIGINAL
MALTED MILK
ALLEGRETTI'S Famous Chocolate Creams
Cheap substitutes cost YOU same price.
We carry this for discriminating customers
New shipment is here The finest candy made
CARROLL'S
and counting tomorrow there are only Five More Shopping Days Till Easter
You will want a new Easter Hat and a new party dress for the entertainments this spring. You can buy better now than you can a week from now and a week from now is after Easter.
You will be interested in looking over our line of late creations. We will enjoy showing them to you.
Why Wait Longer?
Easter Hat Time is Here
Mrs. McCormick 831
MASS.
"The Easter Hat Shop"
THE COLLEGE OF BALLET
A beautiful scene from the ballet "Nature Rythms" in which Ruth St. Denis and company of dancers appear at the
Bowersock Theatre, Wed., April 19
Ted Shonn will also give his version of The Twenty-third Psalm
PRICES:- 50c - 75c - $1.00 - $1.50 - $2.00 Tickets now selling BELL PHONE 10
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
New Baseball and Tennis Goods are Here
SPALDINGS cannot be surpassed and when you select your.
RACKET
GLOVES
MIT
BAT
SHOES
BALLS
HERE
You get the best and all new ones. Select your glove or racket now.
CARROLL'S Next to Eldridge Hotel
Indestructo Trunks Bags and Suit Cases Sold Exclusively by Johnson & Carl
NO ST. MARY'S GAME
Tomorrow's Contest With Catholics Postponed—Play Baker Probably Wednesday
To-morrow afternoon's baseball game scheduled with St. Mary's will not be played announced W. O. Hammilton, manager of athletics, this morning, a game game for Wednesday day afternoon, probably with Baker is being planned.
The fact that this is Holy Week is believed to be the motive that caused the Catholic school to ask the game scheduled for tomorrow, be postponed until some later date. The game will be played sometime in May when there is no home game on the Jayhawker schedule.
Will Mine Next Year
Due to the prevalence of wet weather and soggy ground, the tunnel which the students in mining engineering are to drive under Mount Oread has not yet been started. At Auburn, you can do this spring is to locate the four inch width of coal under the campus and make a start on the work.
The real work of driving the tunnel will be done by students who enroll in the course in practical mining that is to be offered in the School of Engineering. The plan is to offer a course in practice, the work in which will consist entirely of practical, hard work in Oread Mine.
Send the Daily Kansan home.
Mrs. Carrie Chapman Catt, noted suffragette lecturer, and president of the National Equal Suffrage Association, addressed a large number of women who were attending Saturday evening. Mrs. Catt is making a tour of the Union and is trying to ascertain the general sentiment in regard to a national suffrage amendment. Thirty-six states must approve the amendment before it can carry.
IRS, CATT TALKS
SUFFRAGE IN LAWRENCE
Mrs. Catt reviewed the history of the woman's suffrage movement and spoke of their hope of future success. She believes that the country is ready for the question of a constitutional amendment and is canvasing the state to find if the women will support it. The association is working to make the question a plank in every platform.
Preparedness Board Meets
At the meeting of the state board, of Industrial Preparedness in Lawrence Saturday, Prof. H. A. Whitaker was elected chairman and plans were made to get in touch with Joseph Daniels, Secretary of the Navy. The board was appointed by Secretary Daniels to make an inventory of natural resources, manufacturers, industries and means of transportation and communication in the state. A dept. of transportation has been a few days. This board, composed of Professors G. C. Shad and W. A. Whitaker, O. H. Hixon of Iola; O. G. Whitman of Pittsburg; and A. A. Potter, Dean of the School of Engineering, will serve as associate members of the Naval Consulting Board.
COLD HINDERS RUNNERS
Track Men Practice in Heavy Clothes Last Week—Hope for Warmer Weather
Just what shape Fred Roddy will be in for the Drake Games is in doubt at the present time. His arch has to be improving slowly and the days will decide whether he will get into the Des Moines affair. It may be that the injury can be bound up so that the strain of a half mile will not cause it, so he will appear in the first race of the afternoon on the Drake track.
Tomorrow afternoon the tryouts for the Des Moines trip will be held regardless of the weather. The distance men have not been able to do their distances much during the past week because of the cold and poor condition of the track but they are all veterans and know their pace. If the weather clears up for a little while in the afternoon there will probably be some people who want to travel but will be wanting the trip to Des Moines while only eight will get to go.
The team of eight or nine men, which will be picked tomorrow, will leave Lawrence Friday morning. This will give the men time to rest in Des Moines before the big affair starts Saturday afternoon.
TO ENTER PENN GAMES—MAYBE Behind the hard work that is being done for the Des Moines trip is a deeper motive. ManagerHamilton has promised his men that a trip to the Moines team will be waiting them if they make a credible showing at Des Moines. This was also promised the team last year but the showing at Des Moines obliterated all hope. This year the teams have shape and the coaches expect them to be more consistent in their races.
Although cold weather has consid- erably hampered efficient track work it has not stopped it entirely. In spit of the low temperature, clouds and rains that have been hovering around McCook Field since Thursday the thiny clay athletes have been working on the course for the clad this week for each man has on heavy clothes and even runs his race in them. The time of course is slow, but then the track man are keeping in shape and their muscles are loose.
PLANS ARE UNDERWAY TO BEAUTIFY THE CAMPUS
The Grounds Committee of the University is in session today with S. H. Hare, a landscape architect from Kansas City, to discuss plans for campus and primarily to make arrangements for planting trees this spring.
The members of the committee are:
Chancellor Frank Strong, chairman,
Prof. W. C. Stevens, Prof. Goldwid
Prof. W. A. Gwain, Dean
Denn Olm Timpelin, Stuart John M. Shea and
C. H. Poland of the Men's Student
Council.
BELCHIC PERFECTS NEW PROCESS OF ZINC FLOTATION
A new process of "floating" zinc waste has been perfected by George Belchic, an assistant in chemical research in the University, whereby ore that has been smelted by the ordinary processes can be run through a plant, and approximately twenty-dollars worth of zinc extracted daily. The ores curing the plant is less than the present amount of zinc ore and much more zinc is extracted.
Obtain comfort, fit and style in your clothes by consulting Schulz. Advise
Whipped cream, fruit salad and waters. Ten cents a plate at Wiedemann's.—Adv.
The plant can be erected for one hundred dollars and has a capacity of fifteen tons daily. The average contents of the waste that the plant will handle runs about three per cent of blende, making a saving of 900 pounds with perfect recovery, but a conservative estimate was set at 500, which is worth at the present price of zinc a little more than $500.
The plan was placed before the regular meeting of the Southwest Missouri Mine Safety and Sanitation Society held at Webb City recently and was regarded by mine operators as having great possibilities.
Special—Pineapple ice at Wiedemann's—Adv.
Milton F. Madden, a senior electrical, will leave this week for Albuquerque where he has accepted a position as inspector for the Santa Fe railroad.
G got a drop in each eye,
And said: "This is a ___ of a place."
The Cub had a smile on his face,
The painter was painting the place,
Today that theory is thrown aside, and it is an established fact that to get the greatest efficiency from our work we must work comfortably. You can find the furniture here that will give you efficiency in study-desks and chairs for the student or faculty room or home at prices that you can easily afford.
Gordon Welch, '16 Engineer, has rone to Jola to lace a temporary position with the United Iron Works Com-
mputing he will return after the Easter
racation.
YESTERDAY vs. TODAY
The student of the time of our grandfathers was not considered a real student unless he was perched up on a stool over a poorly printed book under the yellow light of a greasy oil lamp or a ray of sunlight from a slit in the wall called a window.
"The art of scouring a nation's market for the best furniture is well enough known here to give our customers the advantages in the price."
808-810 Mass. St.
G.S. Strachan
FURNITURE
To approach the nearest approximation to 100 per cent efficiency is our aim.. You can't wonder then, that this is
What Do You Expect?
Consider the barber service of our sextet of experts men who know the ins and outs of the whole game.
"THE SHOP OF THE TOWN" Where a Gentleman May Be Proud to Be Seen.
SEE SEE SEE SEE SEE SEE SEE SEE SEE SEE SEE SEE SEE SEE SEE SEE SEE SEE SEE
SID MOSS BEULAH DAVIS MAUREEN McKERNAN
K. U.'S MOST PROMISING CANDIDATES FOR THE STAGE IN
"COPPING THE GRAPES"
AT THE
BOWERSOCK THEATRE WEDNESDAY, APRIL 26th
YOU can't get many more real good times in during the next month and a half. Figure on spending two pleasant hours next week to see K. U. as you know her, to witness the production of a play written by a K. U. student, acted by K. U. people under the direction of a K. U. professor. The play was written by Alton Gumbiner and won the $50 prize given by the Dramatic Club this year.
SOMETHING DIFFERENT
Here are the ones who will do the work. You know them all.
D. C. Burnett, Manager
Fred Whitten
Ed Boddington
Bill Beal
Rhody Moore
John Hamilton
Sid Moss
Kenneth Lott
Juno McCammon
Bill Dodds
Maureen McKernan
Beulah Davis
Jimmy McKay
Fuzz Rathfon
Guy Waldo
As you have heard once in a while before, and it seems necessary to repeat, you had better
Make That Date Now
Seats Go on Sale Wednesday, April 19th
25 Cents - 50 Cents - 75 Cents
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VOLUME XIII.
PROF. FLAYS STUDENTS
NUMBER 138.
Goldsmith Condemnns Wholesale Littering of Campus With Paper and Trash
ALL SHOULD CO-OPERATE
Faculty, Organizations, and Students Must Work Together
The Grounds Committee met yesterday to discuss plans of beautifying the campus suggested by the men's student council. No action was taken on the suggestions by the committee because of lack of money. C. H. Pollard represented the Student Council at the meeting.
"The students and the University authorities," said Prof. Goldwin Goldsmith, secretary of the Grounds Committee, in speaking of campus beautification, "should help each other. Instead, they are now pushing each other down. The students want the authorities to beautify the campus. The authorities ask the students not to destroy property wantonly or throw papers and tobacco cans upon the campus.
REPAIRING INSTEAD OF BEAUTIFYING
"Money and labor that is spent in replacing and repairing destroyed pavement, turning a beautiful the campus. We are an instance where students placed a chair on a table and knocked it off with another one. Before they could be stopped, they had broken five chairs.
"Now, when election time comes, the campus will be strewn with posters of our victory signs with them. Men will have to go around the campus picking up these pieces of paper when they might be devoting their time to planting a tree
UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS, TUESDAY AFTERNOON, APRIL 18, 1916.
"MEMORIALS USELESS"
"There are several student organizations," he continues, "who want to beautify the campus but the main trouble with them is that when they have done something they want to be able to do, it looks like a job." Studentookies are generally useless. Take the stone bench. The only good thing about that is that it shows class spirit. This spirit can be shown as well by planting a tree. Let them tack a sign on it if they want to. It need not be planted when the class is ready to leave for the tree. You can use it in an plant it about the first of April. Then the students can hold a big celebration and care for the tree.
POCKET KNIFE VS. DANDELIONS
"We can get rid of the dandelions if each man would take a pocket knife, dig up by the roots a half dozen or so, work them, and burn them each day. The workers would not have to do this.
"Waste paper cans, not the galvanized iron kind, but something that appeals to the artistic tastes of an individual might be placed along the campus. Students could then throw their waste paper, empty tobacco cans, paper towels, or aluminum cups no harder for one to keep these things until he comes to a waste paper can and then drop them into it than to throw them upon the campus.
"The state is now spending between $2,500 and $3,000 a year on cutting the grass and picking up trash only. That means that an average of one dollar a student is now being paid each day for the carrying on of this work."
REPRIMING YOUR COMRADE "It is all in the attitude the students take whether campus beautification succeeds. If each student would take it upon himself to reprimand a student for using waste of paper or a tobacco can or when he tramps out the grass, the University of Kansas could have as beautiful a campus as any school in the United States.
The Daily Kansan wishes to correct a statement made in last night's Kansan, concerning the possible visit of Billy Sunny and his wife. But he was positively coming, but it is not absolutely certain that he will. Prof. Merle Thorpe is in communication with Mr. Sunday's manager, who promises that the evangelist will come if a date can be arranged to agree that Kansas City engagements.
Sunday's Visit Not Certain
"If he comes," said Professor Thorpe, "it will be some time the first week in May, but the date hasn't been set yet."
---
Bob Mason and Floyd Welsh, two freshmen who are responsible for a large number of the Soph Hop posters appearing daily on the Hill, have frequent arguments as to which of their co-ed friends shall be given certain of the keenest posters. One drawing which appeared last week has been promised to twelve different young ladies.
HOW POOR WHITES LIVE
PROF, GLOCKER TOMORROW
Prof. Theodore W. Glocker, of the University of Tennessee, will give his lecture on the life of the poor whites at 3:30 o'clock in Frasher Hall.
Professor Glocker has gained a great deal of eminence as a student of social problems. He has spent a great deal of time among the poor whites in the Tennessee hills and he knows their conditions from every angle. A professor in Peek Hall on Friday Professor Glocker will tell of the efforts being made to better the conditions of these people and in his characteristic way the picturesque life in the Tennessee mountains will be portrayed.
TEACHESHOUSEKEEPING
Prof. Ava Milam Tells How Home Economics Flourished in Oregon
Prof. Ava M. Milam, who demonstrated the practicability of college training for home-aking at the Panama-Pacific International Exposition last year, is a guest of the department of home economics today and tomorrow. She is head of the department of economics at the Oregon Agricultural College.
"A left-over corner in the Oregon building was turned over to the department for a lunch room at the supporter's office of the Oregon commissioners," said Miss Milam.
SENIOR WOMEN WERE MANAGERS
"The plan worked out so that two senior women specializing in institutional management were chosen, one female and one male, to storeroom, and the preparation of food—she also made menus and did the ordering; the other was in charge of the dining rooms, was responsible for the service, and had charge of the family accounts and laundry. Forty-eight other girls who received college degrees were divided into groups of seven. The change of one-half of each group of students came every three weeks, which made it possible always to have three or four students with three weeks' experience to work with the new girls coming in. During the on-occasion training, the mastic science department served in the capacity of adviser, each instructor remaining on duty one month.
ENTERTAINED THE COMMISSIONER3
"The seven students prepared and served breakfast and dinner to guests numbering from 35 to 40. The students also prepared and served luncheon for eighty. It was the desire of the department to make it an exhibit and to bring the work before as many people as possible.
"All the work including the buying, planning, preparing and serving of these three meals, was done by the college women.
"Cheese souffle and Parker-house rolls gained great fame at the Oregon Building. Business men from Oakland came as regular guests for the summer when from become so popular that by 12:0' o'clock no lunchmen tickets were available."
PAID ITS OWN EXPENSES
AUTHORIZATION EXPENSE.
So much of the instructor's time at luncheon seemed to be commanded in telling how to make the favorite dish that the department had recipes printed and gave them to the guests when requested.
Miss Milaan explained that the meals served paid the monthly bills of the department, averaging; $300.00 transportation of students and instructors; $158.55, laundry; $150.00, salaries; $50.00 gas, water and light; $60.00, food; $160.00 vegetables and fruit; $492.47, groceries; $119.90, milk and cream, but still left a surplus averaging $375.00 a month.
Alpha Xi Delta will give their Founders' Day banquet at the chapter house tonight.
Last Paper Tomorrow
Elizabeth Lamme, '18 College, will entertain six of her sorority sisters with a house party at her home in Hiawatha.
The Daily Kansan will publish no paper Thursday or Friday because of the Easter vacation. Publication will be resumed Wednesday after vacation.
"Rodkey Out For Year" read the headline in Friday's Kansas. A reader of this line was heard to remark, "I wonder how long he was in for?"
Fred Rusenbach, '19 College, is the possessor of six senior standings in the Sigma Delta Psi, the athletic fraternity which will probably be established at K. U. this spring. Rusty secured his standing at the University of Indiana which he attended the first semester of this year. The mother chapter of Sigma Delta Psi is located at Indiana.
The Association of Journalism Teachers to Meet at K. U. Friday and Saturday
NEWS PROFS. COMING TWENTY-FLOAT PARADE
MUST STANDARDIZE WORK
Problems of Handling New Subject to be Discussed
Journalism teachers from all parts of the United States will meet at the University of Kansas Friday and Saturday when the annual meeting of the American Association of Journalism Teachers convenes. Dean Talcott Williams of the Pulitzer School of Journalism at Columbia, Dean Walter Williams, of the School of Journalism at Columbia, and Dr. John journalism professors of prominence will be on the program to discuss the problems of this new profession.
Talecott Williams, Columbia University; Will H. Mayes, University of Texas; F. W. Scott, University of Oklahoma; O. J. Powell, University of Oregon; J. B. Powell, University of Missouri; H. H. Herbert, University of Oklahoma; J. S. Myers, University of Ohio; W. P. Kirkwood, University of Minnesota; Willard G. Blerer, University of Wisconsin; James McVlinn, University of Wisconsin; W. S. Smith, Stanford University; F. L. Stone, University of Montana; Carl H. Getz, University of Montana.
An attempt to standardize instruction in journalism will be made and the problems of research work in journalism will be discussed.
On the program will be these professors of journalism: H. M. Blain, University of Louisiana; Franklin Matthews, Columbia University; Freeport McMoRan, University of Michigan; John M. Cooney, University of Notre Dame; Welter Williams, University of Missouri; J. W. Pierce, University of Indiana; M. F. Mogi, University of Nebraska; F. W. Kennedy, University of Washington; A. W. Hopkins, University of Wisconsin; Albert F. Wilson, New York University.
STUDENTS TO EXPLORE
Kansas Biological Survey Party Will Have Headquarters at Pratt, Kansas
Plans for the annual expedition of the Kansas Biological Survey were made public today by B. M. Allen, proxies in zoology at the University of Kansas.
The party making the investigation will as usual be composed of University students who this year will make their headquarters near Pratt, Kauai. The party will be the studying of fish parasites in the state fish hatchery at Pratt.
Sigma Delta Chi, journalism fraternity will give a smoke on Wednesday
The survey will include investigation regarding other animals. Earl O'Roke, a graduate student and instructor in the department of zoology, will head the expedition. He will be accompanied by four other students. He will also make special investigation of lizards and turtles. Another member of the party will pay special attention to field mice and pocket gophers, with the hope of finding some methods of eradication. According to Dr. Allen, as much emphasis as possible is placed on the use of a survey. The specific purpose of the survey is to achieve the classification of all animal life in Kansas.
The five students on the trip during the coming summer will camp out-of-doors for eight or nine weeks. They do not receive pay for their services and may be absent from school hours. Although Pratt will be the location of the camp, the members of the party will cover much of the day by the use of motorcycles and horses.
One third of the students enrolled at the University of Washington are self supporting.
Fred Rodkey, star Kansas track man will run for the K. U. colors in the Drake relay games Saturday, Coach W. O. Hamilton said this morning. Tryouts for places on the team are being held at Des Moines, are being held this afternoon. The weakened arch on Rodkey's foot is improving steadily and Coach Hamilton does not think it will hurt for the speedy Jayhawk to run in one race
CAMP FOR NINE WEEKS
Harold Kirchner, '19 College, spent Saturday and Sunday in Burlingame visiting friends. He calls it the land of "hope, peace and prosperity" on account of a certain "friend" living there.
Last year the state biological survey party was located in southeastern Kansas where an excellent collection of birds and mammals was secured.
Rodkey Runs Saturday
Engineers Plan to Have Bi Events for Their Annual Holiday April 28
NOTHING FOR OUR LAWS
Track Meet Will be This Year's Headliner
Engineers' Day with its parade, track meet and baseball games will be held April 28 and it promises to be the largest event of the school year. The flannel shirted boys were given permission by the University Senate to keep account of having an Engineering Day; Day and Engineering will be excused from all school work, and allowed to make the best of their holiday.
AT LEAST TWENTY FLOATS IN PARADE
The parade this year will excel all of the past, having at least twenty floats, since each upper class of the various departments of the School of Engineering carries a carriage of one sort or another. The freshmen of the whole school will be represented by one float. It is rumored that there will be no float for the benefit of the laws this year. The parade will start at Marvin Hall at twelve o'clock, led by the Engineers' band and will take the usual route down Mission Street, to at 7th street to the business district.
NEW FEATURE FOR THIS YEAR
The track meet this year will be one of the features of the Engineers' Day, and an event to pick the winner. The minors won last year but one or two other departments claim they have a dark house team this year and intend to spring a surprise. Medals will be given for first, second and third places in all events. After the meet there will be a basketball tournament between the different departments of the School of Engineering.
The Engineers' dance which is usually held on Engineers' Day will begin on May 5 this year because the Soffthore Hop is scheduled for April 28.
K. U. GETS RECOGNITION
State University One of Fifteen in Foreign Trade Council Essay Contest
The $150 essay contest of the National Foreign Trade Council is attracting considerable attention among University of Kansas students.
"The contest is arousing unusual interest," said Prof. H. A. Millis, who is a member of the local committee which is managing the affair, this morning. "Four students have personally signified their intention to me of entering, and I do not know how many have been so far." Shaad, the other members of the committee. The announcement was made only last night."
The subject of the essays is "The Commercial Necessity for Developing Foreign Trade Through an Adequate Merchant Marine." The National Foreign Trade Council offers the money.
CONTEST HELPS CAMPAIGN
"This Trades Council," said Professor Millis, "is doing everything in its power in favor of the export trade of the United States and the development of an American merchant marine. The rontest, which has been organized for some time, is one means used in furtherance of their campaign.
"A member of the council recently gave $2,000 for prizes for essays written by college students. The University of Kansas is one of a small number of universities, only twelve or more, that students have the privilege of entering."
K. U. GETS RECOGNITION
The local committee is bringing together material in a place convenient for all the contestants, and is working to make sure it will give equal bibliographical aid to all.
MANY K. U. PROFS TO CLASSICAL ASSOCIATION
Instructors from practically all colleges and many of the high schools of the state will attend the meeting of the Classical Association of Kansas and Western Missouri, which will be held at Wichita on April 28 and 29. From the K. U. Latin department will be held at Wilkes, E. W. Wilkes, E. D. Cressman. The chief speaker will be Professor Grant Showerman of the University of Wisconsin. It is in this institution that the experiment of a publicity campaign to encourage the study of Latin is being carried on.
Misses Jeanne, Ivah, and Ethel Kirkdall entertained the members of the Trego County Club and a few other guests at the W. R. Stubba home on Hill Saturday evening. The time was spent in dancing, games and music.
Send the Daily Kansan home.
PROF. HERBERT CLARK
LECTURES ON MASEFIELD
George Herbert Clark, professor of English in the University of Tennessee, will lecture on John Masefield in the chapel this afternoon at 4:30. He will discuss theacteristics of contemporary poets, and will speak at length of the romantic career and personality of Masefield.
He will treat Masefield's literary work in four aspects, as a critic, a writer of poetry, an editor, and one of best known poems, such as "The Everlasting Mercy," "The Widow in the Bye Street," "Dauber," "Philip the King," "The Tragedy of Man," "Good Friday" and also several somets. His professor, Professor Clark are both Englishmen and are personally acquainted.
DEAN P.F.WALKER BACK
Meets Classes Today After Two Weeks Spent in Missouri and Louisiana
Dean P. F. Walker, of the School of Engineering, was back at his desk in Marvin Hall this morning after a two weeks' absence on business in eastern Iowa and then a trip in Kansas included stops at Iola and Pittsburgh where Dean Walker addressed the Commercial Clubs on industrial development and the parts played in the development of the comunity by the manufacturing industries.
VISITED TANNERIES
In St. Louis, Dean Walker visited a number of tanneries where leather is prepared for every purpose imaginable. During his visit to these plants he took a number of valuable notes and made sketches and plans. Dean Walker believes that there is a great future for the tanning industry in Kansas, and this trip will provide him with thoroughly conditions surrounding that industry.
The latter part of the last week was spent at the spring session of the American Society of Mechanical Engineers, which convened Wednesday in New Orleans. The sessions were given over to the discussions of the means of industrial preparedness that is being so strongly advocated by the engineers. This is an important time means of taking the proposed survey and the ways in which this society might aid in the national work, were discussed.
INTERESTED IN WHARFS
The Engineers at the meeting at manifested much interest in the wharfs and docks owned by the state and the city at New Orleans, as well as the drainage and reclamation work that is being done by the city. Dean Walker also reports a very profitable position for the American Sugar Refinery Company in New Orleans, the largest in the world.
PROF. SKILTON TO GIVE LAST LENTEN RECITAL
Prof. C. S. Skilton will give the last of his Lenten organ recitals in Fraser Hall to-morrow at 4:30 o'clock.
He will be assisted by Prof. W. B. Downing. The following program will be rendered:
Five Chorale Preludes ... Bach
Lamentation ... Guillmant
Religious March ... Guillmant
Aria from "Elijah" "It is enough"
... Mendelsohn
Gethsemane
Easter Morning
Otto Malling
Schools Want More Birds
The ten cases of birds prepared by Mr. C. D. Dunker, curator of Dyche Museum, to be sent out to the schools of the state at their expense, have proved inadequate to meet the demand. Many requests for cases have come in that cannot be satisfied from the limited number now available.
Mining Jobs Thick There
Prospects of earning four to five dollars a day in the mines in Arizona have brought several K. U. men to think of turning westward for their summer's employment. Prof. A. C. Terrill, of the department of mining engineering, has received a letter from the school of mines at the University of Arizona which states that there are more positions there for summer than in many other technology than are filled every summer. There is also work for much unskilled labor each summer, according to Prof. Terrill.
The American Chemical Society which is holding a meeting this week at the University of Illinois, Champaign, will meet next week at Lawrence and Kansas City, according to a message received by Chancellor Strong from Prof. E. H. Bailey, who is attending the meeting at Champaign.
IT'S SHAKESPEARE DAY
Herbert Clark Will Begin Tercentenary Tomorrow With Address in Fraser
ANNIVERSARY APRIL 23
Celebrations Are Had Before and After This Date
The real celebration of the Shakespeare Tercentenary will begin at the University with an address by Professor George Herbert Clark tomorrow at 4:30 o'clock. The anniversary of the death of Shakespeare is announced that day of the month, but the date is being remembered in exhibitions both preceding and following that date. The addresses to be given here at the University in honor of this occasion are but a part of an organized movement to have similar lectures given at every university in this country. In the large cities the celebration will take on various forms. It will be a great paneget and similar exhibitions are scheduled for other places.
The exhibit in the hall of Spooner Library is but one of the ways by which the remembrance of the great playwright is indicated. The articles on show here are but reproductions of the originals but they are so exact that for all practical purposes they serve just as well.
One of the interesting facts connected with this anniversary is that the birth and death of Shakespeare may be celebrated on the same day, for according to tradition he was born on the twenty-third of April. That he died on that date is a settled fact, but it is not quite so certain that he was born on that date. The best proof that that was probably his birthday is found in the church book which records his baptism. The record there reads, "1564, April 26—Gulienus; Filius Johannes Shakespeare."
MUST RESERVE TOMORROW
Limit for Seniors' Choice Seats at Prize Play
Reservations for the Senior Play, "Copping the Grapes," may be made Wednesday morning, April 19 at the Bowersock theater. Ten rows in the center section will be reserved until 10:30 tomorrow morning.
Since this is the senior play, the seniors are given the best reserve, provided they make reservations within the time limit.
"Copping the Grapes" promises something new, something different from any senior school that has ever been given, because it was written by one of the class. It deals with K. U. life and everyone who attends can not help but appreciate the local atmosphere which is portrayed.
An effort to secure a large reunion of the class of 1886 during commencement week is being made by Henry E. Riggs, now professor of civil engineering in the University of Michigan. According to a letter written to a friend here, Professor Riggs already has secured the promises to attend of Mr. Buckledge, Miss C. Saran Emery, Miss Julia Flinn, Miss Grieman, Lucilla Palmer Graham, Olin Templin, Mrs. Lena Van Voorish Templin, and Richard Birkbeck who is coming all the way from Camaguet, Cuba.
86 MAY HAVE REUNION
IN COMMENCEMENT WEEK
Howard D. Brown, '19 Engineer,
will spend his Easter vacation
recovering from an operation on his
nose. He leaves Tuesday for Rose-
dale where the operation will be
performed.
Tom Malloy tried to find a man in the School of Law that is bigger than he. In his attempt, he went around measuring everyone he could. Finally, he doubled his tape measure, tried it on Paul Sautter, and found out that Paul was just as big around the waist as himself.
The Weather
The forecast: Unsettled weather tonight and Wednesday, probably showers in east portion, not much change in temperature.
MORNING PRAYERS
Week of April 17 to 20
Leader, the Rev. J. P. O'Brien of Kansas City Missouri, head of the religious educational work of the Connolly churches in the south and southwest.
General subject: "The Conquering
Life—Four of its Essentials." Dally
Wednesday: "An Infallible Remedy."
Thursday: "The Battles that May Be Necessary."
Friday: Vacation—no chapel.
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Official student paper of the Univer- ulity of Yunnan
EDITORIAL STAFF
Chas. S. Sturievant...Editor-in-Chief
BUSINESS STAFF
REPORTORIAL; STAFF
William Cady...Business Manager
Cbas. Sturtevant...Adv. Manager
**MORTGAGE**
Paul Brindley Guy Scrivner
Don Davis Cargl Sproll
Ralph Ellis Charles Sweet
Ellen Glew Greg Wheeler
Jarry Morgan Vernon Moon
Subscription price $3.00 per year in advance; one term, $1.75.
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 a1. communications to
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Lawrence, Kansas.
Phone. Bell K. U. 25.
The Daily Kansan aims to picture the undergraduate students to go further than merely printing the news, by making the University hold; to play no favorites; to be clean; to be cheerful; to be generous; to leave more serious problems to wiser heads, in all, to help the university satisfy the students of the University.
TUESDAY, APRIL 18, 1916.
THE SNAKES HEAD AND TAIL
The Snake's Tail had a quarrel with the Snake to walk in front. The Head said, because you have no eyes and no ears, because you have no eyes and no ears.
"I've met I have. struggle the I move, I
even but I have. struggle the I move, I
about a tree, and you cannot get off the
ground."
The Head said: ...
"Let us separate," he said, himself loose from the Head and crept on; but the moment he got away from the Head, he fell into a hole and was lost.
IT'S A PRACTICAL SUGGESTION
ITS A PRACTICAL SUGGESTION
The graduating classes of the University of Wisconsin, of Ohio State, of Stanford, of the University of Washington, and of Indiana, are this year raising money for the student Loan. Fund as the memorial to be left to their respective Alma Maters. Scores of other colleges have already taken this form of memorial as the most sensitive and the one worthy of supprt.
The senior class at Ohio State is raising $1500 to apply toward the fund. The class has set itself on record as in favor of a "fresh and blood" memorial, one that will continue to bring and keep students in Ohio State, one that will help to lift Ohio State above those schools that continue to follow the traditional plan of cluttering the campus with senseless bric-a-brac.
When graduated from their respective high schools, the members of the present senior class, probably participated in leaving behind some donation in the form of a class memorial. Perhaps it was a rug for the chapel platform, perhaps a clock, or it might have been a picture. Such gifts are not called for at a larger institution of learning, as is the University of Kansas.
And how many seniors can remember what it was their class really did add to the equipment of the school, to which future generations of high school students may look with admiration? The objection to a Student Loan Fund memorial is that it is an intangible form which is unrecognizable by succeeding classes. Suppose it is? The fact still remains that it is in a form where it will really do some constructive good; not only for the University, but for the many students who may be helped. The students borrowing money of the fund pay four per cent interest on it until paid back. The memorial, then, is a constantly growing one, and always in use.
If we must have some tangible evidence that a memorial was left by the classes as they are graduated, a tablet bearing the inscription of the class numerals, together with the amount contributed to the University Loan Fund, might be placed in a prominent position in Fraser chapel.
The loan fund memorial should be given serious consideration.
"Misery acquaints a man with
strange bedfall."—The Tempest.
IS IT GOOD ADVERTISING?
15 11 12 K. U. will be going home to see the Old Home Town, and all the folks, over the Easter vacation. Of course K. U. will make a good appearance, too good, perhaps. John's sporty tie,
his extreme English suit, his jaunty cap, his loud hosse, his blase appearance of boredom will not be acceptable to the Home Town Boys. Mary's mincing prance in her new white or cream colored dress shoes, her abbreviated full skirt which just barely reaches the shoes, her pre-Easter Spring bonnet, and her Vanity Fair air, will be viewed suspiciously by the Home Town Girls.
The Home Town Folks are antagonistic to John and Mary, if the Home Town happens to be small, it resents the self-assured manner which John uses when he says the Little Old Town hasn't grown or changed any. They are irritated by having Mary tell them how it is done at the University.
And on Easter they will say "There she goes, there she goes, all dressed up in her K_| U. clothes."
"That man that has a tongue, I say is no man.
If with his tongue he cannot win a woman."—Two Gentlemen of Verona.
WE'RE CIVILIZED NOW
“Pax vobiscum” said the knight of the Dark Ages, as in his courtly way, he wished you the passing of the day. The Dark Ages were filled with strife, so much so that the Church was obliged to issue a decree, a Truce of God, during which it was unlawful to engage in combat.
Yet honor and chivalry hold sway.
"Pax vobiscum," says the German Boche as he lunges at a French Pierre or an English Tommy during a spirited charge. The present age does not give us a second during the week which might be used for rest. The whole civilized world, with few exceptions, scorns "Pax vobiscum."
Yet ours is an age of civilization.
Tetours is an agile to-
nment. "Tax vobiscum," says the Mexican peon as he brutally murders a Gringo, an American Pig. The lust for blood, the desire for power and the Mexican is not above it.
"Pax vobiscum," mumbled the ancient Monk as he dropped his beads and wished a "peace be with you," upon the passerby.
THOSE WONDROUS WISE PROFS
The following, clipped from the society column of the Topeka State Journal is a gross libel, of course but—but—do you suppose they really did it?
A great joke is going the rounds in federation circles. This week a mondrous wise university professor gave a profound lecture before the club women. Last winter another university professor of equal wisdom gave before a local club the identical many of the same women heard the lecture, and they had listened to a few weeks viiously. Their interest in it consists in the puzzle as to which of the two wise gentlemen composed it.
Essays in Tabloid Tablets
A dinner date. Is a form of diversion. Indulged in. By college men on Sunday evening. Because. There is no other. Way. To spend money Upon the Lord's day. The picture shows. Being closed. And dancing under. The ban. Of Brown. To eat. At home. To find someone. Who is willing. To eat with you. And not. Criticise. The way. You use. Your hardware Dinner dates. Cost from $1. To whatever you let. The stick. You and if you save. Your cash register. Checks. You can get. A coke. For each dollar's worth. But not. A sack of Bull Durham. Because. Tobacco. Costs. More than coke. That is. The cost of lunch. Dinner date is less. Dinner date that you have to reserve. A table in advance. For the extra expense. You get. A clean table. Cloth. And sometimes. A napkin of linen. You can save money. By ordering. A big steak for two. By instead of individual. Cuts. If you make such. A date. Be sure. That some other. Bird. It's not coming. A child. But they are. Considered. A sucker. If you Take some. Other fellow's woman. Out to dinner. And then. Don't get to stay.
DINNER DATES
LET HIM COME
Should thank the stars that we may have
A chance to see old Bill.
If Billy Sunday wants to come
To Lawrence, just to see
The weary students on the Hill;
The children in jail (they)
Should thank the store that
The largest diamond is missing from Gustafson's window. Just wonder now if George Henry Beach knows anything about it.
There was little need of worry in those days when all was velvet and red roses. It was round of cheer from sun up to sun set. Apprentices and shop peekers did the work. At the time and whole pretty verses lauded sweet rose bowers as they picked at some light air from their mandolins.
POET'S CORNER
SOLILOQUY FROM MACBETH
In these days only poetless lover
SOUHLONG FACE SCREEN
Tomorrow, and tomorrow, and tomorrow,
Creep in this petty space from day to
day. In this petty space from day to
day, my yesterday have lighted
fools. The last syllable of recorded time,
The last syllable of recorded time,
The last syllable of death. Out, out, brief
candle.
Life's but a walking shadow, a poor
that struts and heals his hour upon the
And then is heard no more; it is a tale
of sound and dury, Signifying nothing.
—William Shakespeare.
CAMPUS OPINION
A poet can scarcely be expected to be poetically inclined when he must pay nine-hundred dollars for a peep at a first class modern-day bout, or pay at the rate of two cents for the account of the same written by those who have not the slightest knowledge of poetic justice.
Communications must be staged as evidences of good rat but names will not be published if rat is present.
GLEE CLUB ADVERTISING Editor of the Daily Konsultant
The K. U. Glee Club appeared in concert last Thursday night. They appeared again at concession Friday morning. Both times they sang well. I've heard other folks say that the concert given by the club Thurs- was better than those given by club Mon- who this is true, why haven't we heard from the Glee Club before? Why haven't they shown them were alive? Clubs in other schools advertise their Alma Mater by making concert tours over the state and immediate vicinity. It influenced me to come to K. U. was hitched to club when Clarence Sowers appeared as "Harry Lauder," in my home town.
The Glee Club concerts in the smaller towns are mighty good adven- tures.
In the days of the good Queen Bess the barber-surgeons did dress sword wounds received in street frays, cut hair and starch beards, curl mustaches, and tie up love-fuld but ditchers blow and stretch their ribs to stale lights with fresh blood; in the days of Shakespeare the aspiring young writers had their promenade and exchange of news at Paul's, the daily pageants, the trooping of ladies and gallants in velvets and golden chains passing from Whitehall to the city, moving in bower boats along the silverway, and damsels that neither needed to mix biscuit dough or to take the dictates of a poet-fnancier in the sixtieth story of a skyscraper. The Londoner might have spent the day fishing for salmon, an afternoon at the bull ring, or bear batting, or at the theater, or at the court, or gambling and drinking at one of the Breed Street tavernas.
MEN ARE AS THE TIME
"And worse I may be yet: the
worst is not
Glee Club Enthusiast.
How can a poet write poetically when the scales of justice dispatch to the hereafter a husband, who has put away his wife's lover in the true Elizabethan style, by subjecting him to a few thousand volts of retributive force, by taking romantic about an electric light that will do justice to a young poet. In the days of the pompous Queen the court ledgers might read at the close of the day's work, "Today there has been bloody work in the Tower; there are three new heads on the wall; the doors are on every city gate." Can one wonder that Shakespeare after witnessing such daily sights preferred to have Polonius run through with the sword, and preferred to have foul death fall heavily on the head of Banquo? Even the work of the submarines of our Young Turks and our submarines will not rival such a life.
MEN ARE AS THE TIME
Unfruitful are the times that we live in. How can any present day young aspirant to the laurels of the pen ever hope to o'ertop the pressure of the one-time William Shakos-ness of the present day is not in the mood of the new.
In the days of Shakespeare "the sheriffs had to make peace; two men were killed, and many heads were shot." The soldiers' feast, the wrestling in Clerkwell, and the Lord Mayor's opening Bartholomew fair and St. James' fair in the same week. The cups too fast, and the wine was potent."
So long as we may say 'This is the worst.'
He liven in the time of romance, when it was had for the asking. We live in the common, commonest day when even the breaking of the head of the commonest cur dog will transcribe the violator of the laws and custom of mankind, the arrow confines of an electric lighted and machine riveted iron cell.
loll beneath rose bowers. Poets, if there be any, buy their meals with an hour's work of yesterday. Even the rich must work, for when they have no romance, no breaking of heads, nor no stretching of hams about which they might grow poetical, they must be content with工作; and their meals may be sufficiently lined and their homes repaired with greenbacks.
A beautiful scene from the ballet "Nature Rythms" in which Ruth St. Denis and company of dancers appear at the
KEELE'S BOOK STORE. 325 Mass
Typesetter for sale or rent
98 pcs. Paper by the pound. 450
10c. Pictures and Picture framing.
MISS ESTELLA, NORTHROP. Phone
615-278-4900. Carefully
check the label. 736 Mass. Phone
615-278-4900.
CLASSIFIED
LOST—Silver mosh bag Monday in 110 Fraser. Return to Kansan office or phone 16975. Reward. 138-1
Rank Stars
This is the age when the roller towel and the tin cup are spied upon, when hand kissing in itself is dan-
gled with a motion of hydrogen-peroxide is near.
K. U. SHOE SHOE Pantatorium is best place for best results 1482 IHG
LOST—One black Simplex Note Book
No. 6 containing the name of Ruth
Goldsworthy. Please leave at Registrar's office.
Jewelers
Ted Shonn will also give his version of The Twenty-third Psalm
This is the scientific age. Not a time for Shakespeare. To have such he in this day, one would need to attend school full three score and ten years. Poets are no longer born; they are made, scientifically brad. We no longer have art for their bodies. The poet would no longer dare to say "to牙 of dragon, ear of dog," for it is unscientific.
Let the poets rave. The dollar first, is our slogan.
nubbers
PHONE KEENNAN JUMBING CO.
MASS. Phone and Maeda Lamps. 357.
Mass. Phone.
ED. W. PARSONS, Enervaver, Watch-
phone, jewelry. Bell phone 711, 717, 745
WANT ADS
LA DANCE DE RODIN
I. H. DALE, Artistic Job Printing
phone 228, 1027 Mass.
MEN WANTED-For summer works at $4.00 per day guaranteed. See Chas, Campbell at Eldridge Wednesday. 137.2
LOST-On the campus Tuesday
morning, a gold bar pin. Please
leave at Registrar's office in Fraser
Hall.
136-3*
MEN WANTED—For summer work at $4.00 per day guaranteed. See Chas. Campbell at Eldridge Wednesday. 137-2
Bowersock Theatre, Tomorrow Night
FORNEY SHOE SHOP, 1017 Mass. St.
for an a mistake. All work
warranted.
PRICES:— 50c - 75c - $1.00 - $1.50 - $2.00
Tickets now selling
BELL PHONE 10
MIBS M. A. MORGAN, I351 Tennessee
tajingr. prices vary reasonably
tajingr. prices vary reasonably
BELL PHONE 10
BOWERSOCK THEATRE
TONIGHT Paramount Pictures
Cleo Ridgely and Wallace Reid IN
AND
"THE LOVE MASK"
The story of a girl who fought alone and won her right to Riches and Happiness in the world of men. A photodrama thrilling in story and exciting in scene. A combination of two great players as stars in one play.
AND The Sixth Episode of
"The Strange Case of Mary Page "
"THE DEPTHS."
Admission, 10c.
PROFESSIONAL CARDS
HARRY RIDDING. M. D. Eye, ear.
JOHN H. BLDG. Phones. Bldg. 613.
Phone 613. U. Blvd. Phones. Bldg. 613.
DR. H. L. CHAMBERS. Office over
Squires' studios. Both phones.
G. W. JONES A. M. M. D. Diseases of the sternacm, surgery and gynecology. Suite 1, F. A. U. Bldg. Residence, 1201 Ohio St. Phones 35.
J. R. RECHTEL, M. D. D. O. O. $33 Max.
Both phone, phone and residence.
A. C. WILSON, Attorney at law, 742 Mass. St., Lawrence, Kansas.
DR. H, W. HUTCHINSON, Dentist, 309
Parkins Bldg, Lawrence, Kansas.
C. E, ORELIP, M. D, Dick Bldg, Eya
Ear, Ear. Nose and Throat Specialist.
All glass work guaranteed. Successor to
Dr. Hamman.
“To be the next to the last stanzas of a hymn is to enjoy the utmost obscurity in the world,” says Miss Marra Lyman, “because you are never sung.”
PROSPERITY
the new Spring and Summer
Ide Collar have—exclusively—
Lincord Unbreakable Buttonholes
GEO. P. IDE & CO., Makers, TROT, N.Y.
Also Makes of Ide Shirts
15c Each
COLLAR
Ide
2
for
25c
Watkins National Bank
Capital $100,000
Surplus and Profits $100,000
The Student Depository
The College Tailor
PROTSCH
Conklin Fountain Pens Non-Leakable and Self-Filling Sold in Lawrence at F. B. McColloch's Drug Store 847 Mass. St.
THESIS BINDING
Engraved and Printed Cards
A. G. ALRICH
Typewriter Paper 744 Mass. St.
20 MEN WANTED
for summer work at $4.00 per day.
call C. E. Campbell at Hotel Eldridge
WEDNESDAY.
SHUBERT NEXT SUNDAY SEATRS. NOW SELLING
SHUBER NEXT SUNDAY
SAVES 60% NEW SELLING
Direct from 6 months in
芝哥.
TAYLOR HOLMES
In a new comedy—Brimful of fun.
HIS MAJESTY
Bunker Bean
Lee Wilson—Dodds' dramatization of Harry Loomis Saturday
Evening Post, Story
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
THEATRE VARSITY TONIGHT ONLY CLARA KIMBALL YOUNG in "The Deep Purple"
Wednesday: Bessie Barriscale, also Keystone Comedy
Arrow Shirts—guaranteed fast color Sold exclusively by Johnson & Carl
YOUNG MAN!
We just received a shipment of New Spring Suits that are beauties.
Half-lined with silk, all seams piped and hand tailoring of the finest.
Blue flannels, homespuns, stripes and mixtures of the latest patterns.
Regardless of what you have been paying for your suits see these. You will wonder how such values can be put into garments at the price, $15.00.
See Windows.
Colors Guaranteed
The New Piping Rock Bow is Here.
829 Mass. St. SKOFSTAD
829 Mass. St
You Have Got to Admit
that when it comes to expert work and attention to detail, in the cleaning and pressing line, we have 'em all beaten. From the moment you call
510 Bell or 464 Home
until your suit is returned to you, every care and precaution possible is taken. That is one reason why
Owen Service
has become so popular. Here's another:
OUR WORK WILL SATISFY—or we will.
- FISCHER'S SHOES ARE GOOD SHOES
Arrived Today
A large shipment of Women's White Buck high lace, English Walking Boots with white "Neolin" soles and heels.
Beautiful goods, and very Stylish. See them in our window
$6 per Pair
Otto Fischer
Send the Daily Kansan Home
ELEMENTS DELAY MEET
Unsettled Weather Prevents Elimination Matches for Round Robin Tennis Meet
The rainy and windy weather this spring has had a rather demoralizing effect on the Round Robin Tennis Tournament to be played by the women. But when they invite the players out on the courts, then rain and wind would make it impossible to pound the ball over the net for the next week. Consequently, the schedule planned by Miss Hazel Pratt, for women's spring sports.
Not one of the twelve groups, into which the contestants for the prize tennis raquet are divided, have been played off. In fact but few games have been officially finished. Since over 100 women have signed for this practice tournament, the players will be compelled to hustle in order to finish before the real tournament played by experienced swatters will begin.
A set of definite rules governs the Round Robin match. Each woman must play three sets with the other in a game of volleyball be played at any time providing a third person is present to act as referee. This referee must keep score on paper which she must turn in to the player who the player may appear in gym costume.
the difficulties offered by changeable Kansas weather. The gym floor is always in use on rainy days, but not by the tourneyists. With the scheduled time for this first interclass meet among University women scarcely an away the athletes are planning strenuous practice for the next few weeks.
Real racing is being practiced by the swimmers, who will take part in the aqueous meet also scheduled in May, and the swimming elements can play no part and the women are working in good shape to defend their classes in the final climax. Diving and racing will feature several series of stunts and gymnastic feats.
The women interested in the athletic tourney are also practicing under
The Lawrence Ornithology Club took a hike Saturday to Blue Mound by way of Sibleykville in search of new specimens. Many birds that are seldom seen in town were found in great numbers in the country. The most notable bird that was trip was a Sand Hill Crane which was located at the Wakauras on the return trip. It is the only one that has been seen this year by the club.
Sigma Delta Chi smoker at the Beta house Wednesday night.
Fifteen women students are to be selected Friday at 12:20 in Fraser Chapel for the May Fete cast.
All seniors who expect to be graduated this spring and have not filled out their applications for degrees are院 O. Foster's office at once and do so.
Indestructo Trunks Bags and Suit Cases Sold Exclusively by Johnson & Carl
--go on sale tomorrow morning. It is
10 12 14 16 18 20 22 24
Gruen "Wristlet" Watches
The convenience, practicability and attractiveness of Wrist and Bracelet Watches make them particularly desirable, and fully justifies their popularity.
We show them in silver, gold or platinum, and make them clear. We put the enamel on these chased, others are set with diamonds or other stones.
Priced
1965
Silver, from ... $2 upward
Solid Gold ... 20 upward
Golden Coin ... 20 upward
Platinum.
The materials these craftsmen celebrate, Greenman manufacture, guaranteed to be the best obtainable in price and entitled to our endowment. Many of them are also our exclusive designs and there are no dupliates or oftenly jewelled and more expensive ones. The prices that these often charged for commonplace and less
GUSTAFSON "Ye Shop of Fine Quality"
GRUEN
Veri thin Watch
Just 4 More Days 'Till Easter
Which one's the prettiest?
Which one's the prettiest?
When a Woman Needs a Friend
It is when she's choosing a hat. Nevertheless she always wants a big stock of creations to select from.—Doesn't she? That is why 831 Mass, has the name "THE EASTER HAT SHOP."
Take a New Hat Home Easter
Show them all your new spring bonnet and let them enjoy it with you. We've got more to say but the "line's busy"—
Miss Reed Has a Message From the Dressmaking Rooms
“—Flowing ribbon here from a rosette of madonna blue—there's that better—and the bodice in just a little”
WHY WAIT LONGER
Mrs. McCormick
831 Massachusetts St. "The Easter Hat Shop"
Hot Cross Buns Hot Cross Buns
You know the rest. The jingle is in your Mother Goose Book. They're on sale
Tomorrow
California Sun-Made Raisin Bread We need say no more, you know what Sun-Made is
Specials for Clubs. Phone 501 Bell.
Brinkmann's Bakery 933 Massachusetts.
The Dramatic Club will meet this evening in Green Hall at 7308 'c10ck. The play, "Our Aunt from California" will be staged by members of the club. Those in the cast of this play are Bora Lockett, Mabel Elmore, Cook, Porchy Angivew, Hazel Letoubaugh and Vera Blackburn.
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Seniors are requested to call at the check stand and order their caps and hats.
Coach Oleett wants 25 more men out for spring football practice every afternoon. Spring training lasts until April 20.
The postponed meeting of the K. U.
Anti-Cigarette League will be held
Wednesday, April 19, at 7:30 p. m.
in Fraser, room 110. The meeting will
be addressed by Prof. Charles Cockran.
Black Helmets: Important meeting at Delta Tau Delta house, 7:00, Wednesday.
The International Polity Club will hold a business meeting Wednesday evening at the Pki Kappa Psi house, 1140 Louisiana, at seven-thirty oclock.
Black Helmets have important meeting at Delta Tau house Wednesday at 7 o'clock.
THE LID IS OFF
Seats for
"Copping the Grapes, "
Something Different
and you are going to lose out on the keenest bit of dramatic stuff of the year if you don't fork over a pittant little sum and make the date rule look sick on
WEDNESDAY, APRIL 26
Prices 25c, 50c and 75c
IT'S YOUR MOVE NOW
UNIVERSITY BAND CONCERT
Wednesday Evening, April 26.
ADMISSION 25c.
STUDENT TICKET ADMITS.
Fraser Hall, 8 o'clock
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
INSIDE TRACK AT PENN
But Lucky Draw Isn't in Event K. U. Expects to Enter
FATE WITH DES MOINES
If Successful, Squad Will be Entered in Eastern Meet
And now the report comes from Philadelphia that Kansas has drawn luck in two of the three relays it has entered in the Penn Games, April 29. But the worst part about it is that the luck came in the other half, and we expect to enter while in the two-mile relay our "pickins" were very slim.
Tryouts for the Drake meet are being held on McCook Field this afternoon in spite of the bad weather and poor condition of the track. It is probable that eight men will be taken on the trip although Rodkey may be used in both relays if he is in condition to run at all.
The relay entries for the big Philadelphia meet closed Saturday after noon and since that time the drawing for positions in the different relay teams was made, the inside track in the one-mile and four-mile races and a rather poor position in the two-mile race. At present the chances are that only the two-mile relay will be run and the other races will be run, while other races will go to someone else.
Although Kansas entered three teams in the Penn Games it is possible that none will be sent. But the Indians will determine. Moines this week will determine that.
Do you put off buying that policy in the Northwestern because you should or because you can?
Manager Mamiliton is considering taking two men to Philadelphia besides the relay team. Treweeke and Reber will be the lucky men if anyone gets the trip. Treweke will enter the hurdles, high jump and broad jump while Reber will enter the weight events.
The Dramatic Club will meet in Green Hall this evening at 7:30.
L. S. Broughly
Easter Sale Undermuslins
SINGLE COBWEB MODEL
You'll enjoy spending a few moments any day this week looking over the counters of new under muslims both in crepe-de-chines and cambricks and nainsook. Many new and pretty styles in Camisoles, Teddy Bears, Skirts, and Gowns.
Weaver's
MRS. EDNAH MORRISON at 1146 Tenn. St., Does Fancy Tailoring and Remodeling for University Women. Bell Phone 1154J.
INVESTIGATE the merits of CORONA AND FOX TYPEWRITERS
Carter
Sells Them Exclusively in Lawrence
1025 Mass St.
Buy your paper here
T
Easter Opening
SEE OUR EASTER WINDOWS
More new "Piping Rock" ties— ready tied or untied as you prefer, 50c.
News of the Newest
In our hat department you can see two new arrivals—a soft hat called the "Argus" at $3 and a derby called the "Garrick" at $3.50. Either will make a good Easter hat for you.
Just received a new cap style that is decided out of the ordinary. The button is on the front just above the visor and the goes run back from that point. It's called the "Torpede" and shows "high speed." $1.
More new patterns in the "Bullet" cap. $1.50.
New Easter gloves in light gray Buck Skin with black stitching, $1.50—in washable cape, $2—in chamois, $1.50.
Hundreds of new neckwear patterns because the Easter scarf is a very important part of your Easter costume.
Today~Our Store Has Been Made Respondent With Many New Easter styles Which Were Designed Especially for Young Men.
Many of these new creations were made possible to us because of the recent trip to the Eastern markets of our Mr. Radcliffe. He was instructed to purchase the very latest styles he could find in Suits, Top Coats, Hats, Caps, Furnishing Goods, Shoes, etc.
We are glad to invite you to call and see what is probably the most complete and extensive showing of Easter Styles that we have ever been able to show. Come tomorrow.
In our clothing department you will see many new styles and patterns and we believe that it will be easy for you to make a selection. Some of the newer fabrics are English Homespuns, and "Piping Rock" flannels. Stripes seem to be the favored pattern for this season although plain grays, blues and greens are very good style. Young men's clothes is our specialty and we believe these new Easter styles will interest you.
"Styleplus Suits" $17
"Society Brand Suits"
$20 - $25 - $30
Other Special Value Suits $15
Ober's HEAD TO FOOT OUT FITTERS
In our hosiery department you'll find some new Phoenix silk hide in black or white with contrast clocks — Men's are 50c, ladies', $1.
The New Style "Hudder" coat is here. You know it's the light weight knitted top coat which has so many good features—won't wrinkle when packed in a suit case and is mist proof, $25.
The "Harvard" is a new silk shirt by Manhattan—Its beautiful pattern and color combinations will please you, $5.00. The "Cult" is a new fibre silk shirt in a beautiful fancy woven pattern, $3. The "Jacinto" a Manhattan shirt in fancy madras, $2. The "Chase" a fancy madras under our own label, $1.50.
The latest arrival in our shoe department is a new English last Oxford made from "Koko" Russian Calf—Looks like Cordovan but is lighter in weight, $6.
News of the Newest
SEE OUR
EASTER
STORE
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VOLUME XIII.
MANY M.D.S AT COURSES
NUMBER 139
Physicians From All Parts of State Here For Two Weeks' Program
DOING POST GRAD WORK
Another Will be Given at Rosedale April 24 to 28
The new two weeks course for physicians which began Monday morning is being attended by Medical men from many parts of the state. Lectures will be given every day with the exception of Saturday, and next week, from April 24 to 28, a schedule of courses for the physicians and health officers will be held at Rosedale.
duty.
The object of these courses is to enable medical men to take a graduate course short enough so as not to interfere with their regular duties. They are offered free to all who wish to attend them and already it has been found to fill a real need in keeping the graduate in touch with the newest investigations and progress of the profession.
Many will prove of great value in helping physicians to solve the problems which now confront them. "Worm Parasites" was the subject upon which Dr. K., a professor of information and those who attended took voluminous notes. Several University professors are helping to conduct the courses. Professors Dains and Nelson and Dr. K. have lecture, and Doctors Sundwall, Matthews, and Naismith will talk today.
SOLVING NEW PROBLEMS
OUT OF TOWN PHYSICIANS
The following physicians from out of town are attending the courses and lectures: J. H. Snider, Courtland; V. E. Lawrence, Ottawa; W. M. Garden, Greenleaf; H. B. Johnson, Pomona; M. McMalley, Osage; George M. Lisbon, Baldwin; W. F. Richardson, Paxico; Geneva H. L. Leader, Topeka; G. G. Lee, Eolon; W. O. Nelson, W. A. Shaley, Esse N. W. H. Robinson, Eudora; F. N. Nichols, Manhattan; N. M. Coffman, Ford; John J. Sipsey, of the State Board of Health, and H. L. Clarke, both of Topeka.
both of topicals.
The program in Lawrence contains lectures with such subjects as "The New Public Health" "Domestic Water Supply" "Sewarge Disposal" and "Water Bacteriology."
Arbor Vitae Trees Planted— Board Employs Artists
BEAUTIFICATION BEGINS
Owing to the frequent attack of the postman's dog the row of trees that was set out on the north side of the walk running from the gymnasium to the Engineering Building last year, is being replaced this year. The Chinese variety has been used. These trees are extremely hardy species it is thought that they will be able to resist without difficulty the extreme climate of Mount Oread.
This row of trees is only a beginning of the campus beautification plans that are under way. The board has emitted the Hare Harvest Hare, Hare of Hare and Hare landscape artists, to prepare plans for the beautification of the Hill. It is so late that not much actual work can be done this spring. The plan requires for the park to resist, such as the red oak, hackberry, and mollion, on all the slopes.
*prof. W. C. Stevens of the department of botany said this morning, "the plans are being prepared on a great scale in the University of Kansas will without a doubt have the most beautiful campus in the United States."
Y. M. CABINET WILL MEET WEDNESDAY NIGHT
The Y. M. C. A. cabinet will hold its regular meeting on Wednesday evening of this week instead of Thursday, owing to the Easter vacation. T cabinet will take supper together at Brick's Cafe at 5:30 o'clock and at 6 o'clock will hold its regular business meeting in Myers Hall.
At this meeting the chairmen of the various standing committees will announce the names of the men they have appointed as aids to mittees. This meeting marks the act of membership of real Association work for the year.
UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS, WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON, APRIL 19, 1916.
The out door rifle season opened last Saturday for Company M when half a dozen recruits under the command of Lieutenant Sprinkle went to the range at Six Corners. Out of the six who went three qualifiers, Hart and Grinstead as Master Marksmans and Decker as Rifleman. Captain Jones said that each Saturday taken on a few men would be taken out for trial practice. Those taken out this week will be chosen tonight.
THOUSAND TREES BOUGHT
TO BEAUTIFY CAMPUS
A shipment of 1,186 trees has been received by John M. Shea, superintendent of buildings and grounds, for use in beautifying the campus. The shipment includes the following varieties:
50 Chinese arbor vitae, 25 thornless honey locust, 15 green ash, 12 Ruscus buckthorn, 13 Russian Kentucky coffee tree, 25 red buds, 1,000 tamarisk and 25 hackberry.
The arbor vitae have been placed along the walk leading to Marvin Hall and at other points about the campus. The other trees will be placed along the boulevard, about the car tracks, some around the student hospital, about Potter Lake, and on the south and west sides of the Hill.
SMOKER FOR TEACHERS
University Club to Entertain Journalism Professors and Editors Friday
Visiting newspaper men and teachers of journalism attending the meeting of the American Association of Teachers of Journalism, will be entertained by the members of the University Club at a smoker Friday night at 9 o'clock. Franklin Matthews, formerly a correspondent for the New York Sun and now president of Journalism and the Columbia School of Journalism, will at Columbia University, will give his address on "The Citizen and the Press."
Sessions of the journalism teachers' meeting will be held in the theatre in Green beginning Friday morning on Oct. 10 and will adjourn Saturday afternoon.
Among the guests at the smoker will be Governor Arthur Capp, Ed. Howe, J. L. Bristow, H. J. Haskell, Charles F. Scott, F. Pearce, Charles W. Reefer, T. Reir, W. Y. Morgan, Charles M. Harger, William Allen White, and Wait Mason.
At 10 o'clock Saturday morning Albern F. Wilson, an authority on the short story and teacher of the short story at New York University, will speak to the students in Professor Thorpe's short story class. The course includes the special lecture on the short story, will be open to the public.
A group of fifty men gathered to attend the first Estes Park Jubilee in Myers Hall Friday night. Mr. Foster showed his faith in the work of the conference by guaranteeing to ethic give or obtain financial aid to students who did not hate the money to make the trip at the end of the school year.
FIFTY HEAR TALES
OF ESTES CONFERENCE
Rex Miller, Edward Todd and Hugo Wedell were called on for talks in regard to the various phases of Conference work and play by Benjamin Baltzer, chairman of the convention committee of the Y. M. C. A. cabinet.
Preceeding the speaking part of the program, games were played, and boxing matches indulged in. Eats were served during the evening. An announcement was made that the second Estes Park Jubilee would soon be held, at which time another program would be given.
JAYHAWKER THIS YEAR
OUT BY MAY 2 SURB.
The Jayhawker this year is the only annual in the history of the University that will actually be out on the day that has been announced, namely May 2. The sale of the book according to B M Johnson, as high as 30 copies of the De Luxe edition having been sold.
Thyssa W. Amos and Anna Myers, members of Prof. R. M. Schwegler's educational clinic, went to Topeka Tuesday to perform the Kent-Rosanoff test on the pupils of the State Industrial School there. Miss Amos and Miss Myers returned Tuesday evening. They will go later to Parsons to test the pupils of some of the grade schools there with another educational test as a part of their clinical work.
Cargill Sproull, a student in the department of journalism, was given a chance to break into the "big league" last week when he received a telegram from the New York World for a story of 2,000 words on the election of Mrs. Harris of Lawrence as delegate-at-large from Kansas to the Democratic National Convention in St. Louis.
The place for the distribution of the Jayhawker has not been decided upon as yet, but it will probably be as last year, in Fraser. There will be 200 copies to be sold besides those already ordered. These will be in the cheapest edition and will sell at two dollars.
Clement A. Reed, "16 Law, was called to his home in Burlington Monday morning on account of the death of his grandmother.
Test Elementary Students
TODAY'STERCENTENARY
"William Shakespeare" is Title of Address by G. H. Clarke This Afternoon
SECOND LECTURE TONIGHT
Gravesend, England, Is Home of Professor
"William Shakespeare; a Tercentery Address" will be the title of a lecture by Prof. George Herbert Clarke this afternoon in Fraser that will mark the real celebration of the tercentery of the Bard of Avon's death
The real anniversary of the death of Shakespeare comes next Sunday. Both on account of the Easter vacation and the fact that the day is Sunday, nothing could be attempted in the way of a celebration.
The celebration here will consist of two addresses by Professor Clarke. The first will be given this afternoon in Fraser and Ann, and the second at. At the address this evening the subject will be "The Mystery of Hamlet."
Mr. Clarke is professor of English literature at the University of Tennessee. He is himself an Englishman by birth, as he claims Gravesen, England, for his native city. He came to the United States from Canada in 1896. Professor James is interested in other authors than Shakespeare, having edited Bacon's Essays. Selected poems of Shelly and other works. He is also the author of numerous magazine articles on topics in English literature.
"We hope to have a large attendance at the lectures today," said Prof. C. G. Dumpl of the department of English this morning. "It is an occasion that comes very sadm and for season every one ought to get out."
HE WANTS ART CIRCUIT
Professor Griffith Will Work for Monthly Exchange of Pictures
4—Proof, W. A. Griffith, of the School of Fine Arts, will go to Philadelphia during the Easter vacation to attend the meeting of the College Art Association, where exhibitions that are to be exhibited here during Commencement week.
While at the meeting Professor Griffith will read a paper on "Loon Exhibits in College Art Museums", a subject with which he is familiar, was the originator of the loanning of famous pictures by collectors to colleges and universities. In fact, the organization grew out of the uniting of Kansas and Nebraska into a group of pictures together that one of them could not afford to borrow alone.
SOCIETY OF ART TEACHERS
SOCIETY OF ART TEACHERS
As a result of these first attempts
Kansas, Nebraska, Missouri and Illinois united to form a society of art teachers for the obtaining of good pictures and artworks were not part of interest in the work of the Western Art Association, an organization of grade school teachers. The society has grown until now practically all of the large universities and colleges in the country are in the association. Many of the important museums have representatives at the meetings also.
MAY START MAY END
Professor Fifth working on a plan whereby the universities and colleges will be formed into circuits that will borrow the pictures at the rate of two or three a month and send them from one school to another, making a change of pictures either by copying pictures from the history of painting could be most successfully taught as the actual pictures would be before the students and they could follow the movements of paintings by copying the various styles. Better pictures could be two or three really good pictures each month instead of being surfaced on a large collection once or twice a year.
The Sig Alphs defeated the Kappa Sigs in the third game of the Panhellenic series on the west diamond of Hamilton Field yesterday afternoon 8 to 3. The game was close until the sixth inning when the Kappa Sigs had a bad round which counted five runs for the Sigs.
MAY START ART CIRCUIT
SIG ALPHS AND PI UPS
WIN IN PAN-HELLENIC
On the east end of Hamilton Field he Kanza Club fell before the Pipa squad with a 6 to 4 score; game was full of errors on both sides.
Prof. E. H. Hollands of the department of philosophy will leave for St. Louis today to attend a meeting of the Western Philosophical Association to be held Friday and Saturday at Washington University of that place.
To Attend Meeting
MRS. MAY GREEN DIES
Wife of the Dean of the School of Law Ill for Several Weeks
FUNERAL ON THURSDAY
Services at Family Residence Rev. Edwards Officiating
Mrs. May Green, wife of Dean J. W. Green died last evening at eightthirty o'clock. The funeral services will be held at the family residence, 637 Tennessee street, at two o'clock Thursday afternoon, conducted by the Reverend Evan A. Edwards of the Episcopal church.
The funeral will be private and the family request the friends not to send flowers. The relatives are Miss Kate Stephens, of New York, who married Macmillan Co., and a brother, Mr. Edward Stephens of Kansas City.
PRIVATE FUNERAL
Mrs. Green came to Lawrence in 1865 with her father, M. T. Stephens, who afterwards became the judge of the fourth judicial district, of which Douglas county is a part. In 1875 Dean and Mrs. Green were married. Shortly afterwards the law school of the University was organized with Mr. Green as an associate. It was due to Mrs. Green's intellectual attainments of Mrs. Green and largely through her helpfulness and co-operation, that Dean Green became recognized as one of the leading teachers of law throughout the country.
HLL FOR SEVEN VOLTS.
Mrs. Green had been ill for several weeks and incurring the last four days of pain been unconscious. Out of respect to her the Law School has been closed for today and Wednesday by order of the Chancellor. The burial will be held at Oak Hill Cemetery, the members of the faculty of the School of Law officiating as pall bearers.
ILL FOR SEVERAL WEEKS
TALKS ON J. MASEFIELD
Professor Clarke Tells Audience of His Productions and Eccentricities.
George Herbert Clarke, professor of English in the University of Tennessee, lectured on John Massefield in the chapel of Fraser Hall yesterday at 4:30 o'clock. Professor Clarke gave tabloid extracts from a lecture given by the English poet at the University of Tennessee several years ago.
Masefield is a poet of extremes and to show the marked contrast in his production, Prof. Clark read a selection from *From the Beginning* by Bridget Jones, in opposition to that dramatic situation he read a pastoral sonnet. His poems illustrate his ideas of religion and lives of the people. At greatest depth, he imagined a change but would no doubt be Pantheistic.
Masefield admits that his literary heroies Thomas Hardy and although he is pronounced influenced by him, the poet caught the gloom of his favorite more than any other characteristic. The two plays, "The Tragedy of Man" and "Philip the King" contain many Harydisms.
His lyrics indicate the poet's love of nature; "The West Wind" and "The Call of the Sea" are the most popular. The four poems that will lend permanent value to literature are "Daffodils," "The Widow in Bye Street," "Dauber," and "The Everlasting Mercy."
Extend Time for Senior Dues
The time in which the members of the senior class may pay their dues has been ceased. Mr. Harold Carack, chariman of the committee, this will rush the class some in deciding how the money shall be spent but owing to the fact that several of the committee have been sick and were unable to look after lessons, it was thought he should be moved. Then he added, "Perhaps collections will be better after vacation."
Extend Time for Senior Dues
The Theta Tau fraternity held its annual banquet Tuesday evening in Eckle's Hall. The festivities which coincided with a four course dinner beamed at 7:30, after which toasts were in order. Those who responded to the call of the toastmaster Tony James, were, Prof. H. A. Rice, Prof. G. C. Shaad, Willard A. Burton, Paul A. Dichl and Clyde Van DerLip.
Theta Taus Banquet
Women who have not paid their class dues will not be allowed to vote at the University of Illinois in the spring. The senior, junior and sophomore officers.
Miss Ruth Cope, who attended the University during the year of 1913-14, visited Miss Agnes McDonald at 1400 Tennessee during the week end. Miss Cope is now attending the State Normal at Emporia.
LAWRENCE HIGH SCHOOL
TO GIVE LATIN EXHIBIT
An exhibit of interest to University students will be given at the Lawrence high school tomorrow which will show that Latin has a close relation with our modern life. The exhibition is in the form of charts showing the striking similarity of the Latin and English languages.
At 3:30 o'clock in the afternoon a Latin play will be presented by the Latin students of the high school. University students are invited to attend this. Miss Gracia Blair and Miss Maud Mauffet, both K. U. graduates, are in charge of the play and exhibit.
OSBORNE PLAN LAUDEI
Prof, Clarke Says Prison Reform is Great Success in Sing Sing Penitentiary
"Thomas Mott Osborne's new method of handling prisoners is a great success in Sing Sing penitentiary; my recent visit to the prison I made a painstaking investigation of conditions there, firmly convinced me of this," declared Prof. Herbert Clarke, of the University of Tennessee, in an address yesterday evening at University club smoker given in his honor.
"Mr. Osborne impressed me as a man with a big brain and an even bigger heart—a man who is doing his work purely for the sake of the humanity, think of him and his work is illustrated by the reply of one of the convicts whom I asked what would happen if the old method of procedure at work was reverted to. His answer was, The would be he to pay, Mr. Clarke.
After Professor Clarke had concluded his remarks, he suggested that Dean F. W. Blackmar talk because of his intimate knowledge of penal situation in the old West and the most natural home to society when he is cured. The trouble is that, although we admit that the criminal is governed by too much individual freedom, he allows him to speak to nobody for a term of years and so cultivate in him ten times the individualism with which he started out, and then turn him loose on society at the end of his life. He dreamed that he shall take his proper place in our social system.
ENTERTAINMENT FOR PRISONERS "Nearly every night." Professor Clarke continued, "an entreatment is given to the prisoners of the womb, of whom there are more than 1,700. Because of the small auditorium, they are divided into two squalls. The worst cells are seven and a half feet long by four and a half foot wide. The sanitary conditions frightful, as is common in the south. The Georgia is typical of the south. The prisoners there work in chain gangs."
OLD SYSTEM AILED
"Susan a system which a treatment is dazed by much helpless; in fact, mentally and morally incapable of adjusting himself to the new state of affairs.
The result is that he usually drifts back to the penitentiary."
OLD SYSTEM ALL WRONG
Forty attended the smoker. Among those present were: Chancellor Frank Strong, Fearn F. W. Blackmar, Dean Olin Templin, Pearn F. P. Walker, Dr. John Sundwall, Dr. S. A. Matthews, Prof. Arthur Nevin, Prof. R. M. Ogden, Prof. C. G. Dunlap, and Prof. H. C. Thurnau.
BAND PLAYS IN FRASER
A WEEK FROM TOMORROW
The University band appears in concert the Wednesday evening following the Easter recess in Fraser Hall at eight o'clock. A splendid program has been arranged, including "Tannhauser Overture," Sextette from Lucia, and "Dance of the Hours." In speaking of the conflicting of dates with the senior play, Director McCanles said, "Copping the grapes" copped their date and they are no available ones left."
Prof. H. A. Mills will give two courses in economics primarily for graduate students in the Summer Session of the University of Chicago this year. The courses are to be "Public Finance," and "Labor Problems."
The Weather
The forecast: Fair and cooler to night. Thursday Fair and warmest west portion.
MORNING PRAYERS
Week of April 17 to 20
Leader, the Rev. J. P. O'Brien of Kansas City Missouri, head of the religious educational work of the Congregational churches in the south and
General subject; "The Conquering
Life Four of its Essentials." Daily
news.
Thursday: "The Battles that May Be Necessary."
Friday: Vacation—no chapel.
Wilson's Appearance Before Joint Session of Congress Portends a Break
HAS HAPPENED SIX TIMES
Prof. Davis Thinks President is Playing Safe
Diplomatic Breaks of the United States
3. 1835. Diplomatic relations broken off with France for a year.
2. 1812. John Madison sent a message to congress and followed eighteen days later, June 17, 1813, in an attack of war against England
6. April 19, 1916. President Wilson appeared in person bewildered regarding diplomatic relations between Germany and the United States.
5. 1898. Mckinley sent message to congress regarding California fourteen days, April 30. Fourteen days declared war upon Spain.
1. The X. Y. Z. Papers, 1798.
John Adams sent correspondence to Congress regarding relations with France, air warfare and actual fighting for eighteen months upon the high seas.
4. 1846. Polk sent message to congress declaring that state of war existed between Mexico and the United States. Two days later, May 13, congress recognized the state of war.
JUST LIKE ADAMS
With the appearance of the president before a joint session of congress the German situation assumes a serious aspect. Heretofore the president has delivered messages to congress only over the most critical situations and both times, after the delivering of a message by Presidents Madison and Polk, a declaration of war followed.
The appearance of the president upon the floor of congress closely resembles that of John Adams when after a long diplomatic controversy with France, he sent a strong message to congress demanding a settlement of the controversy. The outcome of the whole during the Adams administration on page 3)
FOREIGN TEXTILES HERE
An old Japanese priest's cape, made by cutting brocade into small pieces and sewing them together, thus preserving the tradition that the priests shall dress in rags, is one of the unique articles to be found in the packet received by the department of home economics this month.
Home Economic Students Get Samples for Study
Fabrics of different kinds and designs, including numerous pieces of German, French and Austrian origin, are in this way circulated among the departments of home economics of the various universities each month. For instance, the faculty of Wisconsin and is forwarded to the University of Nebraska, thus helping to complete the circuit.
The price, quality, place of manufacture, and history, if any, are given on small tags which are attached to the articles, and orders for the materials may be sent to the secretary to be filled. Some of the materials are not now available because of the war, but a great many of them are manufactured in America and can be obtained.
Miss Grace B. Kelton, an artist,
Columbus, Ohio, is the secretary of
the club, and assists in making up
the sample display.
Louie La Coss, news editor of the Parson Daily Sun, will be home for the Easter holidays. It was under Mr.Coss's editorship that the Daily Kansan changed from a weekly to a daily.
The date rule does not apply to seniors in the University of Oklahoma. Beginning with the opening of the second semester they are allowed dates every night in the week if they choose.
De Paun University dedicated a
new modern gymnasium, and the day
was filled with a holiday. The building
is 125,000 square feet, known as the
Bowman Memorial Gymnasium.
Send the Daily Kansas home to the folks.
---
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Official student paper of the University of Kansas
EDITORIAL, STAFF
Chas. S. Sturtevant...Editor-in-Chief
William Cady. .Business Manager
Cass. Sturtevant. .Adv. Manager
REPORTORIAL. STAFF
Paul Brindel
Don Davis
Ralph Ellis
Joel Hill
Jerry Morgan
Guy Scriver
Cargil Spilloul
Charles Sweet
Glenn Sweet
Victor Moore
Subscription price $3.00 per year if
advance; one term, $1.75.
Entered an second-class mail mailsite office in Lawrence, Kansas, under the office of the Postmaster General.
Published in, the afternoon five
wives of Kannan, from the press of
variety of Kannan, from the press of
Address a. 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 University of Kansas; to go further than merely printing the University holds; to play no favorites; to be clean; to be cheerful; to be a good person; to be a generous; to leave more serious problems to wiser heads, in all, to serve the best of humanity the greatest good.
WEDNESDAY, APRIL 19, 1916
THE OAK AND THE HAZELBRUSH
The Hazelbrush is in
Hazelbrush. The Hazelbrush said to
the Hazelbrush.
"Have you not enough space under your desk to hold your acorns in an open space. Here, crowded by my shoots, and I do not drop my nuts to the ground but give them a break."
have lived for two hundred years-
have survived from a great apocalypse
japonic from the acorn will live
"If so, I will choke your Oakling, and
I will not live for three days."
Then the Hazelbrush flew into a rage and said;
for three days.
The Oak mat made the told his son to sprout out of that acorn. The acorn got wet and burst, and clung to the ground in its crooked rootelet, and swirled with acorns.
The Hazelbrush tried to choke him, but he managed to spread upward and grow stronger in the process. The dead years passed. The Hazelbrush had gone to great lengths that soared towered to the sky and was lost.
—Leo Tolstol. —Aesop.
GET THE $100 PRIZE MONEY
The University of Kansas, has bee asked to enter a $150 essay contest financed by the National Foreign Trade Council. Unlike other contests which have had prizes so large as a hundred dollars for the winner, the competition is to include only those students in the University rather than the whole United States.
See Professor Millis, or any member of the committee, for information relative to entering the contest.
The students entering the contest, may feel with certainty that the same bibliography will be used by all, and that the same time must elapse before the fifteenth of June, when all essays are due. The subject, which deals with the development of foreign trade through an adequate merchant marine, should make interesting reading. It is a live question at present, and is becoming more important every day.
"SWEARING OFF"
Ever swear off? Who of us has not?
A Michigan alumnus gives a different method of changing his habits. Instead of swearing off forever and forever, he just takes a grip on himself and says he won't do it this once.
Then as each time arrives, he settles the matter on the spot. He doesn't swear off. He just decides he won't do it this time.
It does sound easier doesn't it?
"Lord, what fools these mortals bc.'
-Midsummer Night's Dream.
A PICTURESQUE JOURNALIST
With the sudden death of Richard Harding Davs there passed a soldier of fortune and a seeker of adventure as romantic as any ever found within the pages of his liveliest novel. Novelist, dramatist and war correspondent, he might easily be the pictureed hero of many a small boy's fervid imagination. His work and interests carried him to the smoking lines of wars from Turkey to Japan and his natural tendencies as an explorer led him from the snowes of Alaska to the jungles of South Africa.
He was born in Philadelphia, 1864; his sudden death at fifty-two years of age was therefore, premature. The world has been deprived of many an interesting tale of adventure and many a story from the battle front of the present war, and wars impending. Others will probably come up to take
his place in the ranks of journalists and authors, but no one will be quite able to fill the place he has left vacant
In the Turkish-Greek war, in the Spanish-American, in the South African and Russian-Japanese, Mr Davis acted as correspondent for the London Times and the New York Herald. His name has figured in the liveliest stories ever submitted "from the front." Among his novels "Soldiers of Fortune" is probably the best known, and the earliest to be dramatized.
Richard Harding Davis—the name has stood for much in American literature, and what it has stood for will not rapidly fade from the public memory.
"Some rise by sin, and some of virtue fall."—Measure for Measure.
A HOUSE DIVIDED
Does the condition in the Reichstag foretell the entrance into the war of an enemy more powerful to Germany than the Allies? Press reports tell the story only in part. Of just how much importance is the attitude of the masses toward the ruling body of Germany?
Past the censor's pencil leaks the news that Herr Lenkebnick, Socialist leader, was twice officially silenced as a recent meeting of the body because of his views on the submarine policy. The members are reported as disagreeing radically on the advisability of the Berlin to Bagdad campaign. Capitalist groups have appeared that hold widely different views on this and other matters.
Just how strong is the love for the Fatherland? Will the disagreement lead to the division of a house against itself?
Jayhawk Squawks
The only way to keep your friends
in touch is to suspect what you
really think of them.
Abe Godfrey, who has been in the city the past year, says he is going home Easter to hear a sermon preached from the Bible.
"Dubbs had a bad automobile accient."
"How was that?"
"He broke a spring and was nearly drowned."
When a motorcycle doesn't make its customary amount of noise, its owner might be shocked.
Anyway, the father of a scapegrace son doesn't bore his acquaintances telling of the latter's achievements.
No, the Eternal Grind wasn't a Ph Beta Kappa.
"I see," said Mrs. Gottit Twisted,
"where three tons of coal are being washed. They'll never get that stuff clean!"
Is he a gay fellow? Well, I should say so. He's as Gaius Julius Caesar?
One of the times when a fellow needs a friend is when his "Boston's"
All is not ford that rattles.
Don't judge a German by what he
does to a woman by the arrangement
of his hair.
Shooting stars—the newsboy delivering an evening paper.
Essays in Tabloid Tablets
"The Soph Hop. Is well named When one. Considers. The new Dances. "Hops." Says the chaptero Is "right." If you. Do not do hop. Acording to, Be coeds. You can climb and if you. Do not do the dancing. Teachers. You can't So you are between. The devil. And the deep. Blue sea. But the hop. Is really not a hop. At all. But rather a hug. The double. Nelson grip Which K. U. Dancers use. Makes it. The hop this year. You say. The hop will have marital (artificial). Dance. If it. Does. It may end. In a prize fight. For some Coeds. Object. The hop. Will also. Spring a serpentine. Carnival. (See R. St. Denis. Tonight.) Which may Shock. The chaps. Who belong to. M. of they. The hop is popular. Beneath it. The Necessate soup and fish. Clothes. For men. As the prom. Does. You can buy. A palm beach. For what. A plate glass. Front. Rents for. If you go to the. The do not Expect to. Get home. Before the milkman. That we see. On Do Doves. Posters. Is carried out. It will take. At least. A week.
Send the Daily Kansan home to the folks.
THE SOPH HOP
BEAUTY
BEAUTY Beauty is but a gloss that doubtful good.
A dainty. A gloss that doubts sud-
dness.
POET'S CORNER
A howler that dies, when first it guts to
a bottle glass that's broken open.
A brittle glass that's broken prox enly.
ARE THERE UNIVERSITY MASHERS?
Poem from Shakespeare.
entire.
A delicate good, a gloss, a glass, a
flower.
5. There is already a rule in force here compelling a girl to fill her room if she moves out. Why should the Panhellenic take the question up? It is not necessary. They are rooms sign the agreement. If they do this no trouble will arise.
4. The women will have daytime dates away from the house, if forbidden the use of the houses. Do our mothers want us to room in houses on the street? Friends on the street? I do not think so. A girl should have the right to have company at her house if it does not interfere with her work. The women students would be justly indigent at a rule forbidding afternoon date.
ently.
A doubtful good, a glass, a glass, a
CAMPUS OPINION
—One Who Rooms at a Rooming House.
CAN "QUIET" REIGN?
And that's the joke of it! Can "Quit?" reign in a girl's rooming house? It's absolutely impossible—But, seriously, what is all this foolishness about so many rules for the young women of the University? It would seem that they are little children, so to keep themselves. The present date rule is reticent enough, but to make more rules is adding insult to injury.
THE LAND-LADY RULES
Communication must be signed as evidence of good conduct, and the work should be published without the writer's consent.
"Resolved, that study hour begin at eight o'clock and quiet continue throughout the evening"—resolution number two of the landlades' peti-
2. The rule for quiet hour from 8:00 o'clock on is favored by everyone.
3. The students certainly are not in favor of changing the closing hour. It would be better and deliberation that the women established the present 11:00 o'clock rule, and I can see no good reason why we should change. The women want 11:00 o'clock, and I can see no reason they should deliberately disregarding their wishes.
Lawrence is noticeably free from many of the unpleasant conditions that exist in a large city, and because of these conditions women students in K. U. have been able to do many things including running for City One of the things that women have felt free to do is to go to a picture show in the evenings in couples or in groups unsecreted. But lately a condition has risen known to the city police as "mashing" and is associated with Lawrence men, but by University men.
The petition which he was handed to the W. S. G. A. by the landlades asking that new rules be passed disillusions a number of the Women of the University. We had thought that this institution was regulated for the benefit of the students, but if such petitions as this are to be considered, we should ask the students for the benefit of the landlades. The students are men and women and are treated as such by the University authorities, but not so by the landlades. The University considers its students capable of governing themselves but the landlades needs must take a hand and dictate not only what kind of an audience they have to breathe, but they would measure every breath and action of our guests as well. What are you, the members of the W. S. G. A., going to do about such Boarding School rules as the ones that have been submitted, by this committee of landlades, who make their living off the students? I have investigated this petition quite thoroughly and find this to be the general opinion, of the respective rules which were submitted.
1. The grad women should have a representative if they want one, but the grad women themselves should deal with that question. The rules certainly show
Vaded, broken, dead, within ar hour.
According to the proposed rules, if one had all lessons prepared for a week, with 40 minutes per lesson,
Indignant.
Reports have come from numerous groups of girls that when coming home *from* the picture show or the post office in the evening, they have been followed by couples of University men, or else have been accosted with women who are asking their there girls," or "Ah, there, Mary." The situation has become so unpleasant that many girls are refusing to go out in the evenings unless escorted or chaperoned. In a town as large, or as small as Lawrence this is an entirely unnecessary condition. The names of a number of the men arraymen are known and conduct is "high schoolish," to say the least.
Editor Daily Kansan:
any other young women to a picture show—she must begin to study at eight. And worse than ever—they will not allow daytime dates! What's the reason for this rule? "Of course for this mission to go to the picture show when they are in the afternoon. She might be late for supper." Is that the reason?
It all seems like foolishness to me. When a young lady comes to the University, if she has no mind or individuality of her own, she is supposed to develop one. Surely she should have a daydream, not 'n the daytime.-But no, they seem o the landlades to be mere infants o be tied to apron strings.
G. I. M. Disgusted More.
WANT ADS
LOST—On the campus Tuesday morning, a gold bar pin. Please leave at Registrar's office in Fraser Hall. 136-3'
MEN WANTED -For summer work at $4.00 per day guaranteed. See Chas. Campbell at Eldridge Wednesday. 137-2
MEN WANTED-For summer work at $4.00 per day guaranteed. See Chas. Campbell at Eldridge Wednesday. 137-2
LOST—One black Simplex Note Book No. 6 containing the name of Ruth Goldsworthy. Please leave at Registrar's office.
FOR RENT—On Mt. Oread, June 12,
sorority or fraternity room. First
floor, front and back parlor, large
dining room, kitchen, pantry; second floor
4 bed rooms and bath; third floor, 4
bed rooms and bath. Hot water heat.
Electric lights. Call M. S. Root, Bell
1428W. 139-3
DARBER WANTED—For evenings and Saturday work. Inquire at K. U. Y, M. C, A. 193-8
CLASSIFIED
Book Store
KEELERS BOOK STORE, 329 Maa
St. Typewriters for sale or rent.
School supplies.
Paper by the pound, school
10c. Pictures and Picture framing.
ED. W. PARSIGNE, Engagver, Watch-
gather, Jewelry. Bell phone 711, 717, Mass.
MISS ESTELLA NORTHRUP. china
careerally handled the .75. Phone
careerally handled the .75. Phone
K. U. SHOE SHOP and Pantatorium is the best place for best results 1342 Ohio
PHONE KENNEDY PLUMING CO.
Mazda. Mazda Lamps. M375.
M宫殿. M宫殿.
Balancing
B. H. DALE, Artistic Job Printing
Both phones 228, 1037 Mass
FORNEY SHOE SHOP 1017 Mass. St.
a mistake. All work
guaranteed
MRS M, A, M. MORGAN, 1831 Tennessee
taking up the role of the
laboring force very reasonable
Dressmaking
DR. H. L. CHAMBERS. Office over Squires' suite. Both phones.
HARRY RBDING, M. D. Eyer, ear-
cone, Bldg $12, U.Bldg, Phones, Bell $3;
G, W, JONES, A, M, M, D. Pleasance
D. JONES, A, M, M, D. Pleasance
Real-Time
128th Chicago St. Phoenix, Rea-
lime-Time
128th Chicago St. Phoenix, Rea-
lime-Time
J. R. BECHTEL, M. D. D. O. 833 Mass
Phone. Both phones, office and residence.
A. C. WILSON, Attorney at law, 748
Mass. St. Lawrence, Kansas.
DR. H. R. BUCHTINSON, Dentist. 80
Perkins Bldg. Lawrence. Kansas.
C. E. ORELIP, M. D., Dick Bldg. Eye
B. D. Hammond, Guaranteed. Successor to
D. B. Hammond.
For parties, banquets, committee feeds, etc., call 92 on the Bell for reservations. Let us prepare your next picnic lunch.
At 900 Tennessee
RAYMOND'S
PRINT-DRING 900M
UNIVERSITY WOMEN!
PRIVATE DINING ROOM
We do Fancy Tailoring and Remodeling.
MRS. EDNAH MORRISON,
Bell 1154J. 1146 Tenn. St.
We do ladies tailoring and dressmaking at very reasonable prices. Competent assistants.
University Women
MRS. M. A. MORGAN
1321 Tenn. Phone B 1116 W
a for 35$
Ashby-2½" Lexicon-2½"
ARROW COLLAR spring style, in two heights
CLUFT PEABODY & CO. INC. MANHAS
Just 3 More Days 'Till Easter
A woman in a hat.
Home
That's where you are going tomorrow or Friday. You have just time to come down and make a selection before you go.
Let the Home Folks see that New Hat.
Why Wait Longer?
With Distinction
You will have no better time than the present to make your choice. "Next Week" is after Easter.
We have the new Crepe de Chine flowers. We are ready to show our stock—we appreciate your patronage.
Make a
Memory Note—
Come in and see her before you go so that you can tell the people back home about your choice.
Is the way Miss Daisy Re is making the new party dresses in our dressmaking r o o m s.
Mrs. McCormick's
Tomorrow
EASTER IS HERE WHY WAIT LONGER?
Mrs. McCormick
831 Massachusetts St.
"The Easter Hat Shop"
ain't I the placid one?
Let the Beans Spill!
Such jars as those irk me not at all. I tie the can to care and bid misfortune go roll its hoop. You ask me whence the source of all this swank, swagger and supreme sassiness?—
Smoke "Tux" for serenity, comfort and content. No other tobacco will please your taste so thoroughly and so permanently you'll never tire of "Tux".
Tuxedo The Perfect Tobacco for Pipe
That's because it's made of Burley leaf—full of sweet flavor and rich relish. And because it's had all the harshness and "bite" taken.
out of it by the original and ex- clusive "Tuxedo Process," so that you can smoke it all day long with increasing pleasure and no regret.
YOU CAN BUY TUXEDO EVERYWHERE
Convenient, glassine wrapped,
moisture-proof pouch . . . 5c
Famous green tin with gold
lettering, curved to pocket 10c
In Tin Humidier, 40c and 80c
In Glass Humidert, 30c and 90c
THE AMERICAN TOBACCO COMPANY
PATTERSON'S
Fuxedg
TOBACCO
SPECIALTY PREPARED
FOR PIPE & CIGARETTE
PROTSCH
The College Tailor
THESIS BINDING
Engraved and Printed Cards
A. G. ALRICH
typewriter Paper 744 Mass. St.
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
4.
THEATRE VARSITY TONIGHT ONLY Bessie Barriscale "THE LAST ACT"
By the Producers of "Peggy"
ALSO—A Good Two-Reel Keystone Comedy
THURS., House Peters in "The Hand of Peril"
Arrow Shirts-guaranteed fast color Sold exclusively by Johnson & Carl
FLOWERS FROM THE FLOWER SHOP
are always'n pleasure to receive. Arrangements superior to all others. The keeping qualities are well known. A comparison is all we ask of the uninitiated.
MR. AND MRS. GEO. ECKE. Leading Florists 8251 j Mass. 81
Phones 621.
WORK?
Yes, we have been to a good deal of work to make our place attractive to
University Men Stop in at
820 Mass. St.
Open evenings
and look over our
stock of
"High Grade Clothing for Less Money"
Ideal CLOTHING CO
Come to our store for anything you need for your
Kodak
Fresh films always in setok,
as well as Developing Tanks,
Velox paper,—general supplies
of all kinds.
Come in and see us. We can give you some valuable pointers.
And for the developing and finishing of your pictures, our prompt, painstaking service is sure to please you.
Evans Drug Store
819 Massachusetts
MRS. EDNAH MORRISON at 1146 Tenn. St., Does Fancy Tailoring and Remodeling for University Women, Bell Phone 1154J.
INVESTIGATE the merits of CORONA AND FOX TYPEWRITERS
Carter
Sells Them Exclusively in Lawrence 1025 Mass St.
Buy your paper here
Conklin Fountain Pens Non-Leakable and Self-Filling
Non-Leakable and Self-Filling Sold in Lawrence at
F. B. McColloch's Drug Store 847 Mass, St.
The University of North Carolina, with an enrollment of only 1196, has nearly 100 men out daily for baseball practice.
Grad Announces Engagement Dr. and Mrs. W. A. Minnick of Wichita have announced the engagement of Joe Denten Howard, of Chicago. The wedding will take place the latter part of September. Mr. Howard attended the University of Kansas and was graduated from the School of Engli-
phology at the University with the Western Electric Company with headquarters in Chicago.
Among the many persons mince seats at Sunday night's choral Union service was William H. Jennings, '19 College. Jennings, however, is a fair man. He was not always although he was but one of several hundred leaning on the walls. During the program he spied one lone seat, but that was enough. Taking a loose plank, Jennings placed it on the seat and sat upon it while his friend sat opposite end. People nearby smiled but Jennings et al had seats.
"Safety first, by all means," says Al Herron, 16 College of Education, describing a trip he took Friday to the University of Georgia. He goes thirty-seven miles on a local train.
Send the Daily Kansan home to the folks.
Would you like to look over the typewritten list—eighteen feet long—of the Northwestern policy holders of Lawrence?
L. S. Beughly
SITUATION IS SERIOUS
ASK FOR and GET HORLICK'S THE ORIGINAL MALTED MILK Cheap substitutes cost YOU same price.
(Continued from page 1)
SHUBERT NEXT SUNDAY SEATS NOW SELLING Direct from 6 months in Chicago TAYLOR HOLMES In a new comedy—Brimful of fun. HIS MAJESTY Bunker Bean Lee Wilson Dodd's Dramatization of Harry Leon Wilson's Saturday Evening Post Stories
administration was that diplomatic relations were broken off and though war was not declared actual sea control was achieved by the two powers for eighteen months.
Watkins
National Bank
[Capital $100,000
Surplus and Profits $100,000
The Student Depository
Easter Cards
Booklets, Mottoes and Novelties
New Books
"Prudence of the Parsonage,"
"Real Adventure,"
"Heart of the Blue Ridge,"
And Others.
Popular Copyright Books
New Stock. One Hundred and
Fifty Different Titles.
See Window See.
WAR FOLLOWS BREAK!
Among the first class powers there has been only one instance where war does not follow the breaking off of diplomatic relations. This occurs in the present instance of the severing of relations between Germany and Italy without a declaration of war on the part of either.
Popular Copyright Books
However, there was a period of a year that diplomatic relations were broken off between the United States and France in 1835 after France ministration. In 1835 trouble grew out of the failure of the French government to settle certain debts and over the language used by Presidents and their ministers. War was not declared.
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MADISON AND POLK MESSAGES
After the sending of messages by Presidents Madison and Polk, congress followed up almost immediately with a declaration of war upon the powers in question. After the message from President Madison, June 1, 1812, it was eighteen days before Congress declared a war of war. At this time there was a strong element in both houses against war. Upon the receipt of the message from President Polk declaring that a state of war existed between Mexico and the United States, congress followed up immediately with a declaration of war. In this
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case there was no other alternative for congress other than to back up
In the case of the declaration of war upon Spain, April 25, 1898, President McKinley had his legislative powers radical in favoring war with Spain.
CARRYING OUT POLICY
It is the opinion of Proof W. W. Davis, of Harvard history that the method pursued by President Wilson in going to congress for counsel upon the strained relations between Germany and the United States is merely the carrying out of his policy of a closer co-operation between the chief executive and the legal body, and his policy of playing safe.
NOTE SIMILAR TO ULTIMATUM
The recent note to Germany in regard to armed liniers which had the backing of congress was quite similar to the one Professor Davis. He says that it differed in that it failed to give the alternative should the German government disregard the terms as set forth in the note. Professor Davis considered that Germany has disregarded the terms a few months end, and that the Sussex was sank without warning he considers as conclusive.
Professor Davis says that the present congress is quite like that one of Madison's administration in its attitude toward war. The president will be called upon for a decision proved in earlier cases were the houses of congress called upon for a decision regarding diplomatic trobles, that the members of the legislative body are much more conservative in their approach that will involve this country in war.
$2.50 in goods FREE
Surety Coupons are the means The Jones Store Co., of Kansas City takes to divide its profits with loyal customers. With each 10c purchase made in the Jones store goes one Surety Coupon.
A full book of Surety Coupons is worth $2.50 to you, for you can exchange it in the Jones store for $2.50 in goods just the same as cash.
To more widely advertise and get more people to saving Surety Coupons we will give for one day—all day—Monday, April 24.
Triple Surety Coupons
Round Trip Railroad Fare Paid
This means that you get three Surety Coupons instead of one for every 10c you spend next Monday, or an absolute saving of just $7 \frac{1}{2} $ per cent of everything you buy.
to out-of-town customers on the basis of 5 per cent refund up to the amount of their round trip railroad fare.
Come Next Monday and Start Saving Surety Coupons
THE JONES STORE
Kansas City's Profit Sharing Store.
Easter Greeting
Copyright Hart Schaffner & Marx
When you blossom out at Easter time with the rest of the people, and the rest of the world, you had better do it in a Hart Schaffner & Marx Varsity Fifty-Five suit.
At Easter Time
Here they are in the different variations, two and three button models, plain and patch pockets, nifty stripes and fancy weaves.
Plenty of beautiful Easter suits at $18.00 to $30.00
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Peckhams
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寿
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
CHINESE INVADE K. U.
University of Hawaii Team Will Battle With McCarty's Men Monday and Tuesday
The Chinese baseball team will invade Lawrence Monday and Tuesday afternoons to make an attack on McCarty's squad. The latter will not have much reinforcements for the first battle in the line of rooters because of Easter vacation but the second battle should see the bleachers loaded.
This is the annual visit of the University of Hawaii team to Lawrence and the games always attract considerable attention. The visitors are real Chinese students taking their tour of America last year they lost only twenty-two games during the season. One of these games was lost to the fast Kansas队 and the credit of the victory goes to Red Craig. With Smee on back, this year's Kansas might be able to slip up on the foreigners for a couple of games.
These two games will be the only ones in Lawrence next week and McCarty's men will have time to get in good shape before their next conference games with the Kansas Aggies which come on May 5 and Craig
will be on the mound for the first Chinese game with Weltmer behind the bat. Smee will work the second game.
ANNOUNCEMENTS
All seniors who expect to be graduated this spring and have not filled out their applications for degrees are held on Monday, O. Foster's office at once and do so.
Meeting of the Sigma Xi Society called for this Thursday has been postponed until next Thursday. M. Stevens.
The K. U. Debating Society will not meet tonight. One week from tonight the year's work will close with a picnic.
The Botany Club meets tonight at 7:30 p.m. in room 203 Snow Hall, D. J. Pratt, fellow in botany, will speak in Dr. Anatomy of Cyclamen at triplicifolium.
Sigma Delta Chi smoker set for tonight at Beta house postponed until next week.
Franklin Lecture Postponed—Owing to conflicting dates, the lectures of Dr. E. F. Franklin have been indebtedly postponed.
Bowersock Theatre Tomorrow PAULINE FREDERICK
IN
"SOLD"
The current production on the Paramount program requires no other recommendation of merit. Yet, in addition to these noted players, the subject possesses a measure of interest almost incalculable. In its emotional and dramatic appeal, "Sold" outrivals any of the recent dramatic screen offerings, with the possible exception of the "Eternal City."
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It will be well worth your while to look at our stock of dining tables and chairs with the view of making yourself proud of your Easter Table. You will be both pleased and surprised at our selection of fine dining room furniture at Attractive Prices.
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Election of Cheerleader, members of Athletic Board and members of the Men's Student Council will be held Thursday, May 4. Petitions of candidates for these offices must be presented to the president of the Men's Student Council before 6 p. m. April 28. Leland Thompson.
The Baseball game which was scheduled with Baker has been called off on account of the death of Mrs. Green.
An athletic festival for women is held annually at Barnard. This year the games will be dedicated to Poseidon, god of the sea, and the costumes, in accordance with the celebration will be in accord with the nature of the presiding diety.
Dunakin 9. Oread 8
The Dumain Club defeated the Oread Club in a postponed game yesterday afternoon by a score of 9 to 8. The game was arranged to go but seven innings but it was necessary to fill nine before the tie was broken.
The score of Saturday's game was Dunakin 7, Stevenson 6, instead of Stevenson 7, Dunakin 6, as was printed in the Daily Kansan.
Vacation days and Easter days
Will need to know, and then
We'll all go home our various ways To see the folks again.
Margaret Hodder, 18 College, shopped Saturday in Kansas City.
Send the Daily Kansan home.
Copyright 1916.
A. T. Kirschbaum Co.
With a Belated Easter
just three days away, this store of good clothes for Men and Young Men is ready.
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THE YOUNG MEN'S STORE
& CARL
Charles Woodbury Married
The marriage of Miss Thelma Robertson to Mr. Charles Putnam Woodbury was solemnized at 8 o'clock last night in the Central Methodist church, South, in Kansas City, Mo. The wedding took place on a colonel's column of the bridegroom's fraternity, Sigma Chi. Mr. and Mrs. Woodbury left on an eastern wedding trip and will be at home after May 15, 3610 Gladstone Boulevard, Kansas City.
Blanche Mullen spent the week end with her parents in Hutchinson.
The University of Chicago
HOME in addition to resident
study in residence for
infection by correspondence.
For detailed information
28th Year U. C. (Ohio). Chicago, Ill.
Museum Town
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WORLD FAMOUS DANCER ASSISTED BY
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Company of Dancers and Native Hindu in Super Program of Oriental, Classic and Modern Dances. Elaborate Scenery and Stage Settings.
Tickets Now Selling
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AT THE
BOWERSOCK THEATRE TONIGHT ONLY
THE WEDNESDAY AFTER EASTER
APRIL
23 24 25 26 27 28 29
"Copping the Grapes"
With a K. U. man in the leading role playing the part of a K. U. student surrounded by K. U. conditions as they are on Mount Oread. And it is JUST ONE WEEK AWAY
You still have time to call her up and get your tickets before going home.
Seats Now Selling—Prices: Two Bits, Four Bits, Six Bits
40
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VOLUME XIII.
Y. M. RE-ELECTS WEDELL
Association Is Pleased With Work Done by Secretary During Year
DEBTS HAVE BEEN PAID
Hugo Wedell was re-elected by the Board of Directors of the University Y. M. C. A. as secretary at their meeting Thursday night. A substantial increase of salary was given on account of the effective work done by him both along financial and religious lines. The work of the year was directed by the Board of Alumni and said for the extension of Y. M. C. A. activity.
Campaign Puts Organization on Sound Financial Basis
PLEDGED $375
A defect of $1,040 was the difficulty that the Y. M. C. A. cabinet of last year faced when they returned to school in the fall. To add to this burden, the University was without a Y. M. C. A. secretary. The deficit that the Y. M. C. A. then faced was due to the great religious program carried on by Conrad Hoffman during his last year here as secretary. The Mott-Robbins' meetings caused the larger part of this deficit.
Benjamin Balzer acted as secretary at the beginning of the school year, until October 1, when Hugo Wedell took charge. The latter then organized a committee of 125 men who were active in various lines of student activity and who helped in the organization here. These men were instructed as to the nature of the problem facing the Y. M. C. A. and they went forth resolved to lift the burden of indebtedness from the Y. M. C. A. A. sum of $375 was pledged by these men themselves and during the first day the pledges of other students had raised this amount to $1,585. The remainder in a committee of 15 men, succeeded in raising $785 on the same day.
The debt that the Y. M. C. A. faced at the beginning of the year was thus wiped out, but it was necessary to make one more campaign during the spring semester in order that all the expenses of the current year might be met. This Clean-Up Campaign was held on Tuesday, March 20. On this day, 100 students gained pledges amounting to $215, $100 of which was in cash. Ten faculty men on the same day raised a sum of $30.
TO SOLICIT ALUMNI
The alumna have not yet been solicited for support. On Friday two teams, consisting of Prof. E. F. Engel, Prof. W. G. Baumgartner, Prof. U. G. Mitchell and Prof. George O. Foster will make a trip to Kansas City to solicit the alumni of that city. Topeka, Hutchinson and other cities of the state will be visited by them at later dates.
WORK FAVORED BY STUDENTS
The data gathered by the men who took part in the campaign of this year show that they are very few the Hill who are antagonistic to the work of the association. These men are for the most part those who have not seen the work that the Y. M. C. A. is doing on the Hill.
The outstanding reasons -for this phenomenal success upon the part of the Y. M. C. A. are due to two main reasons. In the first place the Mott-Robbins' campaign brought about a number of changes in the students and faculty. Last year the students subscribed only $705; this year their subscriptions totaled $1,800. The faculty last year pledged only $607; this year they have promised another $400 to the effective organization maintained by the Y. M. C. A.
"K. U. men are a right royal bunch to work with," said Hugo Wedell, as he finished outlining the work of the association for the year. "I want to thank them all for the support they have given the Y. M. C. A. Next year we can plan better and bigger things."
PROF. ROLAND HUGINS
TALKS TO POLITY CLUB
Prof. Roland Hugins of Cornell University will address the Polity Club tonight at 8 o'clock at the Pi Kappa Alpha house.
At the next meeting, May 3, the club will elect officers for the ensu-
ly year. Also they will elect two delegates from this club to the Con-
ference on International Relations to be held at the Western Reserve College at Cewland, Ohio the last ter-
days in June. The delegates are sent by the club and all of their expense are paid.
The engagement of Miss Anne Malolt to Mr. Arthur Humphrey has been announced. Miss Malott was graduated from the University in 133 and was a member of the Medal of Honor. Ms. Humphrey was graduated from the School of Law in 1912 and was a member of the Phi Kappa Psi fraternity.
CHANCELOR ANNOUNCES
HOLIDAY FOR MAY FIRST
UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS, WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON, APRIL 26, 1916.
"Chancellor's day, May 1, will be a holiday this year, as usual," said Chancellor Frank Strong, today. In regard to using this day as "Clean Up Day" Chancellor Strong says the day is organized effort being made among any of the students to promote the idea of a Clean Up Day on May 1. The Men's Student Council has failed to take any action on the matter, and that effort will be impossible to do anything towards cleaning up the campus on that day.
PROF. HILL LEAVES K.U.
Will Complete Law Work at Chicago—Resignation Effective September 1
Howard T. Hill, assistant professor in the department of public speaking, has presented his resignation to the board of administration, to take effect on September 1. He intends to spend the summer and next year completing his law course at the University of Chicago.
IOWA STATE GRADUATE
Prof. Hill is a graduate of Iowa State College, where he represented his alma mater in oratory and debate, and he led the two years following his graduation from Harvard and at Chicago. He then came to the University as assistant professor of public speaking, the position that he has held for the last three
COACHED SUCCESSFUL TEAMS
His work as coach of debating has been exceptionally successful. Colorado and Oklahoma, University of Kansas rivals in debate, were both defeated in the same year, a feat that had never been accomplished by Kansas. Under Professor Hill's leadership, his team has continued speaking he has steadily increased, until the department has become one of the most popular as well as efficient departments of the University.
Prof. Hill has long been one of the favorites at the student mixers, where his ready wit and interest in student activities make him welcome. He is a member of the Acacia, Phi Alpha Delta, Delta Sigma Rho, the honorary debating fraternity and Phil Alpha Tau, the honorary dramatic fraternity. As yet no successor has been elected to the position.
FOR THE ___ YOU HAVE
ALWAYS WITH YOU
Always? Quien Sabe?
His smile is that broad and his voice that sweet—why hang it he can't help but mean every word of it. He carries that cheering hand-shake in his sleeve and meets you at every turn on the wind-swept campus. He puts you on the back every time you pause.
He smokes cigars with you that you did not buy and drinks cost you naught. He's there prepared to meet you every time you turn a corner, and he's there to give you the licious he is about you, your aspirations, the folks back home, this summer's crops on the home place, whether the hens are laying, and if the garden the home folks were think about putting out is going to produce
Are you having any trouble with that ten hours of library courses? Would you like to attend a smoker tomorrow night? And—er—ahem—speaking of the election next Thursday, your way clear to—he's a candidate for Hang it here comes another one with a petition to be signed.
Should the movement started by the Torch Society toward asking the members of the faculty to wear the caps and gowns with the seniors at commencement be successful, a new custom will be established at the University of Kansas. The question has not been formally asked, but a committee has been appointed to investigate the custom in other schools and colleges and to obtain opinions from the members of the faculty here.
TORCH MAY START NEW
CUSTOM FOR UNIVERSITY
Should the investigations prove satisfactory, a committee will be appointed to take the matter before the faculty. Most of the seniors are in business and must have pressed the opinion that they thought the commencement exercises would be more impressive if the faculty would adopt the garrd of the seniors.
Gladys Henry, Mryle Crose, and Viola Jones will attend the annual convention of the Mu Phi Epsilon sorority to be held April 23rd to 28 in Cincinnati.
Hill. It will be a sight for sore eyes when the old familiar boards once more adorn the front of the cars.
BAND CONCERT TONIGHT
K.U. Musicians Will Give Annual Entertainment in Fraser Chapel
PROGRAM TO BE HEAVY
Musical Treat Planned; Band Is Best In School's History
The University Band will give their Annual Spring Concert tonight at 8 o'clock in Fraser Hall. This year's band is the best that has ever been produced on Mount Good and those who appreciate Good Music, says Director McCanles, will not be disappointed.
1. "Grand War March and Battle Hymn"
2. *R.* Wagner (From Wagner's Opera, "Bienzi")
3. *Selection*, from the Opera,
The following program will be given:
C. Saint-Saens
3. Cornet Duet, "Nip and Tuck."
3. Cornet Duet, "Nip and Tuck."
4. Overture, to the Opera, "Tann-
hauser," . . . . . . . . W. Rawger
FIVE MINUTES INTERMISSION
Ballet, "Dance of the Hours,"
- . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . *Donchelli*
(From the Opera, "La Gioconda")
6. Selection, "Lucia di Lammer-
moor" and "Sextette," from
Donizetti's Opera, (double
number.)
7. (a) Paraphrase, "Die Lorelid"
8. (b) Intermezzo, "Mauresque
Caprices." E. Boccalari
C. A. Davis F.D.Gage
Caprice ... E. Bacairei
8. Overture, "Isabella" ... Sauppe
HAMLET AN IDEALIST
Prof. George Herbert Clarke Says Actual Things of Life Could Never Satisfy
Hamlet's apprehension of the ideal was so vivid that the actual things of life could never satisfy him, was the view of Hamlet's character advanced by Prof. George Herbert Clarke, professor of English in the University of Chicago. In his lecture last Thursday night on "The Mystery of Hamlet."
In developing his conception of the intellect of Hamlet he said that actual vengeance on the king seemed futtle and useless in contrast with what his mind perceived, and his love, and his sense of responsibility was so ideal that he could not have loved a real woman. In his business relations with life he was so out of touch with the world that like Lazarus, as depicted by Browning, he had been in constant contact with heavenly things to regain our ordinary human perspective.
The program was planned to honor the Shakespearean tencentery. Several members of the club took parts of a rehearsal of the play, which enacted an evening at the Globe Theatre. Dr. E. M. Hopkins, chancellor of the National Quill, presided and the officers was Master of Ceremonies. Prof. B. McCarthy as stunt master.
MONDONUS WAS MAD
Mr. Chucklebonus Polonius as a "fool with a college education" and although it is the common conception that Laertes was a finer type of man, he said that in his judgment Laertes was very like his father and would ultimately have grown up to be the same kind of a man. The violence of Laertes was at its greatest the castle upon his return after the death of his father was of the type that seemed to court repression and could very easily have been put down.
Hamlet was further represented as being more of a thinker than an actor, and Mr. Clarke pointed out the fact that although the ordinary impression which one gets of Hamlet is that he was a very quiet person, he really talks more than any other actor in the plays of Shakespeare.
The initiates were: Jeanne M. Kirkendall, Norma Jamieson, Bessie Willett, Willard L. Day, Laura L. McCannes, E. M. Johnson, Dorothy McKown, J. E. Johnson, Hailt Halt, Eleanor Skillet, Stewart, Steven, Schloss, Gladys M. Henry, Anita M. Hostetter, Bertha M. Smith, and Jennie K. Weaver.
Another point of difference from the ordinary acceptance of the play was that the mother of Hamlet in the last scene took the poisoned potion with full knowledge of what it conceived, and she used a glittered bullet to hammer Hamlet and was ready to die for the miserable part which she had been playing.
Quill Club held initiation for sixteen
members of the consternist Hall,
Tuesday evening. A minute
QUILL CLUB INITIATED
SIXTEEN TUESDAY NIGHT
Send the Daily Kansan home to the folks.
Action Against C. A. Randolph Continued Until May 10— Biglow Plaintiff
CLASS
S SENIOR CLASS
CASE IS MISREPRESENTED
Statements Involving J. M. Johnson Declared Incorrect
The suit filed by A. A. Biglow, a Lawrence merchant, against C.A.Randolph, president of the senior class, for a grocery debt contracted by Clyde Vanderlip in connection with the Sophomore year, was denied for fifteen days. No continuance was asked by Vanderlip and Karl Pinkard who were sued in a separate action. They did not appear in court. Judgment will probably be given by default against the two, according to the lawyers connected with the case.
Biglow is suing for $85.50. According to his statement he has made repeated efforts to collect the account of Mr. Hunt and a far far has met with no success, and is bringing suit against individual members of the senior class to insure himself against the loss of the account. He is also fighting against other members of the class.
Chancellor Strong stated this morning that the story in the Topeka Capital to the effect that the school authorities held J. M. Johnson at fault was not correct. "Personally, I do not know who is responsible for the debt, and it would be helpful to collect owed by students, and have made no statements concerning the responsibility of any person in this particular case."
C. A. Randolph made the following statement this morning: "As individuals I do not think any member of the class owes the debt, or that they should be held for a debt contracted by the manager of the Hop. Those who attended paid enough when they gave five dollars to attend; those who did not go derived no benefit from the Hop and should not be held liable. Further I think the statements in the Journal and Topke Capitol attack J. M. Murray, who wasident of the class in 1914, for not seeing that the debt was paid, are unfair, Johnson had absolutely nothing to do with the management of the dance. Vanderlip worked independent of the class organization."
PROFS WANT TO TALK
Series of Faculty Addresses Starts Next Month—Professor Becker First
A system of monthly addresses in Fraser Hall by members of the College faculty is to be inaugurated next spring and will be continued regularly next year.
The idea originated with Dean Olin Templin. It is his plan to have the faculty addresses given at 4:30 o'clock on the last Thursday in every month. Owing to the address of Justice Burch in the chapel tomorrow the first address will be postponed until the first Thursday in May.
A petition nominating John Dykes of the School of Law as a candidate for next year's cheer leader was received by the secretary of the athletics department, and accorded with the new amendment passed by the University Senate. Eight hundred names appeared on the petition in support of the candidate. This is the only petition that has been taken in the spring election it will be taken in the spring election.
Prof. Carl Becker will deliver the first faculty speech. The subject of Professor Becker's address is "Being a Professor." He defines his talk as a few remarks on education by one whose early training was not of the best." Prof. R. M. Ogden will speak later.
JOHN DYKES' PETITION FOR CHEERLEADER IS ON FILE
John Dykes is noted for his rousing "pep" talks on students' day last year and at the foot ball rallies this year. His home is in Lebanon.
An earth disturbance was registered at 8:27 o'clock last night. The main wave came at 8:34:42 o'clock and the disturbance ceased at 9:14 F. E. Koster estimates that the shock occurred in the region of Mexico City.
Shakeup at Mexico City?
Election of the College Day speaker will be held in Fraser Chapel tomorrow at 12:30. All college students will show their interest in the course they decided to attend Chapel to attend the mass meeting at the aforementioned time, 12:30 tomorrow.
JUSTICE BURCH SPEAKS
IN FRASER THURSDAY
Rousseau A. Burch, justice of the Supreme Court of Kansas, will lecture on "Observations on French Criminal Procedure" in Fraser Chapel Saturday at 4:30 o'clock this lecture will be held in association of another state, won much praise. This treatment of the subject is of such a nature that the theme is made of vital value to the general audience as to students of sociology and law.
Justice Burch is a graduate of the University of Michigan, receiving both his A. B. and LL. B. from that university, and as an attorney for the bench, he practiced law in Salina. For the last ten years he has been a member of the Supreme Court.
POLITICAL POT BOILS
Men's Student Council Election on May 4 Brings Out Candidate Announcements
The University of Kansas political boil is potting this week with the approach of the annual election of the Men's Student Council which takes place Thursday, May 4. Ames P. Rogers, vice president of the Council and co-chairman of the Leland Thompson, the president, called attention today to the fact that all nomination petitions must be in his hands by six o'clock Friday evening.
GREENWOOD OUT FOR CHEERLEADER
Two candidates have appeared for President of the Student Council, Chancellor of the college councilmen and Homer Herrritt, mile man on the track team.
Another office in which there promises to be an interesting contest is for cheerleader with Kenneth Gedney, assistant cheerleader during the past year and John H. Dykes.
The rules of the student council provide that all candidates for student council offices must pay a petition fee of seventy-five cents and present petitions with the names of seventy-five qualified voters.
ELECTION MAY 4
At the election May 4, in addition to the president of the student council, will be elected a vice-president, secretary-treasurer, seven members from the college, four from the engineering school, two from the law school, one each from the medical,pharmical and graduate school. Five student members of the athletic board, non-letter men, will be elected also.
The Student Council election is conducted under the Australian ballot system. Because of the election scandal connected with the fall election of the Council, it is thought that the coming election will be conducted in stricter fashion. An audit of the election will be the enforcement of the "point system", the purpose of which is to limit the number of offices one person can hold.
ALLIE HEARS THE CALL
And So, After May 1, He Will Own Two Stores
The Varsity Shon
That's the name of the new Allie Carroll Annex which will be located in the south room of the Varsity Theater lobby after May 1, under the management of Jack Carter and Dummy O'Leary.
The infant news-stand cigar-store athletic goods-headquarters will be run on the same line as the big store in the seven hundred block, and Allie will see that the latest in all lines can be found at the Varsity Shop. Placing the goods on sale in the Annex makes it much harder for most of the students, especially the women, who want to buy sportswear here shopping tour and purchase magazines and newspapers for evening reading.
"I expect to keep the Varsity Shop under the management of students all the time," said Mr. Carrel this morning to a Kansan reporter. "The new student is so closely as is the old one and customers of the Annex can be assured of the same goods as we get now. I am opening a little nearer the students for their convenience and be- I believe the new location is ideal."
Carroll's has been a popular place with K. U. students ever since Allie took charge—infect, ever since the old Smith News Depot was started in 1876—and the new store under the roof of the library homes of the students and handling students goods will no doubt enjoy a "distinction all its own."
Why is it that some students would rather work all night trying to demonstrate that they are better pitchers than players? Why study half an hour on their lessons?
STUBBS MAKES A GIFT
Prin, H. T. Steeper, A. B.' 09, of Leavenworth was here Wednesday looking over prospective teachers for next year.
Places $1,000 at Disposal of Y.
M. C. A. for Fares to Estes Conference
TWENTY-FIVE MEN MAY GO
C. U. to Have Largest Delegation in Years
Ex-Governor W. R. Stubbs has placed $1,000 at the disposal of Geo. O. Foster and Hugo T. Wedell, Y. M. C. A. secretary, as a loan fund for students, who desire to attend the Estes Park Conference, June 9 to 19, but who have not the money to make the trip. This amount will enable twenty men to attend Estes Park this summer and will certainly cause a larger attendance than would otherwise be possible.
Five more men signified their intention to go to the conference as a result of the Jubilee Rally held the week before vacation. This brings the total up to fifteen. Those who attend this summer are Edward Todd, Lester Ewin, Edwin Price, Clarence Gorrill, J. Homer Herriott, Hart Russell, John B. Dail, Seth Owens, William Frear, Laurence Walmor, Walter Steinheur, Clarendon Having-ward, played the Duke Woodward, and Hugo Woodward. It is hope of the Y. M. C. A. Cabinet that at least twenty five men will represent K. U. at the conference this summer.
OLICITS K. C. ALUMNI
Faculty Committee of Y.M.C.A.
Collects $120 from Grads
The faculty committee of the Board of Directors of the Y. M. C. A. collected $120, one-half of it in cash, during their campaign last Friday among the alumni of Kansas City. The committee, composed of Professors E. F. Bauer and U. G. Gartner and U. G. Mitchell solicited only a fraction of the Kansas City alumni and will return there later to complete the campaign.
The success which the committee has met thus far in their personal solicitation indicates that the result of this year's campaign will surpass that of last year. There was no personal campaign made last year and work was carried on by letter. In addition, the college methods were not as efficient last year as those now being tried, the alumni subscribed $300.
They expect to extend their solicitation later on to Topeka, Hutchinson, Emporia, Wichita and Newton. These towns will visit personally at different times during the remainder of the school year. Alumni living elsewhere will be solicited by letter for financial aid.
A recent issue of the Christian Science Monitor carried a story that will bring joy to the hearts of the college football club. The golf ball patent has run out.
For 17 years the Haskell rubber centerball ball, necessary for the "fore" game, has been protected in this country. The ball could be charged if others could charge the price they saw fit without fear of competition. With the expiration of the patent these balls can be made by any manufacturer wishing to put them on the market.
LOW PRICE OF BALLS
LISTENS WELL, GOLFERS
The Laws have found a new source of amusement. They now take turns putting their hats on top of the large globes in front of the Law building and then trying to knock them off with good sized paper wads. They spent the entire afternoon Monday trying out the newly invented game.
They say that even student council members don't keep the date rules. This last week when the Women's Student Council was changing its personnel it is reported that several of that august body set very bad examples for innocent little underclassmen.
The Kempshal liquid core ball has still two more years of protection. The English patent office refused to honor either of the two balls.
The Weather Unsettled weather with probable showers in south portion tonight, not much change in temperature.
MORNING PRAYERS
Chapel Service fff mff fff. Speaker: The Reverend R. L. Patterson, of St. Mark's Lutheran Church, Atchison.
General subject:"Post-Easter Meditations."
Wednesday: "Thomas Convinced."
Thursday: "I Believe in the Resurrection of the Body."
Friday: "The Risen Life."
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Official student paper of the University of Kansas
Chas. S. Sturtevant...Editor-in-Chief
EDITORIAL STAFF
BUSINESS STAFF
REPORTORIAL STAFF
William Cady...Business Manager
Casa. Sturtevant...Adv. Manager
Paul Brindlein Guy Scrivner
Don Davis Cargill Sproull
Ralph Ellis Charles Sweet
John Glenn Glenn Swigger
Megan Glarner
Subscription price $3.00 per year in advance; one term, $1.75.
Entered as second-class mail mat-
ter to a station in Kansas, under the
offers of May 1895.
Published in the afternoon five
thirty-five minutes after the press
wholly or of Kansas from the press of
Boston.
Address a. communications to UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Lawrence, Kansas. Phone, Bell K. U. 25.
The Daily Kansan aims to picture students of the University of Kansas; to go further than merely printing the text, it needs to know 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, the students of the University
WEDNESDAY, APRIL 26, 1916
Many estates are spent in the get-together, where spinning and knitting, and men for punck foroook hewing and spitting.
What is a butterfly? At bout He's but a caterpillar dirst. The gandy bird his picture just. The gandy bird his picture just. Almano.
BOOMERANG FOR LANDLADIES
BOOMERANG FOR LANDLADIES
The demand of Lawrence landlades,
on the women of the University who
are, rooming at the various houses,
bring up the question, again, of
the need of dormitories. The women
having rooms to rent have devised the
efforts made in the past to bring about
the erection of a girl's dormitory.
Such stringent rules as have been urged will bring about, sooner than anything else, the building of a "dorm," under University supervision. And when it is built, there will be a much closer "esprit de corps" than there is at present among University women. The "Dorm" will have a tendency to break up the small groups and cliques that attach themselves, as barnacles, to K. U.'s ship of Democracy.
WHAT'S YOUR STATUS QUO?
And while the medicine may be bitter for the present generation, should the rules be adopted, it may lead to agitation for improved conditions, with the result that those women students who come to the University in the future may have the privilege of living in an up to date "dorm" all their own.
No use preaching; you are old enough to know how you stand. But, are you satisfied with your self?
There are only five more weeks before the finals. Are you satisfied with your status quo? A stitch in time saves nine. A little tightening up of the intellectual belt, and a settling down to real study now may keep you from taking the same course over next year.
If you don't believe some people recognize their own weaknesses, just notice the women on the campus who carry dorine boxes.
THE LITTLE THINGS
They were on the way to a "movie," he and his "date." She was keeping up a lively and animated conversation. It dragged for just a moment — but long enough for—
"Do you care if I take a few puff on this "pill" as he pulled a package of cigarettes from his pocket.
It's the little things that count.
TREAT HIM ROYALLY
Have you written that editor y'all about the bunk and three squares a day waiting for him during Newspaper Week?
Every student will be called upon to play the host and every editor who receives the good honest hospitality that has been shown to visitors on similar occasions will become a warm friend of the University.
Appropriations for this institution lie indirectly in the hands of Kansas editors. Good advertising is the best thing in the world and there is no
exception in the case of a university.
Make these visitors, who are all influential men in their respective communities, catch the personal tone of K. U. Give them a glimpse of life as it really exists on Mount Oread. If we can strainen out their wrong conceptions regarding us and the University, they will unconsciously reflect the true spirit of K. U. in a better light.
If you are afraid to risk taking the blame you may be sure you will never have a chance to take any praise.
THE SPANISH SHAKESPEARE
Three hundred years ago last Sunday, there passed from this world, two men whose works have lived after them. William Shakespeare, was the one, Miguel de Cervantes Saavedra, the other. Each was the greatest genius his race produced in the field of literature.
Strange as it may seem, the two languages which these men handled so ably, which they may be said to have perfected as a means of artistic expression, are the two dominating idiomatic languages of the Western hemisphere.
To Spanish America, Cervantes means more than he does to us of the North. We think of him only as the creator of that adventurous, whimsical, and dauntless knight, Don Quixote. But this one work is enough to make him live forever in the hearts of many.
THE ETERNAL PROBLEM
Thirty-three cents a day is all a Chicago woman considers necessary to live on. Let's see, fifteen cents a day for room rent, ten cents for depreciation or our daws, five cents for cokes; that leaves three cents for the boarding club.
Oh well our C. f. admits that she has never tried her theory out—it just figures that way on paper.
Essays in Tabloid Tablets
"COPPING THE GRAPES"
"Copping the Grapes." Is the name. Of this year's senior. Play It was written. By Alton. Gumbiner. A student. In the Law School. And is proof. That some. Good things Can originate. Even in, such a. Denn University. In College. First. However. And probably learned. How To. Do it. There. "Copping the Grapes." Is a slang. Term. It means. Plucking the fruit. Or. Fleecing the lams. Some students. Think that they. Will be the teachers. They will not. And that. The show. Be worth. The price. The show. Will be produced. At Mr. Bowersock's theatre. April 26. And dates. Will cost extra. If you can. Get one. If you can't. You may. Go alone. Shanghai Moss. And Doubleda Davis. For the main mosaics. Ressues. and Maureen McKernan. Will appear. Also. Her chief function. Is to say. "This is. Terrible. Terrible." And sometimes. It is. A pale. Blond. Youth. Has been selected. For the ferocious. Burglar. For the real. Director. And he doesn't look. The former. The public speaking. Prof. Who drives. A big touring. Car. Is directing. The rehearsals. The cast will test. Will, As to. His Efficiency.
Mind you I'm not saying that a little education isn't a good thing in a college course. I learned a lot of real knowledge in school that I wouldn't have missed for anything, though I have forgotten it now.
FOUND IN A BOOK
A Corner for the Library Browser
Knowledge is a grand thing to have around the house. But nowadays knowledge alone isn't worth as much as having it, and has to mix it up with imagination, and ingenuity and hustle, and nerve, and the science of getting mad at the right time, and a fourteen-year faculty of understanding the other fellow.
The college professors lump all his in one course and call it levitry. They don't put it down in he catalogue and they encourage you cut classes in it.
'At Good Old Swish"—Geo Fitch
When Mrs. Brown
is somewhere 'round
You'll find them sitting
Here and there.
When Mrs. Brown
Is not around.
You'll find them sitting
Hereandhere.
'At Good Old Siwash.'—Geo. Fitch
Send the Daily Kansas home to the folks.
Anna Lettie Barbauld, the daughter of the Rev. John Aiken, was born at Kilworth-Harcourt, in Leicestershire, 1743. She wrote "Poems," "Hymns in Prose for Children," "The Female Spectator," and "Eighteen Hundred and Eleven." She died at Stoke-Newington in 1825.
POETS CORNER
LIFE
Life! I know not what thou art, art,
And when, or how, or where we met;
I own to me a secret yet.
Life! we've been long together;
Through pleasant and through cloudy
Tis hard to part when friends are
Perhaps it will cost a sigh, a tear;
A little less a little warning,
China thing even time.
Say not "Good night," but in some
Bid我 morning,
Bid me good morning,
Benghoud.
What D'ye Know
The following ten questions are
things you should know. But do you?
1. What is the capital of the
country?
1. Name the "Hoosier" noet.
2. The world's most famous tenor.
3. A European possession on the main stage.
4. Name the senators from Kansa.
On three sides of the set were brilliant mercury lights throwing a white and dazzling glare over the scene which made the faces of the players seem white and drawn as if in bright moonlight. Just inside the surrounding banks of lights there was placed on the scene a rubber tube which denoted the boundaries within which the actors could appear without getting out of range of the camera. The bank of light gave way on the surface of the camera in which was placed the camera, shielded of course from the direct rays.
The center fielder gave quick pursuit, running at an angle of, say thirty degrees, to recover the ball. When several yards from the ball,
5. Name the book in the Bible where the ten commandments are found.
8. Name the countries in the Venezuela controversy
6. Name the Lone Star state.
7. Name the two great powers whose boundary has remained unfortified for 100 years.
6. Name the Lone Star state.
9. Name the city in which the 1916 Democratic convention will be held.
10. Name the city in which the 1916 Republican convention will be held.
The University of Washington Daily is waging a campaign against "horse play" as a part of college fraternity initiations.
The camera man slowly turned the crank, Miss Clark and her supporters, who in this case were children, played with her as she walked over. It took hardly five minutes.
MAKING MOTION PICTURES
"it's just my luck," says many a man, when in reality there is no luck to it. Baseball is called "luck" often times but there is a great deal of "inside baseball" to account for the success of a certain play. The following, told by a Michigan Alumnus, illustrates the point:
MAKING MOTION PICTURES
Motion picture fans attend the shows in which their favorite actors are to be depicted. A peep at the workhouse, behind the scenes is interesting. Many deceiving scenes are worked up to deceive the audience with the aid of a bit of stage setting.
The following from the N. Y. Sun;
The first thing which happened to catch the reporter's eye was Marguerite Clark in one of the far off corners of the studio. She was just then busily engaged in falling off a hay rick in a little old barn. She was dressed as the queen of the fairies. The scene was set to the smallest detail. Hay and straw hung from the rafters and peeped from between the cracks of the walls. Hay was spread profusely on the floor and there were chickens running about on it. Yet the whole ten scene took up an area hardly ten feet square.
BASEBALL "LUCK"
It was within very recent years, and during the spring training in the south, that an unusual play occurred in a game of baseball between a major league club with which I happened to be connected, and a minor league club with which I had fought throughout, and the score in the later innings very close. Some of the men engaged were what we call recruits, and both the recruits and the old men were trying with might and main to show that skill which would secure retention on the team. The other players surplus players eager to into the game. There was, in fact, every reason to suppose that each man was doing his best. One of the older players of our club, a very fast runner and easily able to bat the ball the farthest, hit what was called a liner, a low, hard drive—this one is about 30 inches wide and fielder. It looked at once to be a home run, as there was no enclosing fence to stop the ball.
1
After Easter Clearance of Suits For the Month End 25 Per Cent OFF
"Then, in the third place, Red, why did you slow up at second?" He said.
More than 75 Suits, many of them recent arrivals in the department, in this month-end Sale They represent the Smartest of Styles in Gaberdines, Poplins, Serges, Checks and light weight Novelty Suitings, and with a complete size range in best shades.
It will not be necessary for us to urge an early choice if you are interested in the Purchase of a Spring Suit.
The prices are plainly marked. You save 25c for each dollar on the ticket.
$12.00 Suits
at... $9.00
$15.00 Suits
at... $11.25
$16.50 Suits
at... $12.35
$18.00 Suits
at... $13.50
$20.00 Suits ... $15.00
Then I continued, "Red, how did you turn the burn at first?" "Wrong," said he, "wrong. It threw me out thirty feet beyond the line in making my turn." He meant that by not making a proper turn before reaching first, and, if possible, turning the fire down to room temperature too, he was compelled to run much further toward right field before getting himself turned toward second.
$20.00 Suits
at... $15.00
I was interested in the runner, who, brushing his trousers as he passed me, said, "Well, there is just my luck." The next inning, I saw this player on his way to the bench, and asked that play last inning; did you break straight at plate? "I" "did not notice," he said, "but I did look at the ball, I guess." And I replied, "Exactly." It is a habit of many players at bat to look at the ball after hitting it, and by so doing so lose speed in starting, and direction in running as well. Such movement can help ninety-five feet in reaching first base, a straight line distance of ninety feet.
$22.50 Suits
at... $16.90
$25.00 Suits
at... $18.75
$27.50 Suits
at $20.65
$30.00 Suits
at... $22.50
$35.00 Suits
at ... $26.75
All styles are represented—Sport Suits, Plain Tailored, Norfolk Style, Belted or Loose. Flare and Ripple; all styles of sleeves, all style of collars.
One big pitcher, I recall, after verbally assaulting his god of ill-fortune in almost every conceivable manner, turned to me and said, "There! There you are. Started all alone." Then he slowly went his way far down the field where he gloomily stayed the rest of the afternoon, alone.
and slightly behind it, the player was seen to change his direction slightly to reach out and grasp firmly a flying ball. I have never seen a like coincidence. The ball had struck a stone, and was bounced by it up and back to the right, almost into the very hands of the fielder. We—well, he bent towards the diamond he threw the ball, not knowing accurately what point the ball would reach, and probably not thinking of the objective point of the play. He made a remarkable throw. Straight it went toward third, and bouncing along those last few yards, I did think the runners were ready for "Red" slid—a "fall-way" slide, the boys call it—the right. The dust cleared and I saw the umpire with his thumb over his shoulder, and all the world knows he had called the runner "out." Groans came from the bench. "Hard luck," was generally repeated, and from one came. "Did you ever win?" "Yes," he said. "The breaks are against us," an off-repeal remark in a losing game.
Innes, Bulline & Hackman
"Did you see that? I thought it was a sure home run." "Yes," I replied, "but every base-runner should make his plays, assuming that every break would be against him." It is never the player's fault then if he loses. He could have made his play. In the world did you slide to the right and directly into the baseman, who was outside the bag, instead of to the left, and away from the play?" I waited for no answer, but I thought of all the condolences and sympathy given to Red by the boys—of his remark that "It was just his luck." Then I walked up to the grass down the field, who had forecast a bad season on account of Billiken helping out a minor league club with a stone. I walked away saying, "Four chances to make your own luck, any one of which, played properly, would have made a decision by the ampire at third unnecessary, and all four of which, played properly, would have made a decision by the plate instead of third." He could have made his "breaks." It was a losing play.
WANT ADS
LOST-On the campus Tuesday
morning, a gold bar pin. Please
leave at Registrar's office in Fraser
Hall.
136-3'
MEN WANTED--For summer work at $4.00 per day guaranteed. See Chas. Campbell at Eldridge Wednesday. 137.2
MEN WANTED—For summer work at $4.00 per day guaranteed. See Chas. Campbell at Eldridge Wednesday. 137-2
LOST One black Simplex Note Book No. 6 containing the name of Ruth Goldsworthy. Please leave at Registrar's office.
FOR RENT—On Mt. Oread, June 12,
soriority or fraternity house: First floor, front and back parlor, large dining room, kitchen, pantry; second floor 4 bed rooms and bath; third floor, 4 bed rooms and bath. Water heat water. Electric lights. Call M. S. Root, Bell 1428W. 139-3
BARBER WANTED-For evenings
work. Inquire in
U, Y, M, C, J.
139-38
Book Store
KEELER'S BOOK STORE 839 Mass
St. Typewriters for sale or rent
Paper by the pound. Quis book's 8 for
10c. Pictures and Picture framing
CLASSIFIED
China Painting
Jewelers
ED. W. PARSONS, Engraver, Watchmaker and Jeweler. Diamonds and Jewelry. Bell phone 717. 717 Mass. Street.
**China Painting**
MISS NORTHRUP, china painting. Orders for special occasions carefully handled. 785 Mass. Phone Bell 152.
shop shop
K. U. SHOE JUNGLE Pantatorium is the best place for best results 1342
IUQ
Numbers
PHONE KENN YOUNG BUMBING CO.
for gas, goods and Mazda Lamps.
PHONE KENN YOUNG BUMBING CO.
Printing
B. H. DALE, Artistic Job Printing.
Both phones 2102, 1027 Mass.
shop
FORNKEY SHOP 10197 Mass. a mistake. All work
guaranteed.
Dressmaking
(US M. A.; MORGAN, 1821) Tenances
alarming. Pricing very reasonable.
All prices very reasonable.
R. H. L. CHAMBERS. Office over Squires' studio. Both phones.
PROFESSIONAL CARDS
HARRARD BREDING. MI. D Eyer, ear-
n察. p. O. U. Bigd. Phones. Bell 513;
no. U. UiGd. Phones. Bell 513;
G. W. JONES, A. M. M. D. Diseases of the stomach, surgery and gynaecology. Suite 1, F. A. U. Bldg. Residence, 1201 Ohio St. Phones 35.
J. R. BECHETT M. D. D. O. $32 Mars
STREET. Both phone offices and residence
A. C. WILSON, Attorney at law 743
Mass. St. Lawrence, Kansas.
DR. H. W. HUTCHINSON, Dent. 2017
DR. Kirsten Bldg., Lawrence, Kansas.
C. E. ORBLUP M. D. D. Bliek Bldg Eve.
G. H. CHOOLE M. D. D. Bliek
griss work guaranteed, successor to
J. M. GERMAN J. D. Bliek
Seniors are requested to call at the check stand and order their caps and shoes.
SHUBERT NEXT SUNDAY SEATS ON NEW SELLING Direct from 6 months in Chicago. TAYLOR HOLMES In a new comedy—Brimful of fun. HIS MAJESTY
Bunker Bean
Lee Wilson Dodd's Dramatization of Harry Leon Wilson's Saturday
Evening Post Stories
Watkins National Bank [Capital $100,000]
Surplus and Profits $100,000
The Student Depository
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
THEATRE VARSITY TONIGHT and THURSDAY
MAE MARSH Star in "The Birth of a Nation" in
"Hoodoo Ann"
Films艺 production (D. W. Griffith)
ALSO "Wife and Auto Troubles" Two Real
Keystone Comedy
Arrow Shirts—guaranteed fast color Sold exclusively by Johnson & Carl
FLOWERS FROM THE FLOWER SHOP
are always a pleasure to receive. Arrangements superior to all others. The keeping qualities are well known. A comparison is all we ask of the uninitiated.
MR. AND MRS. GEO. ECKE. Leading Florists
8251½ Miss. St.
Phones 621.
INVESTIGATE
the merits of CORONA AND FOX TYPEEWKITERS
Carter
Sells Them Exclusively in Lawrence
1025 Mass St.
Buy your paper here
Conklin Fountain Pens
Non-Leakable and Self-Filling
Non-Bekkale and Sem-Tiling
in Lawrence at
F. B. McColloch's Drug Store
847 Mass, St.
THESIS BINDING
Engraved and Printed Cards
A. G. ALRICH
typewriter Paper 744 Mass. S
PROTSCH The College Tailor
University Women
We do ladies tailoring and dressmaking at very reasonable prices. Competent assistants.
MRS. M. A. MORGAN
1321 Tenn. Phone B 1116W
a forge
Ashley-92½in. Lexicon-92½in.
ARROW
COLLAP spring
style, in two heights
CLUFT PEABODY & CO. INC. MARKERS
At 900 Tennessee
RAYMOND'S
PRIVATE DINING BUNGE
For desserts, banquets and dinner feeds, etc., call 22 on the Bell for reservations. Let us prepare your next picnic lunch.
ASK FOR and GET
HORLICK'S
THE ORIGINAL
MALTED MILK
Cheap substitutes cost YOU same price.
MRS. EDNAH MORRISON at 1146 Tenn. St.,
Does Fancy Tailoring and Remodeling for University Women.
Bell Phone 1154J.
Three-year course leading to degree in Mathematics or a related Quarter system, may be completed in four years. College education required for regular admission. County counted toward college degrees. Law degree required.
The University of Chicago LAW SCHOOL
The Summer Quarter offers special opportunities for students, teachers, and practitioners.
1st term June 19-July 26
2nd term July 27-Sept. 1
1st term June 19- July 26
RUSH MEDICAL COLLEGE
Offers courses in the medical branches
Detailed announcement will be sent
upon application to the
DEAN OF PHYSICS, THE
UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO
DRAMATICS FOR 10 CENTS
K. U. Club Will Give Four Farces at "Prices"
An evening's entertainment in dramatics for ten cents is the latest thing in the "pop" line for K. U. The Dramatic Club voted at its regular monthly meeting in the theater of Green Hall last night to open the final meeting of the year, some time during the latter part of May, to the general public, and to charge an ad-hoc fee that would be enough to pay for hauling three hundred chairs over to Green Hall to increase the present seating capacity.
There will be four farces, one given by Professor MacMurray's class in Dramatic Art, and the other three by members of the Club under the direction of Ihasa Hilsiman, Frank Ahlers and Michael D. Burr, the farces have already been picked out and the casts will be announced shortly after the Easter vacation. Enough time and care will be given to the production of these four farces that everybody who can afford to spend the ten cents will find as pleasurable an evening's entertainment as the members of the club can turn out.
The Club was entertained last evening by a clever one-act farce with all-a-star lady cast in composed of Jack O'Neill, Jared Florence Cooke, Dorothy Anguevine, Hazel Longebaugh, and Vera Blackburn. Four new members were admitted to membership on the recombinations of the Executive Committee.
SILVER TONGUES TO SPEAK
Student-Orators Prepare to Deliver Maiden Speeches in Poetry
Two student speakers, trained by the department of public speaking, will make their debut on Friday night. Avery Ohey of the Graduate School, will give his lecture-rival on Kansas State University's Kansasas. On the same evening at Turner, Kansas, Kenneth H. Lott, '17 Law, will speak on "The Spirit of the West." These dates are the first of a series that have been made through the Extension Department for those who want to see the department of public speaking.
Oney and Lott have spent considerable time both in the writing and delivery. It is believed that they will create a favorable impression throughout the state of the character of work done by the different departments of the University. If they succeed in the completion of the endeavor to connect the work of the University with the people of Kansas.
Receipts from the French war medal campaign have not been counted yet. The members of the Torch so far have paid their money collected the last of this week.
The speeches that these men will deliver are the product of a year's work in the study of oral interpretation. A thorough knowledge of the life and work of the poets, whose poems they read, is essential to a successful rolling in this course. The lectures are one hour in length and are prepared for public presentation.
Twenty young women wore on the Hill last Friday selling these medals. The medals are designed by Lalique, the French artist, and represent a woman clasping two children in her arms.
WAR MEDAL MONEY WILL
BE TURNED IN FRIDAY
Tot Tarrant, '18 College, took an Easter vacation worth while. He went home a week early and in, he wore a glove in two years attendance at K. U.
"Oh! Oh! Oh!", Soph Hop Farce Features An Original Song
IT'S A PEPPER POT! DEPENDS ON FACULTY
An original song by Henry McCurdy, '17 College, is to be the feature number in the Soph Hop farce, "Oh! Oh! Oh!" The song's title is "Love's Melody in A Flat." McCurdy himself, assisted by Ray Gafayen, '19 College, and Gladys Bitzer, '18 College, will sing the number.
Sherlock Holmes himself couldn't find a plot in 'Oh! Oh! Oh!' A Kansas reporter who makes some pretensions at being a sleuth slipped into the gym for rehearsal one day last week; but so far as he could observe the face has no more plot than a snake has hips.
First of all, there's a snappy opening chorus, song by Paul Sauter and a chorus of twenty girls. Jimmy McNaught and Helen Topping do a "frolic" to the music; and between watching Sautter, the chorus, and the two dancers all at once, the spectator (who is often a bit skimming) to that of a small boy at a three-ring circus. He simply can't see it all!
After the opening chorus, Bud Irwin and Gene Dyer enter, in blackface, and proceed to hold down the arena for five minutes with their more or less ludicrous remarks concerning the other chorus number, led by Adriance Jailrite. "Your Photo" is the title of the song—but nobody will ever know it the night of the farce! They'll be too busy laughing at the embarrassment of some male spectator for the song; they'll be for a chorus girl's amatory attentions.
Frank Miller slips onto the floor for a few thrillers on a bicycle, and then comes Guy Waldo, in rubber make-up. He has a couple of sycroped melodies up his sleeve, and he proceeds to let them out of a hole in his elbow.
About this time, the scene is suddenly shifted to Greece, and Paul Sautter and the chorus emerge in Grecian costume to sing a lyric noun "The Ragtime Pipe of Pan." Then enter the Wooley Irish man and he demonstrates the effect of Pan's chansy by dancing a bad chansy.
The K. U. song brings the farce to a close.
At this moment, Patti Hart and Opal Holmes, disguised as "Beauty Contest Girls" burst upon the scene, having been restrained with difficulty because of a nose injury. There's little left of any of their friends after they finish gossiping.
Just as Patti paddles a particularly funny "gap," Ray Gafney and the chorus enter, and proceed to sing a university song entitled "True to K. 11."
If your life needs spicing, "Oh! Oh! Oh!"
Oh!" is the peper pot.
GRAD STUDENT GOES
TO LELAND STANFORD
Mr. Dudley J. Pratt, who has been a graduate student in the department of botany for two years, has been appointed graduate assistant in the biosciences department of Stanford University. Mr. Pratt received offers of assistantships from three large universities, Illinois, Wisconsin, and Laeland Stanford. He expects to compete with other students in his physiology with Dr. Pratt at Stanford for his doctorate.
Milton Madden, 16' Eng., has withdrawn from the University to work for the Santa Fe with headquarters at Albuquerque, New Mexico.
Do you usually pay for a truly nice shirt? Fast colors, Latest style, Excellent material?
HOW MUCH
FIRST CLASS WORKSHIRT
Ideal Shirts
$1.00 and $1.50
Remember the place
820 Mass.
Open Evenings For Your Con-
vidence
The success of the proposed co-operative book store depends, in the main, upon the willingness of the stockholders to become stockholders in the institution.
The Establishment of a Co-Op Store Rests on the Purchase of Shares
A capital stock of only $200 or $300 is necessary to buy fixtures for the store and to raise this amount, the committee has planned to sell shares to the faculty members at par for $5.00. This will give each stock holder twenty-five cents per annum on each share held.
The books will be purchased on credit and will be sold on a strictly cash basis; each student receiving a receipt with his purchase. At the end of each year or possibly at the end of the semester, the profit made outside of the actual handling of the books will be divided equally among the holders of these receipts according to the amounts of purchase. In this way a student may save from one-fifth to one-sixth of his former costs through the co-operative store.
The store is to be situated in Fraser Hall the first year unless the Board of Administration makes an appropriation for a special building. A book exchange is to be run in contact with the Office of the profits derived from the exchange will be used in paying the expenses of the store.
Ideal CLOTHING CO.
PHYSICS DEPT. REPAIR
THE OWN APPARATUS
The department of Physics has installed a shop where they repair their instruments and make some of the research instruments which they are unable to secure because of the great length of time it takes to get them. The laboratory experiments a portion of the apparatus breaks and the experimenter is forced to wait until the broken portion can be replaced. Since the repair shop has been installed students are able to repair their own instruments with a saving of both time and money. "It saves us a lot of money, saving to the state," said Leo L. Brooks, physics custodian, this morning.
which side of the "Prepredress
Question" are you on with respect to
life in your home?
Cecil S. DeRoin, 17 College, who withdrew from school on account of sickness, was on the Hill during the Easter vacation. He says that the school looks better than ever and that he will be back next year without fail.
Send the Daily Kansan home to the folks.
PROSPERITY
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L. S. Broughly
15c Each
the new Spring and Summer
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COLLAR
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OEG. P. ID & E.C., Makers, TROY, N. Y.
Also Makers of Ide Shirts
FLOWERS
Cut flowers, funeral designs, potted plants and shrubs. Orders taken for parties. PHONE 1546 W ALPHA FLORAL COMPANY, 304 W 14th
G
LAWRENCE Business College Lawrence, Kansas.
wants ambitious young people to enroll and prepare for exceptional positions, as bookkeeper, stenographers, private secretaries, civil service. Positions secured as soon as competent. Enroll any Monday. Write, phone or call for catalogue. 645 Mass. St. Two Floors.
E. S. WEATHERBY, Superintendent.
W. H. QUAKENBUSH President
Full of the same old stuff that is going to push a certain little Jayhawk aggregation headed by one "Beau" Olcott through a glorious season next fall—
PEP that's what you will find in
Copping the Grapes
This Year's Senior Play
Written around K. U. life, featuring K.U. characters with an enthralling climax and happy ending, this "Made in K.S.U." play is bound to please.
It is Unique It is Different
TONIGHT
Prices: 25c-50c-75c. Seats Now Selling
BONWIT TELLER & CO.
CAMARADERIE
The Specialty Shop of Originations
FIFTH AVENUE AT 38TH STREET
NEW YORK
CAMARADERIE
M
Sports apparel for every college event.
Originations that reflect the new "Spirit of Play." Specialized types for the jeune fille—in coats and suits for sports wear—in silk sweaters—gay little blouses—frrocks of the La Zerz, Georgette crepe, crepe de chine, serge and linen.
Quaint Tams, broad Canotiers, ElSombrero—Hats for Sports Wear with a special appeal to the jeune fille. Close little turbans to defy campus winds—always with that distinctive esprit de jeunesse.
"Bontell" Originations in sports footwear—hosiery—necklets, and hand bags for sports wear.
Jeunes Filles Fashions for apres midi and dansant occasions. Intimate wear for leisure hours. Every type of apparel for the needs of the girl in college.
Send the Daily Kansan Home
Back to Two Bits, Fellows
Haircuts, like drugs, seem to fluctuate in price. The thirty-five-cent sting didn't remain for long and we are back again to the old charge.
And when you come in this shop, you can be assured that you will receive the same amount of expert service you would if you paid the other dime.
Our highest aim is to have our customers perfectly satisfied with the work—satisfied to the extent that they will come back again and recommend this place to their friends.
When one speaks of "Houk Service" he does it in a spirit of loyalty—he speaks with the knowledge that comes only from experience—he realizes the deeper significance in the phrase
THE SHOP OF THE TOWN
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
LOSE ONE — WIN ONE TO ENTER PENN GAMES
Kansas Divides Honors Wit Chinese Baseball Team of Hawaii University
Monday, Chinka 9 to 7, and Tuesday Kansas, 7 to 6, are the results of the two game series with the Chinese baseball team of the University of Hawaii in a few words. But figures don't change your consideration that Monday's game was a present to the Orientalis. If you don't believe it ask George Smee, K. Uurler that afternoon, who after holding the visitors to nine scattered hits, and contributing a home run, and double to seven, had the good fortune to have seven errors and "given him in way of support by his teammates."
saw success. Of the two games yesterday's was by far the better and of course Kansas won. In the main it was a triumph for two of Coach McCarty's recruits, lanky Wint Smith and Connie Poierier. A total of seven blows was collected off the two Jayhawk in twirlings, five from Smith in seven innings and two off Poierier in three innings. However, she credited the credit for wining the game having been sent in when the score was tied at the openion of the eighth.
Tuesday's game!
CHINESE B, B R H PO A I
J. Chin, seh. 4 2 2 A 1
Ayon, jb. 4 0 1 Y
Chinese, if. 4 0 1 7
Mark, c. 5 1 2 1
Latin, 3b. 5 1 0 1
Swain, w. 4 0 0 0
Dob, b. 4 0 0 0
Imman, p. 4 0 0 0
Alko, h. 0 0 0 0
Aklo, cf. 3 2 0 3
Totals... 37 7 6 6 25*12 3
*One out when winning run was
A ninth inning rally in which three Kansas counters were sent across on three walks, a single and an error, gave the Crimson and Blue the victory.
the box scores of the two games:
acced
ASR AIR B E H I O P A E
Gibbens, 2b. 1 1 0 1 0
Mittel cf. 4 1 1 2 1
Wood, sec. 4 1 1 2 1
Smee, Ir. 4 2 3 2 1
Lew尔mer, c. 4 2 3 2 1
L Lew尔mer, c. 3 0 1 16 1
King, sb. 3 0 1 16 1
King, sb. 2 0 1 16 1
W, Wulmer 3 0 1 1 0
W, Smith, p. 3 0 1 1 0
W, Smith, p. 1 0 1 0
Weber 1 0 1 0 1
Score by innings:
Chinese... 000 202 202
Korean... 200 202 203
Totals ...
†Batted for King in ninth.
†Batted for Polier in ninth.
**BAMBAH**
Summits: 1 Strike: 109, 200 800 203 204.
Summa of Strike: 2 Poinier: 1, Hits off
baman in 8 innings in South in spain on
2 Poinier in 8 innings in South in spain on
2 Poinier in two innings. 2 Two Wins:
Yenshih Miyama in Wood. Base on balls; off
Inman 6 of Wood. Base on balls; off
Inman 6 of Wood. Stone basse—Chin, Akio
Wandell. Sacrifice hits-Ayou, Ven
hains, and Hines. Scorer—Chin, Akio
Umpire, Hikes. Scorer, Spider.
The Soph Hop Management announces that the Fraser Hall check stand will be open at the following hours:
Thursday: 8:30-9:30 a.m.
Thursday: 1:30-1:50 a.m.
Friday: All day.
Seniors and faculty members may enter their prior invitations for tickets at the stand. Tickets will also be on sale.
The very latest in swimming caps and shoes at Carroll's.-Adv.
Baseball scores every night at Carrolls...Adv.
All kinds of typewriting done neatly and accurately. Satisfaction guaranteed. Terms reasonable. Work called for and delivered. Bell 616...Adv.
Spalding's tennis and baseball goods at Carroll's...Adv.
Get your smokes at Carroll's this evening and read the ball scores. Adv.
Furniture Styles
You need have no fear of changing style if you buy your furniture at Strachan's. Furniture of quality of design and structure is always of permanent style, and that is the kind of furniture that characterizes the Strachan Stocks.
Handsome furniture this spring will be just as handsome next spring and for many years after if it is surrounded by other furniture of quality.
The Strachan Store is the home of Quality Furniture, and Service that make trading with us a pleasure as well as a profit.
Start right this spring by fitting out at least one room at Strachan's.
Co So Strachan
FURNITURE
808-810 Mass. St.
Treweeke and Reber Start for the East This Afternoon
Two Jayhawkers left this afternoon for Philadelphia to take part in the Penn Games Saturday afternoon. Captain Reber will enter the shot put and discus throw while Treweeke will enter the long jump. Two athletes represent the strongest points in the Kansas team and their showing on the outdoor track this spring caused Coach Hamilton to enter them in the big eastern carnival. Treweeke has been trained at the neighborhood of six feet regularly and has also been broad jumping around the K. U. record of 23 feet 1 inch. Both of these records should win him places in the Penn Games and good he will doubtless bring back a collection of jewelry in the form of medals.
Captain Reber has been heaving the shot at unusual distances for a couple of weeks. He wanted this Philadelphi boy to be put in the pill up around the forty-four-mark. This will give him a place in the big meet unless some unusually good man are entered. His distance in the discus throw is considerably higher than he would be a place in the Penn Games but he will enter this event while he is there.
The Ohio State University was the first institution to introduce rural engineering as a form of agricultural extension work.
ANNOUNCEMENTS
All seniors who expect to be graduated this spring and have not filled out their applications for degrees are offered by F. Oyster's office at once and do so.
Franklin Lecture Postponed—Owing to conflicting dates, the lectures of Dr. E. F. Franklin have been indefinitely postponed.
Election of Cheerleader, members of Athletic Board and members of the Men's Student Council will be held Thursday, May 4. Petitions of candidates for these offices must be presented to the president of the Men's Student Council before 6 p. m. April 28. Leland Thompson.
R. A. Burch, Justice of the Supreme Court of Kansas, will lecture in Fraser Hall at 4:00 Thursday on the History of Criminal Procedure on French Criminal Procedure."
The K. U. Debating Society will leave 89 Miss. St. at 5 o'clock Thursday for a feed and impromptu program. Patti B. All, come. M. H. Read, president.
The members of the Latin Chorus
ill meet tonight in Robinson gymnasium. Miss Oliver.
The International Polity Club will meet tonight, April 26, at the Pi Polity Club. Meeting calls of Cornell, Palma Rowland Hills, and Cornell will speak. Meeting called at 8 p. m.
A special meeting of Sigma Xi will be held Thursday, April 27, at 4:30 in Room 101, Chemistry Building, to report the report of the Board of Electors.
nymphs in the May Fete, May 12,
are asked to report this week to Dr.
Alice Goetz in Robinson Gymnasium.
Little rehearsing will be required.
All junior girls wishing parts as
The newest thing in bathing caps and swimming shoes. See them at CarryMe.
Get your glove, bat or ball here and get new gods. Carroll's--Adv.
The Forty Club will meet at 1215
Oread Thursday evening, April 27.
Send the Daily Kansan home.
Boarding Club Buyers Know Blue Ribbon Bread
Better make its acquaintance—just step to the telephone and leave your order. The car will stop and open a card. You'll like what you get at
Phone 501 Bell
Brinkmann's Bakery
933 Massachusetts
Indestructo Trunks Bags and Suit Cases Sold Exclusively by Johnson & Carl
IT'S YOUR MOVE
Get into the game and find out for yourself why our methods of dyeing clothes and pressing suits have become so popular. Of course there are some mighty good reasons for this
OWEN
does not do a job any old way, just so as to get it done. Our customers always go away satisfied, for it is our business to see that they are. Either phone is good:
510 Bell or 464 Home
Here's ONE of our secrets—OUR WORK WILL SATISFY or we will.
Minneapolis Symphony Orchestra
Special Course Ticket Two Concerts for $1.00
Now on Sale at the Round Corner Drug Co.
Concerts Next Tuesday at 2:30 and 8:15
100
"Delighted"
That is the way we feel about our new Silk Gowns. Georgette Crepes, Chiffons, Tafetas, Gross-de-Londres, Tulle, Charmeuse, all-beautifully made.
And the colors—Green, Lavender, Navy, Rose—truly they make a pretty picture.
We'll Both Enjoy Your Visit
Even if you are not in the market just now you will enjoy a visit into this land of new shapes and pleasing trees tomorrow afternoon. Really now
Why Not Tomorrow?
Before we finished we wanted to tie up our white cotton dresses but we didn't want to risk the
Prices from $12.50 to $30 and from $6.75 to $25
COME SEE FOR YOURSELF AT
WEAVER'S
A Word to School Administrators
PETER L. WILLIAMS
DR. WILLIAM T. BAWDEN,
Specialist in Industrial Education, U. S. Bureau of
Education, Washington, D.C.
You are interested in the latest developments of scientific management applied to public education. The University of Kansas has secured the five specialists whose pictures are here reproduced to conduct a course during the Summer Session. Each man will deliver eight addresses. This should appeal to you. Other courses for superintendents and principals are described in the Summer Session Catalog. Drop us a postal card for any desired information.
F. J. KELLY
DIRECTOR SUMMER SESSION
UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS.
H. B. WILSON Superintendent of Schools, Topeka, Kansas. Expert on Building the Curriculum.
JOHN E. DAVENPORT
JAMES M. GWINN
Superintendent of Schools, New Orleans, La.
Expert on Rating Teachers.
PETER SCHNEIDER
GEORGE E. MELCHER Director of the Bureau of Research, Public Schools, Kansas City, Mo., on Efficiency Tests.
DR. LOUIS W. RAPEER Author of Text-books on Health Administration, State College, Pennsylvania.
---
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VOLUME XIII
ENGINEERS TO FROLIC
Parade, Field Games, Banquet HopFeature Their Holiday Friday
OFFICERS GIVE WARNING
Tanning
That "Pikers" Will Get a Royal
Tomorrow is the festive day for the K. U. Engineers, and they will celebrate the special holiday returned to them by the University Senate by their usual morning parade and after-after party. A surprise is promised by the committees in charge of arrangements for the parade and the meet in the afternoon, and according to the secrecy that is being observed in getting up the floats, they surprises when the parade leaves Marvin Hall tomorrow promptly at noon.
College and Law classes will be dismissed half an hour early to witness a graduation from up the Engineering Building in Hall, around east of Fraser Hall, and then down Mississippi Street to Massachusetts Street, where the town hall is located.
The parade will make its final destination McCook Field where special lunches will be served for the engineering students and faculty. Final arrangements for the lunch have not been made as yet, but it is probable that each department will tend to the serving of its own men.
The games will start promptly at 2:30. Each department has chosen a ball team which will play for the team. The final game counts 25 points on the dice. The games are arranged as follows: civils vs. electrics; architects vs. mechanicals; electricals vs. chemicals; winner of civils-miners game vs. winners-of-mechanics-game; winner of game winner of electricals-chemicals game.
NUMBER 141.
The track schedule is as follows:
2:30, 50-yard dash; 2:35, 8:80-yard dash;
2:50, tug-of-war, miners vs. chemicals; 2:50, three-legged races
3:10, 100-yard dash; 3:15, tug-of-war
3:45, 100-yard dash hurdles; 3:55, cracker race; 3:45, tug-of-war, electricals vs. architects;
3:55, 4:40-yard dash; 4:05, 220-yard dash; 4:15, tug-of-war, winners between chemicals and mechanicals vs. winners between electricals and architecture; 4:55, final tug-of-war; 5:00, spectacular.
The following rules for the meet have been adopted by the School:
TO GIVE SPANISH PLAY
In track and field events a department may enter two men, but only one may take part in each event. Only one team from each department shall participate in the meet. The department can take part in more than two track and field events. (Relays, tugs-of-war, and ball games are omitted from this rule.) No man shall represent more than one department. Freshman must signify to what department they belong before the meet. Athletes who belong above forfeits the points he gains and is barred from further participation in the meet.
"La Muela Del Juicio" in Gree
Hall Theater Saturday Night
A Spanish play, "La Muela de Juicio," (The Wisdom Tooth), will be given by the Spanish students of the department of Romance Languages, in Green Hall, Saturday, April 29 at 8 o'clock. The play is a modern act force and promises to be extremely interesting.
Each year the department of Romance Languages presents a play, alternating French and Spanish. Prof Skidmore has charge of the rehearsals. The dress rehearsal will be Thursday night.
A synopsis in English accompanies the program, making it possible for all who attend to understand the program is invited and urged to be present.
CANDIDATES MUST FILE
BY TOMORROW NIGHT
"All nominating petitions for the Men's Student Council must be in my hands by 6 c 'clock Friday evening," he added. "The senior class. "There seems to have been some misunderstanding as to when these petitions were to be in but the time is now definitely arranged and the petitions will be accepted later."
The election will be held Thursday May 4, and in addition to the president of the student council there will be elected a vice-president, secretary-treasurer, seven members from the College, four from the engineering school, two from the financial department, two from the health school, a cheerleader will also be elected which promises to be an interesting contest.
Prof. Howard T. Hill is entertaining his mother, Mrs. Flora J. Hill this week.
MEDICS WILL HOLD
SCHOOL FEED SATURDAY
14. don't panic!
All students in the School of Medicine are going to celebrate Saturday evening with a stunt party at the Phi Beta P house. Each of the three helicopter flights (Phi Beta P, Phi Chi, and Nu Sigma Nu will give some vonsense feature.
"But the big thing will be the eats," said Pattie Hart, one of the members of the committee, "for we expect to eat two or three times in the evening. The ten women medical students will be a bit different. They will go without escorts and will wear street suits instead of party clothes."
Dr. and Mrs. John Sundwall will chaperon the party. The committee in charge are Fred McEwen, Frederick Wheeler, Ashton, Fred Soper, and Pattie Hart.
SENIOR PLAY A HIT
Alton Gumbiner's Portrayal of K. U. Life is Well Received
The senior play "Copping the Grapes" by Alton Gumbiner, which was given last night at the Bowering Theater in New York for success. It was written about K. U. by a K. U. man and contained much local color and many local hits.
Sidney Moss as the financially embarrassed student, who decides to write a play in order to get home Christmas to Alice Dearring, showed K. U. man, and Beulah Dearling of a real
The scene was in the D. K. E. house the night before the prize dramatic closed. The prologue and epilogue presented the author in the inspiration to write and the winning of the. The two intervening acts were the result of a writer, in which a gentleman burglar holds the whole room in his power at the point of a revolver, is finally overpowered and taken in charge by a policeman who decides the booty is too good to miss and so turns the tables and plays the part of bandit. The director then faces some of the fraternity brothers who declare the whole thing is a joke to keep Allie from working on his play.
UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS, THURSDAY AFTERNOON, APRIL 27, 1916.
Ed Boddington as a philosophising burglar was capable of working on the sympathies of the whole crowd—with the exception of Mrs. Woggs, who continually repeated her refrain that "It is terrible, terrible."
Fred Whitten made an excellente graft seek policeman. John Hamilton, Paul Rathfon, Bob Smith, John McCommon, Hector Dodge, Jimmy Rodyd, Moore and Guy Waldo repressed the loving Fraternity brothers.
Roddy Moore as the politician and Guy Waldo as the wit pitched off some good speeches. Kenneth Lott, as the abused and indignant freshman, scored his dear brothers—until they turned tables and brought out the paddles.
Prof. Arthur MacMurray coached the play. Don Burnett was manager. The house was packed. No long waits occurred during the play.
DRCHESTRA CONCERT MAY2
The celebrated Minneapolis Symphony Orchestra will appear before the students of the University of Kansas this year in Robinson Gymnastium on Tuesday, May 2. There will be two performances, one at 2:30 and the other at 8:15. Four soloists, Leonora Allen, Jeane Cooper, Albert Linqtest, and Louis Graveur, will give selections, Leonora Allen, soprano, is with the orchestra for her third year, Jean Cooper, contralto, to prize over the top in singing the best contralto voice in America. Albert Linqtest, tenor, has appeared before a University of Kansas audience several times.
Seats to Sell for Seventy-Five Cents and Dollar
The Orchestra consists of fifty-five members. Prices for general admission are seventy-five cents and a dollar. Special course tickets which admit one to both performances are a dollar.
The singing of Louis Grauveur, bass, will be a rare treat to those who hear him. He is a noted Belgian singer who has been forced to come to America. He has often appeared on concerts separately.
The Minneapolis Symphony Orchestra will give "A Miniature Suite," a composition by Professor Arthur Arrhman, professor of music, Farrell will give a vocal selection.
The campus is being beautified. Arbor Vitae trees are being planted along the south side of the drive from gymnasium to the west edge of the campus.
Behold, thou hast made my days as it were a span long; and mine age is even as nothing in respect of thee; and verily every man living is altogether vanity.
Lord, let me know mine end, and the number of my days; that I may be certified how long I have to live.
LUCY RICHARDS
(1893-1916)
For man walketh in a vain shadow, and disquieteth himself in va. i; he heapth up riches, and cannot tell who shall gather the m.
And now, Lord, what is my hope: truly my hope is even in thee.
Deliver me from all mine offences; and make me not a rebuke unto the foolish.
When thou with rebukehs dost chasten man for sin, thou makest his beauty to consume away, like as it were a moth fretting a garment; every man therefore is but vanity.
Hear my prayers, O Lord, and with thine cars consider my calling; hold not thy peace at my tears;
For I am a stranger with thee, and a sojourner; as all my fathers were.
O spare me a little, that I may recover my strength:
before I go heme, and be no more seen.
—From the 39th and 90th Psalms.
FALLS DEAD NEAR GYM
Lucy Richards, Sophomore, Dies Suddenly on Way to Tennis Course
HEART FAILURE CAUSE
Courts
Had Taken no Exercise—Pulmotor Failed to Save
WAS INVITABLE—DR. SUNDWALL
Dr. Sundwall, who assisted in the post-mortem examination, said that the death of Miss Richarda was due to
Lucy C. Richards, a sophomore in the College, fell dead at 4 o'clock yesterday afternoon of heart failure as she was walking down the path to the field to practice with Ruth Endick, '18 College, for field work. They were tossing pebbles over the Hill, when Miss Endick saw Lucy Richards fall to the ground. She attempted to pick her companion up thinking she was going to die. Richards' heavy breathing alarmed her, and she immediately ran to Dr. Alice L. Goetz, professor of physical education for women.
"When I reached Miss Richard, I took her pulse," said Dr. Goetz, "and I felt but one beat. We used artificial respiration for a few minutes until we could get our pulmotor, and also sent for the larger pulmotor at the city fire department; but neither was effective in producing respiration. Miss Richard had stopped breathing because she had not been more than three minutes after she fell, that I felt her last nausea beat."
WORKED FIFTY MINUTES
After using the pulmotor for fifty minutes, hope of revivirg Miss Richards was given up, and her body was taken to the home of James B. Carper, 1000 Illinois, a friend of her family. It was later removed to Funk's undercarriage. The quest held last night gave the cause of death as heart failure.
Miss Richards' parents were notified and the body was taken this morning at 11 o'clock to her home at Minneapolis, Kans.
HAD NOT EXECURED
"There was no chance of saving Lucy Richardson's Nismith smith this morning, 'her heart' had stopped when Dr. A. L. Goetz reached her. There was not much oxygen in the pulmotor as it had been used on a little girl the day before and so we telephoned immediately to the Law Office motor which they brought up within ten minutes. Dr. S. A. Matthes did everything possible to start the heart with no success. I do not know what brought on the attack as Miss Richards was not exercised strenuously at all. She and another "woman" while driving stones and as they each stooped over to pick a stone Miss Richards fell. Dr. Goetz was immediately called."
HAD TAKEN NO EXERCISE.
"I am not a doctor, I did not cause the death of Miss Richards," said Dr. Geeta, this morning. "She and Miss Endacott had just dressed in gym suits for exercise and were leaving the Gymnasium to go down to the tennis courts. They were just a few feet away from the side entrance when Miss Richards fell. Her companion attempted to pick her up but he was too heavy. Miss Richards may office and heavily. She may office and hurried and reached Miss Richards within three minutes after she had fallen. Her heart was beating its that then. Miss Richards had taken no exercise and seemed to be in normal health, her acquaintances said. She was active in women's sports and was used to physical endurance. In physical examinations "bicker over a year" before finding to be normal. No hereditary disease was discovered. Such deaths are unexplainable. Nothing we could have done would have saved her."
IN MEMORIAM.
fatty degeneration of the heart and nothing could have prevented her death.
Lucy Carney Richards, a sophomore in the College, died suddenly on Wednesday.
Miss Richards was born April 4, 1893 in Minneapolis, Kan. She was graduated from the Minneapolis H. S. in 1913 and after taking a graduate course in high school, spent several months qualifying herself as a bookkeeper, for the sake of the business training.
She entered the University in the fall of 1914. She was brilliant in her studies, and showed conspicuous ability in women's athletics. During the war she was one of the most active and reliable reporters on the Daily Kansan. It was her intention to fit herself for newspaper work, and the quality of her writing showed great promise. Much of the matter on her letters appeared in the Daily Kansan of later days from her pen. Her fellow students and her instructors never failed to find inspiration, encouragement and good cheer in the spirit which she brought to the faithful and conscientious readers, could always be expected from her.
Miss Richarda was one of five sisters, one of whom, Hazel Richarda, was graduated from the University last year. She was very active, and was physically so strong that nobody suspected her real condition.
"Lucy was always the boy of the family," said her father to a Kansan reporter his morning. "She had an especial place in her heart for small boys. She liked to participate in their sports and games. They were devoted to her. She had a large and loyal following of them, and had a particular dislike for what she called 'sissy boys', and if any one of her, young, followers had tendencies that were not properly masculine, she made it her business to redeem him. Many a boy will be able to look gratefully back on my daughter as a determining and benefactive influence in his life." Like the young boys whose companionship she loved, she was aliachief, fun and harmless mischief; and we would tell her that she was a greater cut-up than any of them.
"Her influence on girls, however,
was equally marked." One summers she
organized a crowd of Blue-Bird Girls,
took long hikes under her leadership.
"Last summer she went to the exposition at San Francisco, and did a great deal of mountain climbing, in which she became members of the party in endurance.
Mr. Richards left for Minneapolis this morning, with his daughter's flowers to hand off. As a token of journalism, have sent flower as it token of, their sense of loss.
"She was a skilled mime and this gift, together with her high spirits, made her the life of every crowd. She was an invertebrate reader—a fact which was evident in the quality of her academic work."
The *Koreanset* *knightlet* *Weather*
*tonight and Friday*. Warner west
*morning*.
"She was unselfish to a fault, and was always willing to relinquish her good times for the sake of the happiness of others."
The Weather
MORNING PRAYERS
Spaker; The Reverend R.L. Patter-
Stak, Mk. Stark's Lutheran Church,
Church of St. Marks
General subject: "Post-Easter Medi-
tations."
*Name:* Rise, Piers Lifes.
Send the Daily Kesap home to the folks.
SENATOR WILSON TO
TALK GOOD ROADS
State Senator Walter E. Wilson, of Washington, will speak Friday afternoon, April 28, at 4:30 o'clock in the lecture room of Snow Hall. Senator Wilson is a K. U. alumnus and will spike on "The Economics of Good Roads."
This lecture is one of the series given by the departments of economics and political science and was to have been given some time ago. It was then secured by a lecture secured by the department of sociology for the same time.
IS SUNDAY WELCOME?
Faculty Divided Over Evangelist's Visit to K. U. Next Month
When ten members of the faculty were asked yesterday by a Kansan reporter whether they approved of Billy Sunday's being brought to the University, six were in favor of it, two were non-committal, and two Prof. F H, Hodder and Prof. C S. Skilton, were against the idea.
PROF. HOODER CALLS HIM "VULGAR"
"I can only repeat," said Professor
Hooder, "what I have said before. I
have been exhaustively, quite explicitly,
the height of vulgarity. I do not expect him - to corrupt the students' English, neither do I expect him to do it any good. I do not think it would be a good thing to stamp of approval on a man of that type. I don't blame the students for wanting him. They would go to hear him as they would go to see a circus. They are not responsible for getting hurt." Mr. Hoodyer was the executive force of the University."
Professor Skilton takes practically the same stand. He said, "I don't approve of Billy Sunday's volcanic sentiment," and he favored of having him come to the University. If he came, he would be an object of curiosity, nothing more. The churches and religious organizations are now cared for the religious lifes of the school."
It could not be learned what Prof. H. A. Mills thought. He said when he was concerned Billy Sunday's coming, but none that I care to express."
Prof. C. G. Dunlap also was reluctant in expressing his views, "I have a deep sense of guilt, mock, and consequently I have no opinion one way or the other," he said.
"GLAD TO HAVE HIM" — CHANCELOR Chancellor Strong said: "I have no objection whatever to Mr. Sunday's University refusal, but the University refused to invite Mr. Day to speak there, the University of Pennsylvania gave him a cordial invitation. That rather evens up the matter. I understand too, that the largest crowd ever assembled for a public address at Princeton met to hear Mr. Sunday. No doubt the objections of the University authorizing its issuing. Since he has already been invited, I shall be clad to have him."
Dean Blackmar: "There is just as much reason for having Billy Sunday as for having Bryan, Roosevelt, or President Wilson. I am not pleased with Sunday's methods. They are entirely foreign to what I would advocate, but he is certainly getting where he needs to go, where other people have failed. As far as achievement is concerned, there is no greater man, at present, in the United States than Billy Sunday, and there is no reason why he shouldn't come to the University, just the same as any other famous speaker."
"WANT to HEAR HIM - HOPKINS"
Prof. E. M. Hopkins said; "I have never heard Mr. Sunday speak. If I were acting as representative of the University, I should vise him, but I see not reason why he should not come under the auspices of the Y.M. C. A. or upon the invitation of the student body. Personally I should like to hear him at the University. I think he could be depended upon to give a talk entirely suitable for the place and the occasion. If I thought otherwise, I should of course not wish to have him come."
ELDERKIN KPW
"I so need no reason to Billy Sunday shouldn't send the Rev. Noble S. Elderkin, when asked for his opinion.
"There abrupt, pointed remarks that jar us are often better for us than the softer, more polite phrases. I was never for Billy Sunday until he went to the University of Pennsylvania and got away with it. A man who can teach you a student body must have something in him. He made a big hit at Princeton, too. I understand. I happen to have a brother there at present and he reports the sermons as 'great stuff.'"
Ada Dykes College Speaker
Ada Dykes will represent the College on the Students' Day program May 19 at the University. She was elected at a mass meeting of College students today noon. Last year Miss Dykes' brother John Dykes spoke for the Collargiers.
Send the Daily Kansan home.
HOP TO START ON TIME!
"Eight o'Clock The Time Set;
We'll Begin Then, Regard-
less"—Davis.
GOV. IS REALLY COMING
Four Hundred Guests Expected at Soph Party Tomorrow
THE HOP IN A NUTSHELL
Place: Robinson Gymnasium.
Time: Eight o'clock.
Intermission at midnight, at which time the farce, "Oh! Oh! Oh!" will be given.
Dancing begins at 8:30 o'clock and continues until 2:00 Saturday morning.
Grand March begins at 8:15 o'clock.
a reception, with Governor and Mrs. Capper as the guests of honor, the opening event.
Refreshments are to be served in four relays of two dances each.
Cabs, flowers, and dress suits are taboo.
The tenth annual Soph Hop, to be given in the Gym tomorrow night, will start on time! So says Don Davis, manager of the big affair, and he, if anyone, should know. "The reception begins at 8 o'clock; the grand march at 8:15; and dancing at 8:30," said Davis this morning. "And we're going to start on time, even if only two couples are there!"
'I've asked every man to tell his 'date' he would call for her at a quarter of eight. In that way, we hope to have everyone at the Gym on time. But whether they're there or not depends upon it, as set tenteen minutes after eight.'
A reception in honor of Governor and Mrs. Arthur Capper is the opening event of the Hop program. Those in the receiving line will be: Linus Fitzgerald, president of the sophomore class and Miss Dora Lockett; Governor and Mrs. Arthur Capper; Hop manager and Miss Margaret Hoddle; Obliged Mrs. Frank Strong; Mr. Ed. G. Hackney, of the Board of Administration and Mrs. Eustace Brown, adviser of women.
THE GREAT MARCH
At 8:14 a.M., Hakey the six-piece orchestra from the park will play the grand march, which will be led by Mr. Davis and Miss Hodder. Dance programs will be given out by Misses Marie Buchanan and Adriance Jallitte and Messrs Chester North and Edgar Van Cleef. Dancing will begin at 8:30 and continue until 2:00 o.c钟 Saturday morning.
REFRESHIMENTS DURING DANCE
Refreshments will be served on the first floor, in four relays as follows: during dance numbers four and five; seven and eleven; thirteen and fourteen. The usual quartet tables have been supplanted, this year, by an immense banquet table built in the form of a hollow square. In the center of this square, during the interval between the second and third courses of the three course luncheon, the guests will dance. Two cabaret performers will do character and ball-roon dances during the final hours of the play. Frank Hetherington, '17 College, and Mrs. Kate Drisdom, well known caterer, will serve the refreshments.
A thirty-five minute intermission will occur at midnight, between dance numbers 16 and 17. At this time the Soph Hop farce, "Oh! Oh! Oh!" will start with the dance of twenty, and a student orchestra of seven. Seat checks for the farce are to be given out early in the evening when the guests first enter the Gym. "The first guests to arrive will fence the best seat," said Manager Chris this morning. "One simply can't afford to be late to this party."
WHO'S WHO in THE FARCE "Oh! Oh! Oh!" is a one-act musical comedy, with music "copped" from three New York theater successes of the show, including original song by Henry McCurdy, '17 College feature number. Maureen McKernan and Don Davis wrote the "patter" for the comedians. The show is staged under the direction of Misses Gladys Ellott and Helen Hoopes.
Following is the cast:
A. Midnight, Masquerade
...Paul Sautter, '17
Un Danseur. James McNaught, '16
Un Danseuse. Helen Topping, '17
A Gentleman of Color. Bud Irwin, '19
Another Such. Eugene Dyer, '19
An Old Fashioned Girl. '17
... Adriance Jailrite, 17
A Bicycle Rider. . Frank Miller, 17
A Guy Rider. . Guy Valdo, 17
a matinee Roy. Hen, Ben Lowe,
His Little Friend. . Graf Roy, 19
The Soubrette. . Gladys Bitzer, 18
American Made Greecian Maida.
(Continued from page 3)
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Official student paper of the University of Kansas
EDITORIAL STAFF
Chas. S. Sturtevant...Editor-in-Chief
BUSINESS STAFF
William Cady...Business Manager
Chas. Sturtevant...Adv. Manager
REPORTORIAL STAFF
IQPORTAL
Paul Bondel
Don Davev
Ralph Ellis
Harry Morgan
Harry Morgan
LU STIFF
L Guy Servivner
Cargill Sproull
Charles Sweet
Glenn Swogger
Vernon Moore
Subscription price $3.00 per year in advance; one term, $1.75.
Entered as second-class mail master September 17, 1910, at the post office at Lawrence, Kansas, under the act of March 3, 1879.
Address a. communications to UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Lawrence, Kannas.
Phone, Bell K. U. 25.
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 students to go further than merely printing the text on paper. University holds; to play no favorites; to be clean; to be cheerful; to be generous; to leave more serious problems to wiser heads, in all, to help identify the students of the University.
Fond of dress is sure, a very curvy
pursue you must, consult your
puny.
THURSDAY, APRIL 27,1916
**What, though, you have found to be true?**
You may also say that you ariogy, diligence is the mother of character.
"MASHING?"
University women, says a recent contributor to the Daily Kansan's "Campus Opinion," are becoming afraid to venture down town after dark without an escort. Upon numerous occasions, says the writer of the communication, women going to or returning from the picture shows or post office, have been accosted with "Hello there, girls," or "Ah, there, Mary." And the men guilty of such unconventionalities are, it is claimed, often University men.
That such a state of affairs really exists, seems scarcely possible. Any self respecting young man of the University, even though this may have been his custom of making dates in his home town, should know better than to hope to become acquainted with K. U. women in this manner.
K. U's proximity to Kansas City, with its attendant evils, has always been a source of anxiety to the University authorities. Women from the vice district are said to be making trips to Lawrence with increasing frequency. Perhaps it is these women that students from the Hill attempt to make dates with on the streets of Lawrence. The Lawrence police keep matters in hand as best they can, but they cannot be entirely successful.
That K. U, women should be dragged into any proceedings so disgraceful as street "mashering" is scarcely believable. The students of the University, coming from the best homes in the state, surely would not allow such a state of affairs to exist.
The man who always makes "I'm not always the best pool player.
ADDITION TO LOAN FUND
The Senior play last night was a success, a howling success, according, to many who were given "honorable mention." The play was also a financial success. The Student Council is to receive a percentage of the profits. What will be done with its share?
The Student Loan Fund again suggests itself. No better way could be devised to do a service to the University. Additions to the Loan Fund should be made when ever possible.
Perhaps the man who is always afraid of making a fool of himself realizes that it would not be a very difficult task.
SONG FOR THE WORLD
One hundred men from the New York police force have been organized into a chorus. They meet once a week, and rarely is the attendance less than a hundred per cent efficient. The men like to meet, and those in charge of the department say it promotes better feeling among the men as well as the men and their superiors.
Russia sends her men into battle
singing. The German's "Wacht am Rhine," the Frenchman's "Marseillaise," the Englishman's "Tipperary" are all a part of the war. Singing is recognized as a big factor in keeping the men in good spirits, and satisfied with their surroundings.
Couldn't K. U. have more singing in which all might join?
The Freshmen have one consolation. No one can accuse them of using bad taste in the choice of headgear.
CONSIDER THE DANDELION
Behold the humble dandelion, how it grows. It lies close to the ground and has roots of exceeding length, that it may not be destroyed. It is the curse of gardens and the despair of gardeners, yet it hath its place.
Little children use it to tell whether their platyms have a taste for butter. No of course you never did. It was the old-fashioned child, who rode a stick horse and played with rag dolls and went barefoot, and didn't know what it was to order over a soda fountain bar.
CONSIDER THE DANDELION
To the old-fashioned child the dandelion was a thing of beauty and a sure harbinger of that time when foot-cramping shoes could be discarded, and when dread of coal-oil-sugar as a medicine for colds could be relegated to the background of chopping kindling and carrying in cobs. The coming of the dandelion meant an approach of the joyous wild months of the summer vacation. It brought visions of the "slippery-slide" at the swimmin' [hole, of homemade canoes and fishing with bent pins on a piece of string that came around the Sunday roast.
Yes, times have changed. Possibly it's because the coming of dandelions now means spring shoes eight dollars a pair instead of barefoot orgies in the warm dust.
Jayhawk Squawks
What You Heard When You Were
"How's school now?
" like it all right, do you?"
"We're awful, awfully glad t see you back."
"You're looking well."
"Let me see, you finish—when?"
If holiness be a virtue, there will be stockings in heaven.
Among topics to be avoided are those touching entertainments which she didn't attend.
Lord Whata Tatka, the gentleman barber, hasn't helped the colyume much lately. He's been too busy using his to customers who he raised.
"I saw a peach of a bear in the city."
"That's nothing. I saw a dandy ion home."
Everything was so symbolical Even the wind blew in an Easterly direction last week.
The greatest drawback to making a mistake lies in the frequency with which your friends will remind you of it.
Ale Sommers says he weighed before and after taking a bath in Lawrence water the other day with the recollection of how little it littered over three and one-half pounds.
Every time our room is cleaned up we find so many things we'd forgotten we had.
With the aid of the advertisement which the for and against letters in the papers have given him, there seems to be no reason why Billy Sunday should not enjoy his usual success in Kansas City.
A petition for the abolishment of the 12:00' oclock whistle is being circulated. Some of our friends who were in crisis aaressa complain that it wakes them up.
Even the Oklahoma Aggies are having trouble on the chapel question. Only ten members of the faculty meeting certain chapel meeting last month.
We wish formally to introduce the Nell family, Colder, Hotter and Slicker.
Princeton has established a course of military lectures in order to give its students an idea of the funda-
tures involved in training officers and
tatures are to be given by army officers.
The average salary that the women students of the University of Minnesota desire a man to make, before graduation, was found to be $1,642 per year.
Thomas Caryle was born at Ecclesfecham in Annadale in 1795, Caryle, like many literary men of his time, had a long hard fight before he won recognition for himself as a writer. He died in 1881.
POET'S CORNER
TO-DAY
So here has been dawning another blue
Think with them let it slip useless
Out of eternity this new day is born;
Into eternity at night will return.
Should it aftercareen no eye ever灭
his head, a widid,
Here hath been dawning another blue
days.
Think thou thou let it useless slip away. —Thomas Carlyle.
Essays in Tabloid Tablets
ROUGE
Rouge is a preparation. Made by pharmacists. To supply. A feminine want. It is often called. Face paint. Because. It is. Daubed on the cheeks. To give. That peach bloom. Tint. To the complexion. It burns. Because it stings red And it is. Prepared in two forms. Dry. And dress. dry rouge. Comes in a cake. And is applied. With a rabbit's foot. Not being sticky. It does not stick. On. As well as the paste form. Hence. It is. More often seen. On men's coat. Shoulders. Many fanfareful names. Are in front of the wall their red dope. Cherryilla. Bloom-of-youth. Peach tint. Youthine. Etc. Are examples. Paste rouge. Is generally. Put up. In a jar. And it is smeared over. The cheek. With the index finger. Of either hand. It takes practice to make it blend. In. With the natural. Sallow color of wood. You may play roles in group makes. Ugly women. Uglier. But they do not. Know it. And the makers get. Rich. It may be that. The high cost. Of dyes. Will make. The cost. Of rouge. Prohibitive. If the war, Keeps. On. Let us hope. So
Prof. Alfano Aulard, professor of history at the University of Paris, says the French Peasant has been given new life thru new ideas. He is a strong believer in the New France through the education of the peasantry and the growth of international socialism. He says, quoting from the N. Y. Sun;
A REGENERATED FRANCE
In short, we wished to establish in France a model democracy whose influence would win over, among other peoples, the Germans, influencing them to substitute a liberal, modern and pacific government for their absolutist, old-fashioned, warlike government.
Among French democrats the Socialists went so far as to believe that the German people were on the point of entering or had already entered into the democratic condition. Taking seriously certain speeches and certain acts of the German Socialists they candidly believed that the Germans were at one with them to oppose, even by revolt, any war whatsoever, and they would destroy the absolutism of the government of their own country.
It seems to me that you are taking things for granted in your editorial "It's The Little Things That Count," page two, column one, April 26. In the first place do a majority of the women smoke in the presence of someone smoking on the part of their escorts? Personally I do not believe that they do and I do not believe that the man who smokes in the presence of a woman is showing a lack of respect if he has been granted permission. Surely the women of the University are not of the spineless kind that women are supposed to be. I am confident that if they found smoke objectionable that they would say so. We are not living in an age which needs the Blue Laws of Massachusetts and sensible people do not believe that women are forever damned by that they walk with a man who does not smoke. One woman in twenty-five objects to the odor of cigar or cigarette smoke, and that your expression is not in accord with fact. I should like to
Communication must be signed to evidence of good faith but will not be published without permission.
The talks between French and German Socialists came to be frequent. The illusion of a German socialism as the brother of French socialism, the friend of peace at any price, the friend of France, capable of disobeying the dictates of the monarchy, clined to make war, got control of even clear heads in France. Thus the leader of French Socialists, the strongest and the most enlightened mind in French politics since Mirabeau, the late Jean Laize, not only dreamed of a reconciliation with Germany but had also formed a prochèvement was practically realizable, and not far away, as he frequently told me himself.
"I WANNA SMOKE"
Editor Daily Kansan:
CAMPUS OPINION
Young Men, Note!
Here's the smartest suit ever designed--Varsity Filty Five by Hart Schaffner & Marx. Have it with one, two or three buttons----different pockets or lapels---the style you want is here.
en, Note!
smartest suit
Varsity Fifty
Schaffner &
it with one,
buttons--differ-
lapels----the
is here.
nam's
Finer & Marx clothes
Emery Shirts
Hart Schaffner
& Marx
We'll show you.
Peckham's
The home of Hart Schaffner & Mary cloete
Regal Shoes
Emery Shirts
hear an expression of opinion from the women of the University.
—Smoker.
TOO MANY FRATERNITIES Editor Daily Kansan:
Now that the athletes are to have a fraternity there will be still another "brand" of secret society jewelry on University men's vest. In view of the facts that new honorary and professional fraternities install chapters at K. U. nearly every year, and that there are rumors about them in this class society, it is getting to be a difficult problem for some of the men to find room on their vests for the insignia of their various secret brotherhoods.
In fact, the man who spends four years at Kansas has little chance to go back home with an unjeweled front. There is no room at the University for more secret societies, nor should their organization be encouraged unless they have definite, constructive purposes.
Loked upon in its true light, Sigma Delta Psi is nothing but a moderate test of an all around athlete. If we wish to discover and honor the best athletes of the University, we should teach Greek letter badges upon their vests. Why not let the men compete in an open decathlon where they are given credit for the records they make in each of the ten events. This is the method of competition used at the Olympic games to determine around athletes in the world, and is undoubtedly the best one in existence.
The seniors at Vassar voted last week to abstain the annual custom of choosing the twenty-four prettiest girls of the sophomore class to carry the "daisy chain" on Senior Day. The custom had reduced itself to a vulgar beauty contest. The women at the University of Wisconsin have stopped the various beauty contests there for the same reason.
Fire destroyed the new Engineering Building at the Michigan Agricultural College, Friday. The loss is estimated at $25,000 as there was no insurance on the building. The student city fire department prevented the fire from spreading to the other buildings.
As an advertisement, Lawrence merchants would probably offer prizes to the winners of such a competition. The athletes are not in favor of them. They think it an insufficient test and look upon it as an excuse to bring more fraternity jewelry upon the hill. They think also that it might cause of aristocracy and hard feeling among the members of the athletic teams.
A "K" Man.
The Coyotes of the Kansas Wesleyan University, took the deciding basketball game from Bethany College by a score of 33 to 17. This gives the championship of the Kansas conference to the Wesleyan. Bethany took second place and Ottowa third.
An "International Night," under the auspices of the Cosmopolitan club was held at Yale University on the night of March 3rd. Representatives from Armenia, China, India Italy and the United States gave entertainments characteristic of their own country.
The student attendance at the University of Wisconsin from foreign countries has slumped badly this year on account of the war in Europe. The foreign enrollment last year, according to the last issue of the university catalogue, was 71. This year it is 26.
The Harvard Cosmopolitan Club entertained delegates of twenty-four nationalities who attended the ninth annual convention of the American Association of Cosmopolitan Clubs in Cambridge during the holidays. These delegates represented thirty colleges and universities.
Because of a recent faculty ruling every male student at the Southern Methodist University, Greensboro, Alabama, is compelled to take two hours of supervised exercise three times a week. A physician has been engaged and physical examinations will be given when necessary.
WANT ADS
LOST-On the campus Tuesday morning, a gold bar pin. Please leave at Registrar's office in Fraser Hall. 136-3*
MEN WANTED -For summer work at $4.00 per day guaranteed. See Chas. Campbell at Eldridge Wednesday. 137-2
MEN WANTED--For summer work at $4.00 per day guaranteed. See Chas. Campbell at Eldridge Wed-
sday. 137-2
LOST—One black Simplex Note Book
No. 6 containing the name of Ruth
Goldsworthy. Please leave at Registr-
rar's office.
FOR RENT—On Mt. Oread, June 12,
sorority or fraternity house: First floor, front and back parlor, large dining room, kitchen, pantry; second floor 4 bed rooms and bath; third floor, 4 bed rooms and bath. Water hot heat. Electric lights. Call M. S. Root, Bell 1428W. 139-3
BARBER WANTED—For evenings and Saturday work. Inquire at K. U.Y.M.C.A. 139-3
Will the person who found the watch containing the name Neil Paul in the back of it please notify him by calling 711 Jell B?-Adv. 140-3
Get your Hearst today at Carroll's.—Adv.
Book Stores
CLASSIFIED
Ins. Petitta
ED. W. PARSONS, Engraver, Watch-
taker, Jewelry.
Bell phone 717. 717 Mass.
KEELER'S BOOK STORE 393 Maaes
St. Typewriters for sale or rent
Paper by the pound. Quiz books 9 for
10c. Pictures and Picture framing
MISS ESTELLA NORBURGH, china
carefully handled. 724 Mass. Phone
K. U. SHOE SHOE and Pantatorium is the best place for best results 1342 Ohio
Plumbers
umber
PHONE KENNEDY AND LUMBING CO.
MASSE, and Mazda Lumph. 937.
Masse, Phone.
B. H. DALE, Artistic Job Printing
Both phones 228, 1027 Mass.
FORNEY SHOE SHOP 1017 Mass. St.
and a mistake. All work
guaranteed.
MRS M. A. M. ORGANAN, IH$1 "Tennessee"
tajoring. "Prices very reasonable.
tajoring." "Prices very reasonable.
PROFESSIONAL CARDS
DR. H. L. CHAMBERS. Office over Squires' studio. Both phones.
HARRIS REDDING. M. D. EYE. ear.
BERTS W. BLEIGH. Phones. Bell 513.
June 513.
G. W. JONES2, M. A. M. D. P. Dlesson3
colony 4, Johns Hopkins Univ.
colony 5, Ohio St. Phonus4
Heil-
J. R. BRECHTEL, M. D. D. O. 833 Musa
Both phone numbers and residence.
A. C. WILSON, Attorney at law 743
Mass. St. Lawrence, Kansas.
DR. H. W. HUTCHNSON, Dentist. 2015
Perkins Bldg., Lawrence, Kansas.
C. E. ORBELUP, M. D. i. Dick Bldr. Eyw.
D. B. IGAN, M. D. i. Dick Bldr. Gwantuarid. Successor to
Di Manu. Gwantuarid.
SHUBERT NEXT SUNDAY
NEXT WEEK NO SELLING
Direct from 6 months old
TAYLOR HOLMES
In a new comedy--Brimful of fun.
HIS MAJESTY
Runker Rean
Lee Wilson Dodd's Dramatization of
Harry Leon Wilson's Saturday
Sunday
Evening Post Stories
Watkins National Bank [Capital $100,000]
Surplus and Profits 110,000
The Student Depository
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
THEATRE VARSITY
TONIGHT ONLY
MAE MARSH
Star in "The Birth of a Nation" in
"Hoodoo Ann"
Fine Arts production (D. W. Griffith)
ALSO "Wife and Auto Troubles" Two Reel
Keystone Comedy
Arrow Shirts—guaranteed fast color Sold exclusively by Johnson & Carl
BOWERSOCK
TOMORROW ONLY
MARGUERITE
CLARK
IN
"Seven Sisters"
Screen Adaptation of Famous Stage Comedy
Screen Adaptation of Famous Stage Comedy
FOUR SHOWS DAILY
Conklin Fountain Per
Non-Leakable and Self-Filling
Sold in Lawrence at
Conklin Fountain Pens LIKE TO BE A MODEL?
F. B. McColloch's Drug Store 847 Mass. St.
THESIS BINDING
Engraved and Printed Cards
G ALRICH
Tonewriter Paper . Mass. St.
Tonewriter Paper . Mass. St.
Typewriter Paper 744 Mass. St.
DISPLAY INDIAN RELICS
PROTSCH The College Tailor
Collection Received From Old Wyandotte Village
The G. U. S. Hovey collection of Indian religies, consisting of 7,500 specimens, has just been arranged in two large cases on the third floor of Dyche Museum. The collection was donated in 1913 but owing to the lack of specimens the process of cataloguing it has been long and difficult.
There are pipes, pottery, books carved from stone in imitation of the bibles used by the Jesuits, grinders for the preparation of food, and scrapers used to clean skins for wearing apparel. Every article is catalogued as to size, color, and state of preservation. There are many types of arrowheads, one peculiar type is a bright blue. Most of them are left-armed with pink or beaded heads being seldom found. The side which is bevelled determines which way the arrow will rotate on its longitudinal axis.
The importance of the collection lies in the fact that it all comes from one village and that this village was used as a material aid to transport. A large part of the material from which these implements were made, evidently was transported from the Dakota and was probably obtained by trade with other tribes. The villagers point out that on the Missouri river at a point that was favoured for a crossing.
Dear Alan Templin is in Columbus, Ohio, attending a meeting of the Deans of Colleges of the State Universities in the North Central Association. Dean Templin is chairman of this conference and has been ever instrumental in establishing with him an instrument in bringing about. Fourteen universities are represented in it. Dean Templin will probably be gone ten days.
The University of Illinois maintains an official pigeon shooter to rid the campus of pigeons, which become very troublesome every year. He is a crack shot and keeps in training by this work.
Send the Daily Kansan home.
Few Requirements—Beauty No Essential But Character in Your Face is
How would you like to be a model? If you would like to serve as an artist's pattern see Prof. W. A. Griffith, professor in drawing and painting, for he is very desirable of obtaining several models after the Easter holidays to pose before his class in free-hand drawing.
TWENTY-FIVE GENES AN HOUR
The requirements of a model are fine. Beauty is not essential, but three must be some character in the face. You will have to be gentle with you may be a man or woman, it makes no difference. All that you have to do is to pose twenty-five minutes and rest five, and for your trouble you will be reimbursed at the rate specified. The models generally work in turns from two to four hours at a time. No you do not have to sit like a block of marble, in fact, in the advance classes they encourage talking so that an animation can be given to the sketch. Occasionally, the model is in costume.
But, before you take your position "on the throne," as the model's chair is called, it is only fair that you should know that being a model for a beginning class in free-hand drawing is not very exciting. Professor Griffith shows that this class draws a real live model much as they would an onion or a carrot.
A little more dope that you should know before applying for the job: Out of the sketches of the entire class there will probably be only two or three good drawings. Many of them you will not be proud of, and perhaps a few that you will fail to recognize.
This year the girls wanted an old man to sketch. Seventeen typical old follows were found hanging around the court house, idle. Some of them were depending on the poor commissioner for their living, but when approached with the model proposition they were admitted that the money looked good but that they were too bashful for that kind of work. Maybe they thought that they were to pose as Innocence, Virtue or Father Time.
MAY MAKE YOU A CARROT
It is a problem to know where to get models, laments Professor Griffith. The men are too bashful and only a little aware of the revenue. However, when a sorority is raising a fund for a piece of furniture or for some other purpose, models are plentiful and in Professor Griffith'sology, "It's like finding a gold mine."
MEN ARE BASHFUL
(Continued from page 1)
For that picnic lunch we handle all the best grades of picnic stuff. All kinds of soft cheese, deviled ham and salve salad. Dummies—Adv.
HOP STARTS ON TIME! ALUMNI DINNER SAVED
A good quality of Butter-Crust bread. Get it at Dummies.-Adv.
Hazel Wolley, '19; Ruth
Wolley, 19
The Biggie Contest, Patti Hart, '18
The Beauty Competition Girl,
Opal Holmes, '16
...Opal Holmes, '16
THE CHORUS
Violin, Harry Martin, '19; cornet,
Buchanan, '18; Olive Reynolds, '19;
Jane Waters, '19; Emma May Rum-
mel, '18; Josephine Gillett, '18; Lilian Martin, '18; Florence Hoar, '17;
Nelle May Schall, '18; Irma Wullen-
wober, '19; Bonnie Lingenfetter, '18;
Elizabeth Armie, '19; Margaret
Gargarev, '19; Irène Tihen, '18; trude LaCoss, '18; Rose Haworth, '19; Irene Tihen, '18; Helen Riddle, '18; Lucile McCormick, '17; and Milldred Light, '18.
THE ORCHESTRA
Violin, Harry Martin, '19; Cornet,
Charles Davis, '18; clarinet, Ralph
Fritts, '18; trombone, Jay Hargett,
'17; bass guitar, Paul Schmidt,
'18; traps, A. E. Wilson, '19; piano, Frank
Gage, '19.
After the farce, dancing will begin again, and continue until two o'clock. The much talked of serpentine carnival will take place during the next to the last dance. Serpentine and confetti for the festival will be distributed by Misses Katherine Redmond and Ade Dykes; and Messrs Jack Elliott, Bob Mason, Eugene Wulffuhier, and Art Temelin.
"ALL GOES WELL!"-DAVIS
"Work on the Hop is proceeding at a peppery rate, and everything looks fine for a great big time," said Maryanne. "The chair will in Fraser will be open all day Friday for those who have not yet purchased tickets. We expect about 400 guests."
A COUP FOR HERRIOTT
Rents Hall, Passes Out Cigars and Asks Support From Fellow Students
Shh, Theodore. Let Woodrow alone not nibble. He another homelon noises our common.
It is at the Odd Fellows' Hall at the hour of eight. All expected are present. Mr. Herriott rises to speak and the hubu lids叫 into whispers. Cigars and etc., having been distributed gratis, many matches are struck and the smoke rises. Mr. Herriott is speaking;
"In this great state of Kansas, I know of no one so able to advise the student body of this great University, and unselfishly and unselfishly for the welfare of his Alma Mater than he who is now to address you. Hon. Duke Kennedy," (Cries of "Heart Heart") and long applause Hon. Kennedy rises to speak.)
Continance performance for some time with Neal Ireland, Guy Lamar; Tubby Mulloy, et al., as principal actuarial member; the multi-year Boots Academy, Boots Gear, Sint Greecer and Hon, Mr. Herriott sit on the platform. They hope that in this way the student body will get to know its next Student Council sooner. But they hope against force for outside the university, Mr. Herriott ticket has a rival, Curses.
Pettitions are circulating in many classes this morning, for candidates for the Student Council. They must be recognized on the ballots.
EIGHT MICE PER HOUR
CAUCH BY THE TRAP
Miss Lilia Walling of the department of Physiology holds the record for mice catching, or at least her old standby the mouse trap does. One evening when these conquerers of feminine bravery became too impertinent, Miss Walling's mouse-catcher Miss Dana with great clarity and in one hour eight mice ventured forth from one hole never to return.
The mice appreciating the rare morsels of frog, doped-up heart beets, tongues and other scraps from the mice would flocking to these rooms until no more mouse holes could be rented. Miss Walling has increased her supply of mouse traps and soon the desire for homes will be reduced to a minimum.
Evelyn Strong, the president of the Y. W. C. A., will entertain the chairmen of her committees with a dinner at her home on Thursday.
In a Meade county examination, held recently the applicants were asked to name the different state institutions. One pupil from Fowler named Lawrence as being the residence of the State Ayum for Epileptics.
Truly the librarians in Spooner Library believe in preparedness to a certain extent. One of them takes her tooth-brush along in her lunch.
Association Members Consent to Bear Expenses of Annual Feast
Preparation is being made at the University of Illinois Summer Session for a course for athletic coaches. In consideration of the increased interest in athletics in the United States the team has been developed who make coaching a profession and provides training as well as experience.
As a result of recent exchanges of letters between Prof. Leon N. Flint, general secretary of the Alumni Association, and Chancellor Frank Strong, the members of the Alumni Association have consented to assume legal responsibility of the Alumni Dinner this year. The letters follow:
April 17, 1916.
Chancellor Frank Strong University of Kansas. My Dear Chancellor;
Since a ruling by the state auditor prevents the University from giving the customary dinner at commencement, with the funds provided for that purpose, he has appointed the officers of the Alumni Association have authorized me to say that the association would be glad to assume the financial responsibility for the dinner this year in order that one of the old mestors of our customs might be preserved.
It would be necessary, on account of the limited resources of the association, that part at least, of the expense of the dinner be borne by those attending; but all financial risk and the management would rest on the alumni.
Sincerely yours,
L. N. Flint,
General Secretary.
April, 18, 1916.
Mr. L, N. Flint, Secreta
Alumni Association,
University of Kansas.
Mv Dear Mr. Flint:
This is in answer to your kind favor of April 17 to the effect that the officers of the Alumni Association on behalf of the Association itself have offered to assume the financial responsibility for the University Dinner for June of the current year. The University heartily appreciates the action of the Association and welcomes its assistance in carrying through the policy of the University Dinner, an advantage. I note the arrangement which is suggested, namely, that part at least of the expenses be borne by those attending, and believe under the circumstances that this is a wise arrangement ought to be made on all concerned.
With many thanks for loyalty and helpfulness of the Alumni Association and with best wishes, I am,
Yours very sincerely,
Frank Strong,
Chancellor.
TESTING OF PRISON BREAD
Water, Starch and Cream of Tartar Wrong Ingredients
Tests to determine the quality of the bread served the prisoners at Lansing have recently been made by the department of Home Economics at the University of Kansas, in accordance with a request from Prof. E. H. S. Bailey, of the department of Home Economics, where the work is due Miss Emma Thiessen, a senior in the department, who made the analysis.
PRISON JREIS UNSATISFACTORY
"Home-made bread differs considerably in character from that made by a professional baker, in that it is almost invariably finer and closer grained," said Professor Elizabeth Sprague. "The bread made by the original recipe used at the prison was very unsatisfactory, poor in flavor and unsightly in color."
Professor Sprague says that the starch and cream of tartar which had been used, were not only unnecessary, but actually detrimental. An excessive amount of salt, nearly four times as much as the department found desirable, was called for by the original recipe. It was found that latter was made when a slacker dough was made, using from 450 to 500 pounds of flour, as against 600 pounds used by the prison, to 36 gallons of liquid.
MILK BETTER THAN WATER
MILK BETTER THAN WATER
The addition of a larger water quantity of fat made a tenfold but the increased it has been explained, is not absolutely necessary.
The substitution of skimmed milk for water increased the protein 14 percent without greatly increasing the cost and made a whiter bread; and the use of a larger quantity of yeast, reducing the time for rising and baking from 19 to 5 hours gave a sweater, of a two-pound bowl and 3.9 cents for the modified long process recipe and 4.8 cents for the short process recipe, which includes the milk and the additional amount of yeast.
A note from Clay Roberts, B. S.'18, on board a ship to South America, informs his Kansas friends that he will be employed for the next few months in railroad construction work in Chile. After that he will be engaged in a copper mining proposition in the Andes Mountains. His address is Chanaral, Chile, in care of the Andes Exploration Company.
ADVISERS' CONFERENCE
POSTPONED 'TIL MAY 1
Baseball scores every evening at Carroll's —Adv.
The conference of the advisers of women in the colleges of Kansas, announced for this week, has been postponed until May 8, according to a statement given by Mrs. Eustace Brown, adviser of women.
The announcement of the birth of a daughter, Lavinia Morris, to Mr. and Mrs. Eugene C. Alder, K. U.'97, of New York, has been received at the Akhmni office. K. U., people who attended the transcontinental banquet on April 21, 2004, man who handled the conversation from the New York end of the line.
Supt. B. E. Lewis, A. B. '02 of Iola, was on the Hill Wednesday interviewing candidates for teaching positions in his high school. After graduating from the University Mr. Lewis went to Yale where he was granted his degree of Master of Arts.
We have some 25c boxes of fancy figs. Also dates in packages. Dunn-mires.
New Hearsts are at Carroll's.. Adv.
Fresh strawberry sundines and ecairns at Wiedmann's.-Adv.
Your fire insurance protects your interests, but whose interests would your life insurance protect?
L. S. Broughly
A Lifetime Remembrance of the Donor is the Gruen Veri thin
The young college graduate of today, who is about to lay aside the gown of the student and don the garb of the ceremony, would be greatly no more pleased or useful gift than the Gruen Veri thin. "The most beautiful watch in America."
The Gruen Veri thin will be a constant reminder of those qualities necessary for success in the business world, accuracy and efficiency.
Come in today and see one exertment of these watches priced at $25, $30, $35, $40, $50, $60, $75, $85, $100, $150, $200.
Gustafson
GRUEN
Veri thin Watch
10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40
12 11 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
London Pocket Watch Company
Gustafson
GRUEN
Veri thin Watch
SHOOT'EM IN
Call 510 Bell or 464 Home and we will call for that suit you are going to wear to the Hop tomorrow night.
There is something distinctive in the kind of work our thirty years' experience enables us to do.
Let Owen Do Your Work
---
It's Fun to be Thirsty when you can get Coca-Cola
There's the fun of quenching the thirst and the delicousness of the thirst quencher to give you double pleasure. But you don't even have to be thirsty to enjoy Coca-Cola. It's great while ever your reason for drinking it.
Demand the ginnie by full name—nicholson encourage substitution.
THE COCA-COLA CO.
Atlanta, Ga.
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z
Minneapolis Symphony Orchestra
COLLEGE OF HORSE MUSIC
ANNUAL INTRAMURAL
Big Interclass Meet Scheduled for Saturday Afternoon on McCook
The annual interclass meet which was to have been held Saturday afternoon has been postponed until Tuesday afternoon because of the numerous athletic events scheduled for this week end. Many of the athletes who expect to take part in the interclass meet are taking part in the Engineering meet. The amount of change was made so that they would be able to run in both meets and have a three days' rest between races.
JUNIORS CONFIDENT
The dope on this meet is decidedly with the juniors. The men who will represent the juniors Saturday have won the interclass affair for the last three times without any trouble and no serious competitor comes into view. Rodek, the second-place winner of the dope, Rodkey, the junior's stand-by, will not be in the meet because of the weak arch which he hurt for the second time in the Drake games last week. His loss will be a keen one but the large number of Varsity track events will run under the junior colors expected to be able to win without him.
FRESHMEN TAKE ACTIVE PART
The sophomores and seniors will also work at a disadvantage. Treweeke was counted on for ten sophomore points in the high and broad jumps while Reber was good for ten senior points in the weight events. He would have greatly increased chance to win five points for the juniors in the broad jump while Small will also boost the junior score in the shot put.
The freshmen are expected to play an important part in the meet but just what they can do against the Varsity competition can not be determined. Dillon, Seward and a few more will make things lively in the races and give them a chance at the points in such a manner that it will affect the results of the meet.
The relay is a matter of much speculation at the present time. With Rodkey in the line-up, the juniors would probably be able to count five sure points on this as they have in past years but he will be unable to run. With Campbell and O'Leary running for the sophomores the second year men may be able to participate in the event, so they will have to pick a squad that can beat Crowley, Davidson, Sproull, Herriott, Statler and Groene of the juniors and Grady, Fiske, Elliott and a few others on the senior team.
WATCHING FOR DARK HORSES
Although the dope is figured around the Varsity men the new will be instrumental in changing the dope considerably to the score of any team. The Varsity men will devote part of their time to training for the men for the different events. Medals will be given for all four places in each event on the program.
MAY FETE CASTE PLAN TO
DYE THE OWN COSTUMES
May day next Monday will be anything but a holiday for the women taking part in the annual May Fete. While the majority of the students spend their week three hundred young women in the fete cast will put in the day dying 3,600 yards of white cheese cloth for their costumes. The advanced cost of all dyed stuffs because of the war caused Dr. Alice Goetz to suggest they wear blue jeans. The dyeing process will be supervised by Dr. Goetz and two assistants so that no weird color combinations or hues may result.
Caney and Sheridan county high schools will compete against each other for the state debating championship at K. U. May 5. These two schools were victorious in the semifinal contests held last week.
BAND GIVES PROGRAM UNDER DIFFICULTIES
UNDER DIFFICULTIF
The last band concert of the year was given last night in Fraser Hall before a small audience. Those who were too late to secure seats to the senior play found the concert an excellent substitute.
An unusually heavy program, well executed, was deserving of a larger hearing. Two opera selections, 'Lucia di Lammermoor,' and 'Tannhauser' were the most memorable performances by the players handled the program shows that Director McCanles has given them a liberal amount of training.
DADDY MILLER LET'S THE CAT OUT uF THE BAG
Tell's Joke That's 10 Years Old
Every man in the University who has had any gym work knows Daddy Miller for Daddy has been here since Time was. Truly, he has been here ever since the "gym was." Every K. U. athlete is taught by every Daddy gyrmac has done so under the auspices of Daddy Miller for Daddy takes care of the gym.
"Yes sir," asserted Daddy with pride, "I've been here ever since this gym has. In fact, I helped to tear the floor fish in. Snow Hall and install them over here.
"And say," he continued smiling as he seemed to have a mental picture of the whole history of the gym called to mind. "I sure have seen some great athletic feats in this gym! I remember one great contest that took place a short time after the swimming pool was built. I watched James Neame and William Nadelhoffer, the contractor for the gym, were surveying the new tank with pride the first time it was filled. Nadelhoffer dared Doc to swim the length. Doc took the dared and said he bet Nadelhoffer wouldn't follow. Doc didn't care about the zero weather outside. He jumped in clothes and all and Nadelhoffer followed. By day he got back to pounding the floor with his broom stick, "that was the best boke I ever knew on Doc, and I don't believe it ever got on him."
There are only two things that Daddy doesn't like about the gym. The first is that there is no system of ventilation, the second is that the gym serves a double purpose; it is used for exercise and for hospitalization. "The ventilation is bad," he said as he sniffed the air and shrugged his shoulders. "The only way I can get air into this building is through the windows. I don't like to have the gym used for two different buildings. It is fitted up for a gymnasium only and it is hard to guard to try to convert it into an auditorium twelf or fifteen times a year.
Prof. C. A. Dykstra Lectures "Has Woman any Business in Politics?" was answered in the affirmative by Prof. C. A. meeting the members of political science in talk at the Y.W. C.A. meeting, Tuesday afternoon.
"But, I'm pretty well satisfied with the building after all," he concluded. "I haven't any real serious objection to this. I just love it. I'm pretty nice place after all, this gym."
"I cannot say just what woman's place in politics is, but I believe that in the course of time she will find a place where she is needed and can do the best work," said Professor Dykstra.
Father of Fritz Meyn Dies Frederick Meyn, of Kansas City, the father of Fred Meyn, member of the 1915 football squad, and manager of the Lawrence Automobile Company. Mr. Meyn, Mo. Saturday, of heart disease. Mr. Meyn, who was one of the officers of the Kaw Valley Drainage Co., was one of the most active workers in securing flood protection for Armourdale.
Beulah Davis, '16 College, sang at the meeting.
Prof. C. A. Dykstra Lectures
Fridays and Saturdays are fruit salad days at Wiedemann's.—Adv.
HIGH SCHOOLS INVITED
Thirteenth Annual Interscholastic Meet. Will be Held on McCook Field May 6
An invitation to all Kansas high schools to participate in the thirteenth annual interscholastic track and field games to be held on MeCook field, Saturday, May 6, has been isen. From Hamilton, manager of K. U. athletics.
The meet this year, as usual, will be divided into three classes. Schools having an enrollment of over 250 will be entered in Class A. More than 125 and less than 250, class B. Less than 125, class C.
The athletic authorities consider themselves better equipped than ever before to handle the big Kansas meet. Extensive improvements have been made on McCook field. The one-fifth of a mile run track, Manager Hamilton says, is very fast. He also expects to have the straight-away for the 100 yard dash and the 120 yard hurdles in perfect condition.
FIELD IMPROVED
THIRTEEN EVENTS
There will be competition in thirteen events for the Kansas high school athletes. The University of Kansas will hold scholastic records in these events follow:
50 yard dash, 5 3-5 seconds, made by Evans, Osage City in 1915; 100 yard dash, 10 1-5 seconds, made by Butler of Hutchinson in 1912; 220 yard dash, 22 4-5 seconds, made by Marquez of Marquez in 1914; 440 yard dash, 52 seconds, made by Whittaker of Reno County in 1914; 880 yard run, 2 minutes 3 2-5 seconds, made by Palmer of Lawrence in 1912; one mile run, 4 minutes 36 2-5 seconds, made by Dedo of Kansas City in 1915; 220 yard hurdles, 26 3-5 seconds (Wis), Academy in 1915; 120 yard hurdles, 16 seconds, made by Reber, Central, K. C., Mo. in 1912; high jump 5 feet 11 1-2 inches, made by Treweek, Wichita in 1914; broad jump 22 feet 1-2 inch, made by Wright, Baldwin in 1915; pole vault 10 feet 10 1-2 inches, made by Treweek, 14 pounds shot, 44 feet, 11 inches, Heberling, Overbrook in 1915; discus 15 feet, 3 inches, made by Direne, Wilson in 1915.
Offer Scholarship For Women
The Kansas City branch of the Associated Collegiate Alumni offers to women students from Kansas City, Kansas or Missouri, two loan scholarships of $75.00 each written to them. Students should see the committee on scholarships for women, Miss Galoo, Miss Oliver, Dr. Hyde, Miss Wilson and Miss Charles.
KANSAS EDUCATORS TO MEET IN TOPEKA APR 29
A meeting of the Alumni chapter of the Phila Delta Kappa, the honorary educational fraternity, will be held at Topeka Saturday, April 29. A number of the student members here are planning to attend and several of the faculty members will be attending the University who are native in educational work over the state will attend.
ANNOUNCEMENTS
The meeting will be devoted to discussions of the problems confronting educators and to the reading of reports of graduate work. The feature of the program will be the report of three extensive studies made in the course of the program, A. A. Yoyemans, of Minneapolis, on the amount of time devoted to the various activities outside of school hours by high school students. Prof. Raymond Schweler of the University will report on Means of Detecting Substance Abuse in High School. The third report will be given by Prof. W. S. Munroe of the Normal School at Emporia on "Standard Tests and Scales in Kansas."
All seniors who expect to be graduated this spring and have not filled out their applications for degrees are offered the opportunity. O. Foster's office at once and do so.
Franklin Lecture Postponed—Owing to conflicting dates, the lectures of Dr. E. F. Franklin have been indefinitely postponed.
Election of Cheerleader, members of Athletic Board and members of the Men's Student Council will be held Thursday, May 4. Petitions of candidates for these offices must be presented to the president of the Men's Student Council before 6 p.m. April 28. Leland Thompson.
All junior girls wishing parts as nymphaea in the May Fete, May 12, 2004. Alice Goetz in Robinson Gymnasium. Little rehearsal will be required.
The Forty Club will meet at 1215 Oread Thursday evening, April 27.
La Muela Juicio (The Wisdom Tooth) a Spanish comedy, will be given by the students in Spanish Saturday night at 8 o'clock in Green Hall theater. No admission will be charged.
For your parties see us about request.
We can please you. Wiedenmanns."—Acts
Fruit salad, whipped cream and wafers. Ten cents a plate. Wiedemann's.-Adv.
Send the Daily Kansan home.
Minneapolis Symphony Orchestra
Special Course Ticket Two Concerts for $1.00
Now on Sale at the Round Corner Drug Co. Concerts Next Tuesday
გამოყენილი
at 2:30 and 8:15
QNIAEBILX EVIPA EVMSVK
"SMOKELESS SMOKER'
Anti-Cigarette League Will Entertain Members
The latest innovation at K. U. is a "smokeless smoker" which will be given by the Anti-Cigarette League some time next week. A feature of this talk is the chalk talk by Hank Maloy, the cartoonist for the Daily Kansan.
The membership of the League now includes over two hundred men of the University, says its president. Nor are they all taking their work seriously.
The fruits of the League's labor are already being felt with considerable distress by the habitual smoker who is now having trouble in securing cigarettes and papers from the places about town which used to sell them openly. However the real object of the league is to influence the men of the campus, who are addicted to the cigarette habit, to stop smoking.
NO WAR FOR OLCOTT
The special caramel nut ice cream at Wiedemann's—Adv.
A Struggle Would Wreck K. U.
Gridiron Prospects Says
Coach
Don't talk war to Coach Beau Olcott. Not that the football player is a pacifist, on the contrary he is a strong advocate of preparedness, and a great admirer of Colonel Roosevelt. But if trouble should come, even if it didn't amount to more than a mere 50 yards, Coach Olcett sees anything but a rosey outlook for the 1916 football season and particularly so at K. U.
At least twelve men who will probably be regulars on next year's squad are members of the Kansas National Guard either in Lawrence or at home, according to Coach Olcett. The mobilization of troops would mean the loss of these men and probably any chance for even an average team.
UNCLE JIMMY GREEN HAS
ATTACK OF INDIGESTION
Although hitting K. U. hard, there are a number of other schools in the Valley Conference which would suffer even more, so that all together things would probably be equalized. At both the K. S. A. C. at Manhattan and at Ames, military drill is a part of the school curriculum and as the cadet corps ranks right along with the naval force, it would probably use practically all of the masculine part of the student body. At Missouri and Nebraska, a war would also be severely felt for as the agricultural college is a part of the universities, military drill is also featured at Columbia and Lincoln.
Uncle Jimmy Green was taken with an attack of indigestion in his office in Green Hall this morning about 11:30. He was sent home immediately and placed under the care of a physician. As far as could be learned at two o'clock this afternoon the attack had not been pronounced serious.
Omicron Nu Holds Conclave
Omerite Nu is holding a conclave at the State Agricultural College of Iowa at Ames. Sybil Woodruff, president of the local chapter, left Wednesday to represent the Kansas chapter at the conclave.
Indestructo Trunks Bags and Suit Cases Sold Exclusively by Johnson & Carl
Are you interested in saving from $5.00 to $10.00 on your
Spring Suit?
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Style, Fit, Tailoring, and Materials the best. Distinctly young men's Suits.
Every day more men are realizing the actual saving by paying cash for their clothes and if you will compare the garments we offer at the
One Cash Price $15.00
with suits selling elsewhere at from $20 to $25 you will see that we advertise absolute facts.
We have been in the clothing business in Lawrence 27 years and our guarantee is back of every suit we sell. Our customers are the best advertisement we have. Ask them. Can we say more?
SKOFSTAD
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VOLUME XIII.
NUMBER 142.
ANNUALS OUT TUESDAY
Jayhawkers Go on Sale at 10:30 May 2, at Fraser Check Stand
HAS DEDICATION PROGRAM
Books to be Given Hamilton and University Amid Music
Features of the 1916 Jayhawker
25 Per cent more cuts than ever used in a Jayhawker before.
12 Lip impressions of the most beautiful feminine mouths in the University.
6 Vanity Fair pages, showing winners in contest.
24 Pages four-color work.
100 Pages of Junior and Sen-
100 Pages of Junior andSenior sections in three colors. A comprehensive section, and an
A sophomore section and an Oread high school section. Cartoons by four different artists.
A spicy calendar by Maureen McKernan and Fuzz Rathfon.
On Tuesday, May 2, the Jayhawker is published. There will be a short ceremony on the steps of Fraser Hall. I hope that teachers may find it convenient to dismiss classes at 10:15 so that students who desire to do so may attend the presentation exercises—classes to be resumed at 10:30 as usual.
The 1916 Jayhawker will be offered to the University at 10:35 o'clock next Tuesday morning by its creators M. E. Johnson and R. E. Busenark. A twenty minute ceremony begins at 10:15 at which time the editor presents Chancellor Bill will be put in Strong W. O. Hamilton, to whom the volume is dedicated, with a de laux edition. Director McCanles will be out with his K. U. band which will play while the exercises are in progress on the east steps of Fraser Hall. As soon as the formal presentation is completed the annuals will be put on the wall in Fraser Hall. The will be continued until 6 o'clock Wednesday night and all persons who have signed up for the Jayhawker must bring their receipts to the check stand before that time if they wish them to be honored. There are 156 books which have not been signed which will be put on sale. Thursday the last all copies which not been claimed by the people who have signed up for them will be sold.
The annual this year will be the finest ever sold at the University, according to students who have seen it. It is bound in dark green leather with the title, "1916 The cloth edition will sell for two dollars and the leather for three dollars. A special de luxe edition, bound in green morocco and stamped with gold, will sell for five dollars. Orders. Orders have been taken. They are lined with green satin and hand-tooled decorations.
Probably the most novel feature of this year's book are the "Lip Impression" pages showing the kind of kisses given by the twelve women in the University having beautiful mouths. These impressions made by means of a special preparation placed on the lip of the women, refuse refusers to tell what dainty feminine lip imprints will be seen but he offers these as the initials of some of the winners: D. L.; I; H. A; D.; R. F.; K. F.; J. S.; and M. B. Each of the impressions is named with such titles as "Inoxicating," "Kiss," "Inoxicating the Kiss," "Kiss," "The Concentrated Kiss," and is accompanied by a fifty word exposition of its particular merit.
The Vanity Fair section, containing the pictures of the winners in the beauty contest, will announce whom the buyers of the Jayhawker have selected as the most beautiful and popular woman in the University President F. D. Crabbs, of the Bank Note Co., whose book is printed the book; or that this section is the rear-rearrankable he has ever seen in a school annual and that the entire Jayhawker is mechanically the best job ever turned out of his plant. The charge is one third more for the book this year than last. H. A. Burger, president of the Burgery graving Co., which had the contract for cuts, says that the Jayhawker this year is twenty-five per cent more than any other school annual ever put out in the Valley and that he believes it will be the finest school annual ever printed in the middle west.
UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS, FRIDAY AFTERNOON, APRIL 28, 1916.
TUESDAY IS TAG DAY
FOR MAY FETE ON TWELFTH
Remember that next Tuesday will be Tag Day for the afternoon performance of the May Fete and every one should come on the hill with money for a fifty-cent tag, in his pocket.
One of the largest productions ever given at the University of Kansas will be the May Fete on May 12 About 400 girls will take part in the afternoon performance to be given on the golf links. It will be different this year, in that the regular May Queen will be replaced by Mater or the Spirit of the University. Helen Dawson was elected by the woman for this place yesterday. About her will be grouped seven senior girls who will represent different phases of University life. These it turn each head a dance which is typical of the Spirit which she represents.
PULMOTOR IS USELESS
Instrument Intended to Save Human Life Seldom in Proper Condition
An inquiry was made this morning, by the Daily Kansan concerning a rumor to the effect that no physical examination of sophomore athletes required oxygen supply or to guard to the deficient oxygen supply or the University pulmotor.
NORODY RESPONSIBLE
Nobody RESISTED.
"Nobody in particular is responsible for the condition of the pulmonor," said Dr. Nailismit of the department of Physical Education, "but I suppose his disability lies between Marshall E. M. Briggs and myself. That the tanks were empty Wednesday afternoon is probably due to the fact that someone had taken the reserve tank from John M. Shea's office last week. At the present time this tank has not been located."
COULD'T FIND RESERVE TANK
"Last week Dr. Ida Hye asked permission to use the pulmotor for demonstration purposes before the Physiology classes," continued Dr. Naimith, "but no oxygen was administered and the apparatus was immediately returned. Saturday but a city nurse came with a case Dr. H. T. Jones at the Glen home on Pennsylvania street came to the Gymnasium and got the pulmotor. Later Dr. Jones came to the Gymnasium saying they were out of oxygen. A thorough search was made for the reserve tank but it was not found. The city lung motor was then called for but in the meantime the child had died. Monday there being no need nothing was done; an effort was made to fill the small cylinders but necessary connections could not be found. Wednesday when an attempt to use the tank was made the pressure was too low to operate the motor."
The pulmator in question is no good," said Dr. Naismith. "One reason it that the pressure is injurious to the lungs and the heart, and this specific case regarding the oxygen supply. A lung motor should be substituted."
"All men athletes are given a thorough examination before they may check out suits," said the Doctor. "About three per cent have affected hearts and it is a task to keep the hardy looking fellows out of athletics. In these cases a certain amount of exercise is necessary under super-intensive training is not so strenuous."
"Miss Richards had been exercising about ten minutes Wednesday afternoon when I was called," said Dr. Goetz. "The exercise had not been violent. The valves in her heart were good but the existing conditions were such as are usually found in older people."
Speaking of Miss Richards' death, Dr. Goetz said, "Nobody could have detected the condition of Miss Richards. She passed a good examination a year ago last fall and has always been a hardy and active girl."
According to Dr. S. A. Matthews, a more recent examination would probably not have detected the defective heart.
Rules Committee To Meet
"I coached Miss Richards in basketball for the past year," said Miss Hazel Pratt, "and considered her one of my most hairy girls. She never seemed to be exhausted and displayed only normal fatigue."
Rules Committee 16 Meet Dr. James Naismith, of the department of physical education, received word yesterday that his basketball rules committee which was to have met in New York City this week has been appointed until the first of May. Committee consists of four representatives from the colleges, four from the A. A. U. and four from the Y. M. C. A. Dr. Naismith will be the only representative west of Pennsylvania. His distinction as being the originator of this now popular and almost universal game makes his place an important one on the committee.
PROBE SHOSTAC AFFAIR BILLY SUNDAY COMING
Burns Detective is Reported o Trail of "Squirrel Print" Attack
VISITS PRINTING OFFICES
"I Know Nothing About It" Says Percy Shostac
A Burns detective in the employ of Percy B. Shostac of the department of English, has discovered the parties guilty of the "squirrel print" attack on Mr. Shostac last winter. If a report is approved, Kanyan office this morning is true.
Mr. Shoostac, when seen this morning, would neither affirm nor deny the
"Oh, no I don't know anything about it," he answered quickly. "I wish I did. I wish and hope that your report is true." When asked if he had a detective working in his employ his answer was again non-committal.
"I wonder where that got out?" said he slowly.
"You know the facts of the case then?" he was asked.
"I understand that the authorities are still investigating the matter and some other professor might be able to tell you more about it than I can," Shooste. He only suggested that Chief Counsel强 be interviewed however.
When questioned about the matter the Chancellor said, "It is absolutely new to me and I know nothing whatever of it."
Investigations by the detective have been going on for two or three weeks here in Lawrence and in several of the smaller neighboring towns according to the report. In recompension Sun one day, but failed to find the type with which the posters were printed. From there he went to Perry but could find no evidence there. The editors of the McLoughlin and Euclid publications had been conducted in their offices, when questioned over long distance this afternoon.
According to an authoritative statement from another source the investigation which was being conducted by the faculty committee had been given up some time ago. Those in charge of it, Mr. Hicks, said that it practically impossible to find the guilty party, or parties, whichever it may be.
CON SQUIRES IS DEAD
Was Friend of Scores of K. U.
Men Past and Present—45
Years Old
Constant Frederick Squires, K. U.'s photographer, died at his home last evening at 12:45 of intestinal obstruction. Mr. Squires was born on a farm near Towanda, Pennsylvania about forty-five years ago and came to Kansas with his parents when eight years old.
His first years of residence in this state were spent on a farm near Chanute. There he lived until a young man, when he and his parents moved to Leavenworth, where he learned photography. He followed his vocation for a short time in San Francisco and later in Kansas City.
Miss Lucie Rockwell, '19 College, and Miss Jennie Dickerson, '18 College, spent their Easter holidays in Yates Center at the home of Miss Lucie Rockwell. She well became a veritable dare-devil motorist during her visit.
Fourteen years ago he came to Lawrence and started a studio in the Jackson Building, later moving into the Black Block, the present location of his store.
The interest and sympathy, which Mr. Squires felt toward the University students and their activities was evident on more than one occasion. The students' genial nature and his efficient work he held a high place in their regards.
He was married at Leavenworth on April 18, 2003 to Miss Lale DaLee, a graduate of the School of Fine Arts of the University of Kansas.
Mr. Squires was a member of all the orders of Masonry, and of the Elks He was one of the leaders in the Merion County Association and of the Country Club.
Mr. Squires was the only surviving member of his family. His mother died in 1903, while living at Leavenworth, where her father passed away in Lawrence.
Elmer J. Burnham, E. E., '15, is in Lawrence a few days visiting friends. He is on his way to Schenectady, New York where he has accepted a position with the General Electric Company. He has been working at the electric plant in Ness City since graduation.
The funeral services will be held in the Masonic Temple 'Sunday afternoon at 2 o'clock. Rev. D. C. Brown of the First Baptist church will preach the sermon and the Masons will hold their ritualistic service.
Will Speak to Kansas Editor During Newspaper Week at the University
Will Speak to Kansas Editors
PROBABLY ON WEDNESDAY
Date and Hour to be Agreed on Tomorrow
William A., (Billy). Sunday wired Prof. Merle Thorpe this morning that he would address the Kansas editors on the occasion of Kansas Newspaper Week at the University, May 2-6, the date and hour to be arranged tomorrow when Mr. Sunday reaches Kansas City. Mr. Thorpe will suggest that he speak Wednesday, May 3, at 9:30 in the morning.
This meeting, as is the case with all other meetings during Newspaper Week, will be open to the public, and everyone may be held in Robinson Gymnasium.
Chancelor, Strong when seen today said that he would declare a convoitation, so that classes my niece be discharged. He was an enthusiastic student to *hair*: the famous evangelist.
A suggestion was made this afternoon relative to having a platform erected of McCook Field, which would permit of every hearing Sunday, the attendance of the thousand people which is the seating capacity of the Ace fields at McCook Field, paid, heard him and hear well should this suggestion be acted upon.
John M. Shea, superintendent of grounds and buildings, said late this afternoon that should also have a chance decided upon by the University authorities he would erect the platform on McCook. Several faculty members are more favorably disposed toward the talk in the open than the Gym.
A. C. S. MEET COMING
Chemists to Hold National Convention in Lawrence Next N
The University of Kansas and the middle west scored a great victory at Urbana, Illinois last week, when at the invitation of the Kansas City Section of the America Chemical Society, the university hosted its national convention in Lawrence and Kansas City next April. Lawrence will have the convention one day, while Kansas City will care for the scientists on two days because of her participation in the event's great field for excursions of inspection by the delegates.
All is joy at the Chemistry Building this week as the result of landing the big convention, and the local authorities without exception assert that it will be the most notable gathering of prominent scientists that K. U. chemical society has a membership which reaches an approximate total of 8,000 —chemists engaged in practically every branch of the science now employed in America. It includes, besides the teaching chemists, a big majority of industrial chemists, pharmaceutical chemists, chemists and many "physicians," it is the largest scientific society in America.
During the two days that the contend will hold forth in Kansas City the delegates will listen to numerous papers on the live subjects of the profession today, discuss the problems of residential plants, discuss the problems of the year, and pass the few remaining hours in banqueting and sight-seeing.
Mildred Green, of St. Joseph, Mo.
a senior in the 'high school, was a
guest of her sister, Elena from
Greece. The Easter vacation.
She returned home Sunday.
Mrs. Charles Kubik, of Caldwell,
left Tuesday evening for her home
after spending the Easter vacation
at the University of Chicago and Clair,
sophomores in the College.
MORNING PRAYERS
The Weather
The forecast. tomorrow, tonight and Saturday, warmen tonight.
Leader: The Rev. A. S. Henderson, pastor First Congregational church, Topeka, Kansas.
Week of May 2 to 5
The Weather
General subject: "The Filial Life."
Daily subjects.
Tuesday: "Through Christ to the Father."
Wednesday: "Providence and
Prayer."
Thursday: "Conditions of the Filial Life."
Friday: "Expression of the Filial Life."
Prof. L. N. Flint of the department of journalism is in Topeka today where he will address the State Laun- ding convention on "Laundry Advertising";
HASH HOUSE LEAGUE TO
PLAY SIX GAMES TOMORROW
On account of the unfavorable weather of the last two weeks very few games have been played in the Hash House League but with the sun shining today and clear weather ahead tomorrow will find six games on East and West Hamilton fields. The games scheduled for East Hamilton tomorrow are: Star-Grad at 8 o'clock, Grad-Carry at 9 o'clock, and Draper-Walting at 1:30. West Hamilton will accommodate the following games; Dunakin-Midway at 8 o'clock, Stevenson-Stolic at 10 o'clock and the Garret-Oread at 1:30.
The Grady Club has been very fortunate in their games this season, they have not lost a single game. Of course they have not won a game either.
A LONESOME MELODY
Editors' Band During Newspaper Week will Play in Uniforms
Sketch in a long, open straightway
Sketch in the long, open straightway
with dart settling in the road pockets;
the flash of sunlight on glistening buttons;
the uneven, unmeasured step of
the uniformed lines; then for climactic effect, if you can, work in somewhere
and rhythm of a lonesome melody.
SILVER CORNET CONCERT BAND
In the optical center put in the big man of baton and bear skin. Call him Chancellor Strong. Lined up back of him let us have the little red band of his hands, which forms the buttons and the Chancellor you have the Editors' Band.
The Kansas Editors Association is to have its own band this year at the convention, in Lawrence, May 4 and 6. It will not be an ordinary "brass band." By no means. The leader, Mr. Glick Fockele, of the LeRoy Reporter, wants it distinctly understood and understood. And Cornet Concert Band," he calls it. It is true, they have not practiced together as yet, but it is understood that the editor-players are all artists on their instruments and by getting in for the convention a little early they will be appearing in public. They will give one or two concerts a day during the three days of the convention.
WANT CHANCELLOR TO LEAD
Braithwat and Spruiller of theamas City Jazz Uniforms uniforms for the players. Chancellor Frank Strong has been asked to put on the drum major's bear-skin shaku and lead the march. The band will perform at the concert as the needed instruments being supplied from the University band's stock.
Mr. Glick Fockele, the leader, plays a clarionet. A few of the musicians are: Jesse Napier, president of the association; Kevin Merrick, the Republican; Tom Thompson, Howard Courtant; Elmer Peterson, Cimarron Jacksonian; Verde Napier, Iola Regis-ter; Allen White and Mr. Herbert Cavanese are named an official buglers.
GEAR PLANS REUNION
FOR LAST YEAR'S SENIORS
Russell Gear, '15, treasurer of the Men's Student Council last year, is on the Hill today visiting friends and preparing for a reunion of his class in an unanticipated week. Gear was elected permanent secretary of the class.
While in school Gear was quite act-in politics. He said this morning that he appreciated the opportunity afar it might to attend a political gathering.
Gear is now located in a bank at Guyman, Okla, and came by the way of Lawrence in returning to work after spending the Easter vacation at his home in Buffalo. He is a member of the Phi Alpha Delta legal fraternity. His brother, Marvin, is now a junior in the College.
WILL LECTURE ON
PRISON LIFE IN GERMANY
Mr. J. E. Sprunger, State Y. M. C. A. secretary of California, will give an illustrated lecture on "The Life in the Prison Camps of Germany," tonight at 7:30 o'clock in Fraser Chapel. Mr. Sprunger is a friend of Con Henneman and has worked with him in work among the Allied prisoners in Germany. His lecture will serve as a message from Con himself.
The one year's experience in the prison camps of Europe enables Mr. Sprunger to speak with authority when he writes his lecture will deal thoroughly with the treatment of the prisoners by the Germans, the attitude of the Germans to the prisoners and many other topics which do not and their way into the newspapers.
ENGINEERS ON PARADE
Salome Langmade, Fine Arts '18,
has withdrawn from the University.
She will return in June to attend
the Commencement exercise.
Professor MacMurray's class in Dramatic Art will meet at 4:30 Tuesday instead of 3:30.
Worked All Morning Preparing Floats and Making Arrangements
LEFT CAMPUS AT NOON
The Band Was One of The Big Features
The Engineers led out their parade this noon, uncovered by the faculty or the Lawrence police force. Despite the fact that this had been declared a university Senate, the whole engineering school spent the morning completing the floats, and making the arrangements for the parade. Mickey McCune, who was in charge of the busiest man in the whole school.
The big feature of the parade was the Engineers' Band, which marched ahead of all the floats in some thirty of the biggest variety of fancy dress, a wide range of instruments imaginable, all playing horns or beating drums to the time beat out by Tony James, the organizer and leader of the band. Most of the playful figures were regulars, and the sample this noon furnished more good comedy than music.
Following the band came another of autos carrying Chancellor Strong, Dean Walker of the School of Engineering, and the faculty members. The first regular float was that of the Mines—representing a western safari two backsaw a helicopter of liquors and a card game was in progress.
Next came the Senior Civils on a float carrying several pale faced members of the Anti-cigarette League, and three husky "horrible examples." The Junior Civils presented a six-legged submarine, while the Sophome Civils brought along the Law's "goat caged up in a coal black wagon.
The Chemicals were there shooting their usual mixture of typical odors from a float representing the trenches of the Germans and the Allies. Next came the float of the Senior Electricals, which was one of the most clever of the parade—an obsolete omnivore who obsolesced a Lawrence street car. The power for the bus, which was running by itself, was being furnished by a motor on Ecke's big motor truck which was following close behind.
The Architects float represented an old Greek ruin, with signs stating that "Goldsmith's Gingerbread Gang" would build as permanently as did the Greeks. The Freshman Mechanical's float represented a dancing couple being supervised by Mrs. Brown, forbid the "clinchers" to fall "Nelson" hold up, and saw that the dancers could least six inches apart. The Freshman Electricals float carried a big electric iron ironing out the Freshmen troubles.
The Junior Mechanicals presented a very clever old mill and wheel, running from a stream of water pumped from a tank. The Sophoraomens tricolors drove a large basin with body over an auto cabinetry behind was over a little submarine which was taking chance shots at the bigger boat.
The Senior Mechanicals brought three floats representing the three ways to get through college, the first showing one of the mechanicals riding a characteristic farm implement, the second man riding a horse, and the last "the grind." The Sophomore and Freshman Mrs. the rear in the position, the former having the Willa caught and caged up, and the latter showing a bunch of lazy engineers sleeping through the ringing of a dozen alarm clocks.
At ten-thirty this morning the Engineers had their pictures taken out in front of Marvin Hall, and just before the parade started individual pictures of all of the floats were taken. Immediately after the parade the engineers adjourned for lunch, each of the various departments making arrangements for lunch for all of the students and professors in their departments. Most of the lunches tracked down on McCook where the track and field meet are to be held, but the Mechanicals were served at the Oread Cafe.
The baseball games and track events planned for this afternoon have attracted a great amount of interest, as the games and speedy all events are promised.
The Engineers' Dance which usually comes on the evening of the same day as the party is the Sophie's Friday night on account of the Soph Hop tonight.
the members of the May Fete chorus, who did not attend the first rehearsal, me Monday morning at 100 for the home of Professor Oliver at 802 Tennessee.
Minnie Moody, '18 College, entertained the 1244 Ohio street girls with a house party at her home in woworth during the Easter vacation.
Send the Daily Kansas home.
---
UNIVERSITY DAJLY KANSAN
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Official student paper of the Univer
city of Kearne
Chas. S. Sturtevant...Editor-in-Chief
EDITORIAL STAFF
REPORTORIAL STAFF
BUSINESS STAFF
William Cady...Business Manager
Cbas. Stuartevant...Adv. Manager
Paul Brindel
Don Davis
Ralphe
Glaisner
Harry Morgan
Glenon Moore
German Moore
Subscription price $3.00 per year in advance: one term. $1.75.
Entered as second-class mail mat-
telete of the United States, Kansas, under the
office of Marshal N. Hornsby.
Address a.. communications to UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Lawrence, Kansas. Phone, Bell K. U. 25.
Published in the afternoon five
verses. Kansas, from the press of
versity. Kansas, from the press of
versity.
The Daily Kansan aims to pique interest in the University of Kansas; to go further than merely printing the book, the University holds; to play no favorites; to be clean; to be cheerful; to be courteous; to learn more about problems to wiser heads. In all, the students of the University.
FRIDAY, APRIL 28, 1916.
Trusting too much to others' ears is this world; the world men's saved, not by faith the world men's saved, not by faith.
For want of a nail the shoe was lost for fear it would be torn. For want of a horse the rider was lost being overtaken and slain by an enemy; all for the want of a horse the shoot
—Poor Richard's Almanac.
ENGINEERS' DAY
The Engineers are today celebrating their annual holiday. The civils, the miners, the architects, the mechanicals, the chemicals, and the electricals engaged in a friendly rivalry over the building of the best float for the parade. This afternoon they again contested in the track events.
Engineers' Day, with its friendly rivalry has, more than other one thing, helped to make the students in the School of Engineering, a closely knit organization. The various departments of the school have a feeling of brotherhood that is seldom found except in small cliques. The engineers can be expected to stand by one another at all times.
The spirit thus shown is meritorious. But could the University as a whole have this same feeling of commeraderie, this closely knit organization, a great deal might be accomplished. "Die Engineers uber alles" may be a good phrase, but "K. U. uber alles" is better.
So in petty school pride let us not forget our greater and more worthy University pride.
A lawyer in a prominent case asked a witness a question that it took thirty-eight minutes to read. And now if some professor will only ask one that takes a full fifty minute period.
LOOK OUT FOR TOES
The spectacle of two University organizations offering attractions which are of interest to and deserve the support of the entire student body, on the same night, is not an especially auspicious sign of friendly co-operation. It is unfortunate that the senior play had to be postponed so many times and it is equally unfortunate that the management was able to obtain the Bowersock theatre only on the night which Director McCanlane had already set for the University band's concert. However, since the bandmen had announced their date first it seems that it would have been only courteous for the seniors to have found another date for their play. The sooner all the organizations of our school learn that results are obtained not by selfishness but by co-operation the sooner the maximum success will come to them.
SUMMER MILITARY CAMPS
Many of us are making plans for the summer vacation. Others of us have not yet given the matter serious consideration. Some will go to Estes Park, others will canvas, or work in the Old Home Town. Perhaps a few of the more fortunate will spend the time traveling. A few will just loaf—resting up from the arduous winter work.
How many have given the summer military training camps established by
the government, any serious consideration? The estimated attendance this summer will approximate 30,000, distributed among seven camps. The majority will be college men; Harvard, Yale, Dartmouth, and Princeton each sending from 300 to 1,100 undergraduates.
The five weeks' outing will be ideal, and will include instruction in the manual, drill, cavalry exercises, field meuvers, field surveying and field work generally. A clear insight into military matters will be afforded by the five weeks' instruction. The general purpose of the camp, while it is to foster a patriotic spirit, is also to give men a better knowledge of military history and policy, as well as to instill habits of obedience, discipline, command and self-control. Attendance at the military camps neither increases nor decreases the obligation to defend the country in case of need.
Students need pay but $22.50 for mess during the entire camp period. About ten dollars is required for the uniform and personal equipment. Other expenses of the camps, such as tentage, blankets, cots, pillows, ordinance, etc., are met by the government. The first camp will open June 5 and continue until July 2. Others follow in succession, the last closing October 5. Should further information be desired, write the Military Training Camps Association of the United States, 31 Nassau Street, New York City. D. K. Jay, executive secretary, is now receiving enrollments from college men over the country, and assigning them to the different camps in their respective sections. These enrollems are not binding if it is later found impossible to attend.
The U. S. soldiers in Mexico who chase jack rabbits for a diversion, might form a good track team.
THE LITTLE THINGS
They were walking up the Hill together. She had just taken the last piece of candy from the sack he field. He crushed the sack and started to toss it aside.
"Wait," she commanded, "Let me have it. I'll place it in the waste basket at the library."
It's the little things that count.
Essays in Tabloid Tablets
JOBS
Jobs are a necessary. Evil. Men students. Accept them. In the summer. So that. They can. Have more. Dates in the. Winter. And so that. They can smoke. Phillip Morris best. Instead of Camels. To get a job. You first. Apply. And they have had. And the expire. You have had. And the expire. You eat up. Work. A job. Entails. A boss. Who sees to it that. You earn twice. As much as you. Gets. Bosses are noted. For their. Ability at profanity. Jobs may be. Divided into two classes. Grafts and Real. Ones. Under the head. Of graft jobs. One of the worst. Of minimum. Soup pots. And frying pan. To susceptible housewives. Cook books to ibid. Medicine books. To farmers and other. Sympathetic people. Who are never. Sick. And all subscription. Plans. Real jobs. Include. Working in the. Harvest. Digging ditches. Playing the piano. In picture show. Coming out. Newspaper reporting. Und. So. Weiter. The most agreeable job. Is talking father. Out of an allowance. For. The summer. When. One. Can.
Can you answer the following ten questions? You should know them. Grade your "roomie" on the basis of ten for each successful answer.
What D'ye Know
1. Locate the Black Forest.
9. What part of almonds is used?
10. What does S. O. S. stand for?
"Here," said Bridget, "Where did you hear such language, I forbid you
Young Pat: "Well, Kipling uses it."
Kipling: "Yes, with him then."—Nebraska Aygwan.
1. Locate the black roost.
2. Locate the Green Mountains.
3. What is the golden rule?
4. What is the Black Hand.
5. What is the Scarlet Letter?
6. What is Yellow Journalism?
7. What does B. & O. stand for?
8. What part of the sweet potato is
Will the person who found the watch containing the name Neil Paul in the back of it please notify him by calling 711 JBell?-Adv. 140-3
POET'S CORNER
I remember I remember
the violet, the violet,
the violet, and the lily-cups,
the violet, the violet,
the lilace where the robin buil-
lard, the robin buil-lard,
the laurentine on his birthday,
the laurentine on his birthday.
Tremember I remember you.
The little window where we bought,
the little window where we bought,
the little window where we bought,
Nor could come a time so soon.
But now I often wish the night
just now.
I remember, I remember,
and I remember to be so swimming.
And thought the air must rush as fresh
my spirit flew in feathers then,
to swim and summer pools could hardly cool
I remember, I remembe
CAMPUS OPINION
SHE OBJECTS TO SMOKING
Editary Daily Kansan;
I remember, I remember,
I used to look at their shoulder tops,
I used to think their slender tops
it was a childish ignorance.
It was a childish ignorance.
To know I further off from heaven
to know I further off from heaven
THEY BREAK THE DATE RULE?
Editor: Dolly Kangas
communications must be signed as evidence of good conduct, and published without the witness's consent.
I believe other girls feel the same as I do.
I wish to answer the communication from "Smoker," printed in yesterday's Kansan. It seems to me that "Smoker" is taking a lot for granted in his estimate of the attitude of the wards having their exserts smoke. You were entirely right in the question you asked in "It's the little things that count": what can a girl do but say yes when a fellow asks her if she cares he smokes, and at the same time pulls a package of cigar-shaped sticks—no, she is merely polite, if the men could know what sensible girls say about men who smoke in their presence, not many men would have the mistaken impression which "Smoker" evidently has. There is a certain kind of man who howls at women in the presence of him. The Kansas' editorial was not "taking things for granted," and "Smoker" should show better breeding than to howl at the Kansan. Does "Smoker" know that there is an Anti-cigarette League on the Hill? Has he ever noticed signs in the various parks where people camped the campus? Isn't he able to gather from these gentle hints what the best people think of his dirty practice? Does he suppose that a girl likes to start out with a fellow whose breath uses of tobacco, any more than she uses of smoked of whiskey? Even Arrowning any. He is defiling the pure sweetness of the candy in using it to neutralize his vile breath.
Another thing—it isn't that a woman feels "dammed" (as "smoker") delicately expresses it) if she is seen walking with a man who is smoking; a woman with any sense of refinement feels insulted, just as much as she would if he did anything else that was against the rules of etiquette. If "Smoker" has any more arguments to bear upon the subject, I
SHE DOESN'T LIKE SMOKE Editor Daily Kennett
Fruit salad, whipped cream and wafers. Ten cents a plate. Wiedemann's—Adv.
Now that certain members of the W. S. G. A. are having mid-week meetings, the other women of the Hill could not tate to follow their daring example.
-Disgusted.
I heartily agree with the Kansan, in its editorial Wednesday, concerningly a man's smoking cigarettes while with a University women. I notice in last night's Kansan, that a woman wants smoking a woman, and he doesn't think she should object. I must certainly think she should.
A Girl With a Spine.
If "Smoker" has any more arguments to bear upon the subject, I feel perfectly able to refute them.
Smoking cigarettes is bad enough of itself, without giving the co-ed he is honoring with his presence, the opportunity to get a whiff of the nasty, atkining things. I have numerous dates, and I may respect the man I am most likely to爱 me, I stay dear now! He is the kind who refrains from smoking when he is with me.
In not a few instances these organizations have run mediocre candidates as a means of testing the strength of their machine, they will be able to "swing" the election next fall. If, on the other hand, their candidates are defeated then they are given a hint and immediately start to patch up the cracked machine, and in good order for the big election.
Law Makers-Law Breakers-One and the same! And where are we to look for aid? Our system of student government has become a political one, pure and simple, and representatives to be elected must have the backing of the strongest political machine in their class.
It is strictly in order for the women of the University to say—or to be compelled to say—"There are to be no more mid-week dates."
The Jones Store Co.'s May Merchandise Fair
COME
to Kansas City at Our Expense
We pay your round trip Railroad Fare from your home to Kansas City, when you make this your trading place by refounding on every dollar you spend up to the amount of your round trip railroad fare.
An Exhibition of great interest and a Sale of fascinating Economy, combined in one big, rousing event embracing all merchandise in the 70 single-line stores gathered together under this one roof and organization.
Kansas City's Profit-Sharing Store.
A Wonderful Exhibition and Noteworthy Sale
Sale Starts Monday May First
Prices will shatter precedents—new and higher standards of quality and dependability will be maintained. Attend this Annual Event in the Southwest's biggest and best Department Store.
Come to Our May Merchandise Fair.
Blue Ribbon Bread?
THE JONES STORE@
If you have not you are missing a treat. There is no way of judging anything without giving it a fair trial. We know Blue Ribbon will please.
WANT ADS
LOST One black Simplex Note Book
No. 6 containing the name of Ruth
Goldsworthy. Please leave at Registrar's office.
HAVE YOU TRIED
FOR RENT—On Mt. Oread, June 12,
sorority or fraternity house! First floor, front and back parlor, large dining room, kitchen, pantry; second floor 4 bed rooms and bath; third floor, 4 bed rooms and bath. Hot water heat. Electric lights. Call M. S. Root, Bell 1428W. 139-3
jewelers
China Painting
DARBER WANTED--For evenings and Saturday work. Inquire at K.
U. Y. M. C. A. 139-3
FOR SALE -- Visible typewriter, tabulator, backspacer and all modern improvements including two color ribbon. Monthly payments if desired. See it at 1220 Louisiana street or call Bell phone 1442J. 142-5.
FOR RENT—After September 1, modern house of twelve rooms midway between town and the University. Bell Phone 1823 W. 141-3.
Book Store
CLASSIFIED
In Goods Free
ED. W. PARSONS, Engraver, Watch
laboratory. Bell phone 711, 717, Mass
laboratory. Bell phone 711, 717, Mass
China Painting
MISS ESTHETIC HUIP, UHP,
MISS ESTHETIC HUIP, for special occasion,
carefully hand-painted.
KEELERS STORY BOOK, 929 Mass St. Typewriters for sale or rent typewriter and School Supplies Power by computer 104c. Pictures and Picture framers.
PHONE 501 B. Brinkman's Bakery
Shoe Shop
shop shop
K. U. SHOP SHOP Pantatorium is best place for best place. 1342
Ireland
Printing
We Give and Redeem Surety Coupons
PHONE KENNEDY LUMBING CO.
sales, goods and Mazda Lamps. 956-
724-2300.
We give Surety Coupons with all purchases, one for every 10c you spend in funding them in giving them is just funding $2 \frac{1}{2} to 5 per cent on what you spend.
B. H. BALEN, Artistic Job Printing
Both RONAE 228, 1027 Mass.
ORNEYN SHOE SHOP, 1017 Mass. St.
don't make a mistake. All work
is done.
MIR M. A. M. MORGAN, 1831 Tannessees
tajoring. Pursuit very reasonable.
tajoring. Pursuit very reasonable.
$2.50
Surety Coupons are the same as money. A Merchant must purchase merchandise in any Department of this store (except foods) the same as $2.50 in milk.
PROFESSIONAL CARDS
G. W. JONES *A*, M. M. D. D. Dlesson
B. M. A. C. *A* Healey
1881 Ohio St. Ohio Hail-
stone
HARRY BREDING. M. D. Eyes, ear.
now, p. 391. U. Hide. Words, Bell 611.
N. U. Hide. U. Hide. Bell 611.
DR. H. L. CHAMBERS. Office over Squires' studio. Both phones.
J. R. BECHTEL, M. D. D. O. $82 MM
Both phone. Phone office and residence
A. C. WILSON, Attorney at law, 743
Injury Lawrence, Kansas.
DR. H. WILSON, Attorney at law, 743
Perkins Bldg., Lawrence, Kansas.
C. O. ORLEMAN, D. M. Dickg, Eye.
Ear, Nose and Throat Specialist. All
services guaranteed. Successor to
Dr. Hamman.
50c
Of the style you usually pay $1.00 for
Can You Buy Athletic Underwear
We are open evenings for your convenience. Come down after supper tonight and look out for us on Saturday so to see the 75s and 11s styles.
Remember 820 Mass.
Ideal CLOTHING CO.
High Grade Clothing for Less Money
Special This Week Pound Paper 23c
SHUBER **SEATS NEW SELLING** Direct from 6 months in Chicago. TAYLOR HOLMES In a new comedy—Brimful of fun. HIS MAJESTY Bunker Bean Lee Wilson's Dreamization of Harry Leon Wilson's Saturday Evening Post Stories
Evans Drug Store 819 Mass. St.
SHUBERT NEXT SUNDAY SEATS NEW SELLING
Fresh strawberry sundaes and cebials at Wiedmann's.-Adv.
Why Not
cut flowers, you must buy those grown in Lawrence.
square it up with her with some flowers? A little thoughtfulness covers a multitude of sins, you know. And remember, to get the
Freshest
The Lawrence Floral Co.
1447 Mass. Bell 55.
Watkins National Bank Capital $100,000 For $100.000
Capital $100,000
Surplus and Profits $100,000
The Student Depository
Conklin Fountain Pens
Non-Leakable and Self-Filling
Sold in Lawrence at
F. B. McColloch's Drug Store
847 Mass. St.
THESIS BINDING
Engraved and Printed Cards
A. G. ALRICH
Typewriter Paper 744 Mass. St.
PROTSCH The College Tailor
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
THEATRE VARSITY TONIGHT ONLY MABEL NORMAND and ROSCOE ARBUCKLE in "Fatty and Mabel Adrift" Keystone Feature Comedy
"The Blindness of Love" An Inspiring Romance Featuring GRACE VALENTINE
Saturday—LILLIAN GISH Feature, also Keystone Comedy
One New York Firm Bought One Half Million Dollars Worth of KUPPENHEIMER CLOTHES for Its 1916 Spring Trade
KUPPENHEIMER CLOTHES are made in Chicago, yet the fashion center of the United States, New York, went west for its biggest order.
The largest single order that has ever been placed in the history of the retail clothing business.
MISTER K. U. MAN—this means something to YOU. It means that KUPPENHEIM CLOTHES are right—means you're more than safe in buying them—means that styles are all O K—means that service and quality are teed right down to the mark.
THE LOCAL
HOUSE OF KUPPENHEIMER
IS
ROBERT E. -YOU KNOW THE REST
Final Touches Added by Decoration Committee This Afternoon
ON WITH THE DANCE! PROGRAM ARRANGED
Everything is in readiness for the Soph Hop tonight. Governor and Mrs. Capper will arrive in Lawrence this afternoon and other out-of-town guests have arrived. Manager Davis and the decoration committee were busy all day putting the final touches at Robinson Gymnasium.
The Hop starts at 8 o'clock, and will open with a reception in honor of Governor and Mrs. Capper. Dancer will wait later, and will continue until 2 a.m.
At 8:17 o'clock, Haley's six-piece orchestra from Kansas City will play the grand march, which will be led by Mr. Davis and Miss Hodder. Dance programs will be given out by Misses Marie Buchanan and Adriance Jailittle and Messrs Chester North and Edgar Van Cleef.
Refreshments will be served on the first floor, in four relays as follows: during dance numbers four and five; seven and eight; ten and eleven; and thirteen and fourteen. The usual quartet tables have been supplanted, this year, by an immense banquet table built in the form of a hollow square. In the center of this square, during the interval between the sec-
ond and third classes, the guests开会, the guests will dance. Two cabinets performers will do character and ball room dances during the first two courses.
Henry J. Allen Will Deliver Baccalaureate Address to Senior Class
A thirty-five minute intermission will occur at midnight, between dance numbers 16 and 17. "At this time the Soph Hop farce, 'Oh! Oh! Oh!' will be given by a cast of fifteen, a chorus of twenty, and a student orchestra of seven. Seat checks for the farce are to be given early in the evening when the guests first enter the Gym.
The preliminary program for the annual commencement exercises at the University of Kansas has been announced. Henry J. Allen will open the program with the baccalaureate address on Sunday night, June 4. Events of Monday, June 5, will include a morning organ recital by Prof. Charles S. Skilton, a regatta on Potter's Island, baseball game between the varsity and the Agggie teams, a band concert, a repetition of the senior play, "Copping the Grapes," and the annual banquet of the School of Pharmacy.
On commencement day, Wednesday, June 7, Hamilton Holt, editor of the New York Independent, will deliver the commencement address. This will be followed by the conferring of degrees to approximately 400 students and the annual alumni dinner in Robinson Gymnasium.
On Tuesday, June 6, will occur the class exercises, the alumni address by Stuart Henry, president of the New York Security Company, senior and alumni class luncheons; a meeting of the alumni association, an alumni band concert, band concert, reception of law alumni and the senior-alumni ball.
Mrs. C. J. Evans, of Topeka, is the guest of her niece, Maureen McKernan, at the Alpha Chi Omega house. She came to attend the Senior Play.
Margaretta Stevenson, '18 College, will remain at her home in Leavenworth this week on account of the illness of her mother.
The special caramel nut ice cream at Wiedemann's—Adv.
for the class to draw. He said he got rid of one zealous visitor by this means last year.
W. A. Griffith, professor of drawing and painting, warned all students who have an uncontrollable desire to visit classes in free hand drawing, that from Friday on they would be in danger of having to pose as models
A good quality of Butter-Crust bread. Get it at Dummies.-Adv.
Arrow Shirts—guaranteed fast color Sold exclusively by Johnson & Carl
SAMSUNG
We Know that University Women
have good taste. They are careful buyers of the nicest goods we are able to obtain.
WE HAD UNIVERSITY WOMEN IN MIND when we bought our new BLOUSES.
YOU KNOW what YOU WANT
Come in tomorrow—BLOUSES—Radium and Shadow Lace, Chiffons, Georgette Cropes and Crepe de Chine. In dotted out lines she lives. For Navy, and other shades in a palette of styles we haven't room to mention. From $1.00 to $6.98. Really now, why not
TOMORROW
at
WEAVER'S
10
CINEMAS AND BAR SERVICE
The dining room is spacious and well-lit, with tables covered in white tablecloths and chairs arranged neatly. The decor includes elegant floral arrangements on the tables and a stylish wallpaper that adds a touch of sophistication to the space.
IN
The Famous "Tea Room"
The "Tea Room" is well known to thousands of people throughout the southwest! And like all good things, it stands alone.
The "Tea Room" is a beautifully appointed room at the west end of the Third Floor. It is an ideal place to dine -amid delightful surroundings you are served with dainty, well prepared dishes.
The "Tea Room" is the scene of many beautiful social affairs.
Whenever you are in Kansas City be sure to visit the "Tea Room"and use the many store conveniences at your will. Free telephone service to all parts of the city.
Emery,Bird,Thayer Company
Kansas City, Missouri
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
THE LADY'S HAT
The "Zone"
The latest arrival in our cap department. Haslong, square visor. Attractive patterns.
Ober's HEAD TO FOOT OUT FITTERS
$1.00 and $1.50
ANNOUNCEMENTS
All seniors who expect to be graduated this spring and have not filled out their applications for degrees are held in the office of O. Foster's office at once and do so.
Election of Cheerleader, members of Athletic Board and members of the Men's Student Council will be held Thursday, May 4. Petitions of candidates for these offices must be presented to the president of the Men's Student Council before 6 p.m. April 28. Leland Thompson,
La Muela Juicio (The Wisdom Tooth) a Spanish comedy, will be given by the students in Spanish Saturday night at 8 o'clock in Green Hall theater. No admission will be charged.
All junior girls wishing parts as nymphs in the May Fete, May 12, 1936, at Robinson Hall. Alice Goetz in Robinson (Gymnasium). Little rehearsal will be required.
The Rev. Lloyd C. Walter, of Okmulguee, Okla., will preach at the Presbyterian church morning and evening next Sunday. The Committee on Pastor are especially anxious that he be given a wide hearing by the student body and the congregation of the church.
The Deutsche Verein will have a picnic Monday at 3:00. All members, who intend to be asked to inform the secretary, Miss Wilhelmi.
Extempore speaking Class under Professor Hill will not meet at 2:30 Tuesday on account of orchestra concert.
TWO MORE SENIORS GET
DOMESTIC SCIENCE POSITIONS
Miss Ruth Dyche, a senior in the College, who has majored in home economics, will teach domestic science at Stafford, Kansas, next year. Miss Dyche is a member of Omicron Nu, the university's athletic team. Margaret Lorimer, also a senior in the department, will teach home economics at Preston, Kansas, next year.
Dean F. J. Kelley, of the School of Education, will go to Blue Mound Monday where he will give an address in the interest of a county high
The Old Reliable K. U. SHOE SHOP 1342 Ohio
is putting out the best grade of work in town. Why? Because we have the experience. We do our own work. We do not order our stock and use what we sell. We never get eight years gone personally and selected our stock as we did 40 years ago to the old tannery. We know what leather is. The ladies all claim we rebuild the finest heels in town. The young men admit they get the best shoes, but the best sores in town. So bring in your work and be convinced.
For that picnic lunch we handle all the best grades of picnic stuff. All kinds of soft cheese, deviled ham and olive salad. Dumnires.—Adv.
W. J. Broadhurst, Prop.
THE METHODIST BULLETIN
University Sunday School----9:30.
GET THIS!
A free-for-all and fervid discussion on Bible Matters in the class in the Modern Man's Bible. Rev. Thompson referee.
At 10:30 Dr. Hargett will preach the second in a series of sermons on "The New American Religion."
Epworth Library at 6:45. Mr. J. B. Dail will lead a Questionnaire on the "Religious Life at K. U." This is a chance to say what is on one's mind.
At 12:00 Dr. Thompson will conduct a lecture-discussion on the "Why of Methodism."
Rev. Gordon Thompson, will preach at 7:45. Subject, "A Man's Beliefs."
BE THERE!
TO STANDARDIZE WORK SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA
American Teachers of Journalism Will Raise Plane of Work
The American Association or journalism Teachers began a campaign to place the teaching of journalism on an ethical plane equal to that of the older professions when a committee on standardization was appointed at the sessions held at the University, April 21 and 22. The committee was authorized to work out a uniform code by which journalism schools and departments in American colleges and universities are similar to the ratings made by the medical associations of the medical schools.
"Nine years ago," said Prof. Merle Thorpe, president of the Association, in the Friday morning session, "universities and newspapermen general regard their teaching as national imprecation. Today this Association is composed of 145 journalism teachers who are teaching 2,700 students in 46 universities and colleges. Thus the number of institutions offering newspaper instruction grown to such proportions that the work ought to be standardized."
Talcott Williams, head of the Pulitzer School of Journalism of Columbia University, pointed out the necessity of a broad foundation upon which to base the newspaper training. He plead for higher standards and said that the journalism profession was journalism was an inspiration as well as a training for newspapermen.
A committee was also appointed to work out plans for a scientific newspaper journal in which the results of research work could be printed for the benefit of newspapers engaged in the practical work.
The following men were elected for officers for the coming year: James Melvin Lee, New York University, president; Will M. Mayes, University of Texas, vice-president; Carl H. University of Montana, secretary.
PROFESSORS WILL ATTEND
CONFERENCE IN WICHITA
Professors A. T, Walker, E. D, Cressman, J. W, Brandt and E. W, Murray, of the ancient language department of the University, are expecting to attend the tenth annual meeting of the Classical Association of Kansas and Western Missouri, at Wichita, Kan., Friday and Saturday. Professor Brandt is on the program Wednesday. Prof. Prey of the University of Wisconsin, is the main speaker and will open the meeting Friday night.
The association was formed here at the University ten years ago at the time of the annual spring conference of high school and college teachers. The conference is devoted to discussions both scholarly and practical, with some attention to the pedagogy of teaching. The conference proved to be of considerable help to the cause of classical education in the state.
For your parties see us about refreshments. We can please you... Wiedmann's.—Adv.
If time is money, what would a poli-
cist in the Northwestern guaranteed
to you?
L. S. Broughly
Minneapolis Symphony Orchestra
Special Course Ticket Two Concerts for $1.00
Now on Sale at the Round Corner Drug Co.
at 2:30 and 8:15
Concerts Next Tuesday
PETER YANKOFF
no mathematical to genius
also no art of lure work
Will give an illustrated lecture on his native land—BULGARIA—at the Unitarian Church, Sandy night, 8 o'clock. You can't afford to miss this opportunity to get an intimate view of life in the "Boiling Pot of Europe." You will be welcome.
The Minnesota Symphony Orchestra will appear Tuesday afternoon and evening, May 2, in the Robinson Gymnasium, in recitals. Three soloists, Lenora Allen, soprano; Joseph Farrell, bass cantate; and Henry J. Williams, harp, will add interest to the concert. The program is as follows:
Music Lovers Are Looking Forward to Date May Second
1. Symphony No. 5, in C minor,
Op. 67. Beethoven
Andante con moto
Scherzo—Allegro
Finale—Allegro
2. Pogner's Address from "Die Meisteringer" . . . . .
3. (a) Nunages (Clouds)...
(b) Fetes (Festivals) Three
(h) Fetes (Festivals) Three
Nocturnes . . . . .
4. Fantasy for Harp and Orchestra.
5. Dubuio
5. (a) Claire de Dune (Winter Starlight) from "Werther"..
*Massenet*
(b) Shephard's Hey (A Messer)
(d) Don.
ris dance) . . . . .
6. Aria: "Ah, Mon Coeur" from "Mirceile"
*Ganod*
7. Waldweben (Forest) Mur-
7. Waldwübel (Forest) *Murz*
8. Siegtricht *Steigenfurth*
9. Marchu Slave *Teuchkauflage*
PART I
TUESDAY EVENING
Symphony No. 4, in F. minor,
Op. 36. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Tschiakowsky
Andante sostenuto - Moderato con
Andiantino in modo di canzona
Scherzo: Pizzicato ostinato
Finale: Allegro con fuco
Aria: "O Don Fatale," from
"Don Carlos." v. Verdi
4. Suite Miniature, ..., Arthur Nevin
PART II
1. Aria: "Vision Fugitive," from
"Herodiane" . . . Massee
5. (a) "Under the Linden Trees" from "Scenes Alsaciennes".
Cello; Cornelius Van Vliet.
Clarinet: Pierre Perrier (b) Valse triste. from Dram:
(b) *Valse triste*, from Drama
“Kuolema” . . . . .
"Kuolema." . . . . .
6. 'My Jubilee,' from Symphonic Sketches . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Chadwick
Aria . . . . . "Forma sublime" from
7. Aria: "Forma sublime," from
"Salvator Rosum," *Gomes*
Albert Lindquest
or Overlap. Carruthen Op. 32.
Drojak
UDGE BURCH LECTURES ON LAW PROCEDURE
Judge Rousseau A. Burch, justice of the state supreme court, addressed a large audience in the chapel yesterday at 4:30 on the subject, "Observations on French Criminal Procedures" in the light of his study of the French system compared with the American legal procedure.
Fridays and Saturdays are fruit salad days at Wiediemann's.-Adv.
Send the Daily Kansan home.
PHIREEEN STUDENTS ENTER
CHRISTIANITY ESSAY CONTEST
Thirteen students have entered the contest for the best essays on Applied Christianity this year. Their papers will be turned in, under assumed names, May 2. The names of the contestants will not be known until commencement week as the real authors of the essays are always
Last year eleven people entered the contest. All of the people who are competing this year are expected to have essays ready to be handed in by May 2. Four prizes of $100, $75, $50, and $25 are offered. The judges this year are E. H. Hollands, Margaret Lynn and H. O. Kruse.
Send the Daily Kansan home.
kept secret until after the decision of the judges is rendered.
Indestructo Trunks Bags and Suit Cases Sold Exclusively by Johnson & Carl
Bathing Caps Bathing Slippers
Something New
Look them over, at
The Niftiest Things in Town
CARROLL'S
Bowersock Theatre Today
JESSE L. LASKY presents
MARIE DORO
A former student of the University of Kansas
THE HEART of NORA FLYNN
A photodrama revealing glimpses of sweetness and pathos with strong dramatic moments and a powerful but happy climax. Miss Doro in a role of great sympathy and charm.
Also Paramount Travel Pictures
FOUR SHOWS ADMISSION 10 Cents
Brown Bread Vanilla Chocolate Fresh Strawberry Caramel Nut
Ice Cream for Sunday
Phone Your Order Early to Insure Delivery
Reynolds Bros.
Reed Furniture for Homelike Homes
H2(OH)_{2} \rightarrow H
Reed furniture is gaining much deserved popularity in fine homes in every part of the country. It is handsome, durable, comfortable, and applicable for use in any room in the house. It sells at reasonable prices, and makes a fine outfit for any room.
We can supply you with Reed and Chinese Sea Grass chairs and furniture both plain and upholstered in a large variety of finishes.
23 in. 5 yd.
ROCKING CHAIR
HOAK OH
second
many to paste
further
The cut above shows one of the "comfy" styles of rockers so popular for living room or porch use. The cut at the left is of the parlor variety—sturdy, comfortable, and handsome, upholstered in cretonne or leather.
HABRAJ
Why not look over our stock of fine Reed furniture on your next trip down town. If we haven't the piece that you want we can get it for you in a few days, and we will be glad to do it. We can supply you with single pieces or suites for the living room, dining room or bed room.
E.S. Strachan FURNITURE
808-810 Mass. St.