STATE HISTORICAL SOCIETY UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN T O P E K A K N VOLUME XI. NUMBER 126 HASH HOUSE LEAGUERS MUST BE AT MEETING Every Team Must Be Represented When Schedule Is Adopted--Commission PREPARES TENTATIVE RULES Commission Draws up List of Regulations to Submit at the General Meeting Thursday Night No team that is not represented at the general meeting of the Hash House League in the Student Union can become a member of the League. That is the rule passed by the Hash House League Commission at its meeting in the Daily Kansan office last night. "A schedule will be formally adopted at the meeting Thursday, and it is necessary that every team be represented," a member of the Commission said today. "If a team is representing an representative at the meeting, it probably wouldn't have pep enough to finish the season." The Commission also prepared a list of rules to submit to the general meeting Thursday night. They are expected to meet later. The Commission anticipates considerable discussion on the rules governing outside players. Number and Eligibility of Players Rule 1. Players on the Varsity will be required to play some position other than their regular positions on the Varsity. Any队 playing a Varsity player in his regular position shall forfeit the game or games to its opponent. Rule 2. Section 2. No club may enter more than six outside players. Rule 2. Section 3. The manager of each team, when handing in the name of players, shall be required to report every person on the team, and which are outside men. Rule 2, Section 1. Any club which has less than 13 able-bodied men as qualified players shall be allowed to play until the men until 13 men have been secured. Rule 2. Section 4. When any new members come to a club they shall be allowed to play after their turn and to approved by the Commission. Grounds Rule 2. Section 5. The Commission shall have the power to decide on the eligibility of players, both club members and outside players. Rule 2. Section 6. Any team playing other than qualified players shall forfeit the game or games to its opponent, unless the captains or coaches of opposing teams have agreed before hand that an ineligible man may play. Time of Playing Rule 1. The grounds upon which the games are to be played shall be designated on the official schedule. If for any reason the field is not available at that time, it shall be the mission to notify the managers of each team at least 12 hours before the time scheduled for the game. Rule 1. The managers of two teams change the time for joining game. Rule 2. Any team which fails to appear within 15 minutes of the scheduled time of the game, or fails to commence play when the umpire calls "Play Ball." shall forfeit the game. Umpire Rule 1. The umpire shall be sealed for joint agreement of the umpire. Protested Games Rule 1. The Commission shall have power to decide all protested games, each team to be represented at the meeting of the Commission when the case comes up for consideration of the Commission shall constitute a quorum the chairman to have no vote except in case of a tie. List of Players Rule 1. The manager of each team shall prepare a list of players and place it in the hands of the Commission, who shall keep it on record. No addition shall be made to this list without the consent of this Commission. Ralls Rule 1. Each team shall provide a ball for each game that will pass the inspection of the opposing pitcher. Number of Innings Rule 1. The managers or captains (Continued on page 4) UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON,APRIL1.1,1914. PEACE REPRESENTATIVE CALLS ON UNIVERSITY Harry Erwin Bard, director of the Pan-American division of the American Association for International Conciliation visited the University this week. Mr. Bard's purpose is to interest the universities of the United States and international institutions of the Latin countries of Central and South America. It is now planned to take a party this summer to South America for the purpose of study in the Spanish and Portuguese universities. At first only professors or graduate students will go. This is because the South American universities correspond to American graduate schools. SOCIETIES WANT A MEMORIAL Sachems and Skull and K Endorse Plan for a Senior Class Monument The seniors will have a memorial if the support of the two senior societies means anything? Both the Skull and K and the Sachems have endorsed the plan and will push the matter in the class. Sam Fairchild, president of Skull and K, said that this organization was behind the proposed memorial, or anything the class saw fit to leave, and was anxious to see the matter brought before the class. "We have endorsed no particular memorial," said Elmer Whitney, president of the Sachems, "but the Sachems are enthusiastic for some reason. We will probably discuss the altar proposition at our next meeting." GIVE TWO TEAS FOR WOMEN Pan-Hellenic and Ladies of the Faculty to Hold All University Recentions Two teas will be given for the University women Thursday and Friday The ladies of the faculty will close their series of receptions for all University women thru 5:30 p.clock after dinner to 5:30 p.clock in Haworth Hall. Friday afternoon from 3:30 to 5:30 the Women's Pan-Hellenic will entertain with an informal tea at the Kappa Alpha Theta house for Mrs Eustace Brown. All University girls are invited. Juniors Want Dues "Dues from members of the junior class for the prom are not coming in as fast as they should. I will be at the check stand in Fraser, Friday at chapel time," said Bat Nelson, one of the managers, "and would like to have as many juniors as possible see me at that time to pay their dues." Y. M.'s to Hike The old and the new cabinets of the Y. M. C. A. will take a hike into the country tomorrow afternoon for a general mixup and outing. They will talk over the work that has been accomplished this year and will discuss plans for the coming year. Violin 'Cellist At Festival He was formerly a member of the Damrosch New York Symphony Orchestra and the New York Symphony. First 'celist of the St. Paul Sym- phytum' which will give a coneget hert April 31. PAUL MORGAN When 7 years old he was admitted to the Conservatory of Leipsic, the youngest pupil that ever entered that institution. After two years of study there, he went to Berlin, where Robert Hausmann, 'cells of the Joachim quartet, gave him instruction for your years.' COUNCIL BEGINS WORK ON PERMANENT UNION Authorizes President to Select Committee to Make Preliminary Arrangements The University will have a permanent Student Union if the plans of the Men's Student Council carry out. A motion was passed at the meeting of the Council last night to empower the president of the Council to appoint a committee of three men to work for the establishment of a museum. The second men will be appointed tomorrow. President Dodd is considering men that will have time to look after the men. This commission will get ground plans for a Union, inquire into the Union's plans and make its tempt to get legislation looking to a permanent establishment on the hill. Begin at Once, Says Sec'y of Alumni Assn. "I think that the Student Union committees should begin at once to make definite plans for a permanent Union building," said Prof. L. N. Flint, secretary of the Alumni Association, today. "The time to begin a permanent union is right now, but they should formulate a set plan, get designs for the buildings and estimates of the cost. Then it could be presented to the alumni at their regular meeting at commencement, or if they get their plans soon I would be glad to present the matter to the alumni through the magazine right away. "I believe that the alumni will aid the project if it is presented to them in a definite form, and now is the time to mature the plans." LAW DEAN TO SPEAK HERE H. M. Bates, of Michigan University, Will Talk in Chapel The next two chapel speakers will be deans of law schools. Dean Henry M. Bates, of Michigan, will give an afternoon Friday dealing with the relation of a college education to a professional education. The value of having an education in the liberal arts is that it affords a live question in educational circles, and Dean Bates has made a study of the problem. Next Tuesday Dean William D. Lewis, of the law school of the University of Pennsylvania, will be the speaker. Dean Lewis is a progressive authority on trust regulation. He aided the government in solving some of its trust problems a few years ago. Send the Daily Kansan home. SENIOR HONOR SOCIETY WILL INITIATE THIRTEEN The Sachems, honorary senior class, society will meet tonight at Eagle's Hall to initiate the thirteen new members elected at the last meeting. The process will begin at eight o'clock and continue till the last man is finished. The victims are: Cale Carson, Freeman Alexander, Art Weaver, Baldwin Mitchell, Duke Kennedy, Vic Carter, Joe McCarthy, Morrow, Hail Curran, Chiree O'Donnell, Bat Nelson, Blair Hackney, and Charles Smith. BULLETIN Agreeable politicians will be present in full force. The program, including cartoons by Ward Lockwood, music by a new quartet, student speeches and other stunts is of interest to all sophomores. The second sophomore stag party will be held at the Student Union tonight. Some subjects as the Sophomores and some caps will be open to free discussion. The baseball game between the Varsity and the Kansas City Athletic Association teams has been postponed until Saturday afternoon, because of the wet condition of the diamond. POLITICIANS AND ART TO ENTERTAIN SOPHS Laws Paddle Freshmen Armed with paddles of ever shape, size, and form, the Laws padd several freshmen this morning before eight o'clock classes. FIVE SCHOLARSHIPS OFFERED K. U. WOMEN Prizes of Varying Amounts Will be Awarded University Girls Applications for the scholarships open to women students for 1914-15 should be made to the committee before April 15. The applications will be received by Mrs. W. A. Griffith and Miss Isaac Olivey for the Laundry Department, Scholarship, and Professors Hyde, Oliver, and Galloo, for the others. The Marcella Howland Memorial Scholarship, $87.50. Open to young women of the junior and senior classes of the College. The scholarships offered are: The Eliza Matheson Innes Memorial Scholarship. $100. Open to women students of the College above the Graduate School and students of the Graduate School. The Daughters of the American Revolution Scholarship. $100. Open to women students of the College or University near your home. Student of the Graduate School. The Association of Collegeg Alumnae Scholarship. $50. Open to women of the junior and senior years of the College. The Lucinda Smith Buchan Memorial Scholarship maintained by the alumnae of the Pi Beta Phi sorority is a loan scholarship of $200. It is open to women students of the College. MINING ENGINEERS TO HAVE NEW TROPHY CASH The mining engineers are installing a large trophy case just inside the main entrance of Haworth Hall. The eight cups which the miners throw at the mining site as soon as it is ready. The cups are now in the mineral exhibit room. Although the number of mining engineers is small in comparison with the number enrolled in the other engineering schools, the miners have always won a number of the trophies offered for baseball and track events on the annual Engineers' Day. Last year they won cups, and the year before, three. HARSHBERGER APPPOINTS MEN FOR ENGINEERS' DAY E. L. Harshberger, president of the Civil Engineering Society, announced this afternoon the following committees for Engineers' Day Parade, P. K. Bunn, Buster Brown Donne Ackee, Chaucey Hunter; Track, George Smee, Bill Weldline; Baseball, Chu Painter, A. J Groft, Carl Nielay; Tug-o-War, R. C. Keeling, W. A. Burton, Tony James; Dance, D. G. Reid, Alfred Grave, Paul Diehl. The men on the parade committee and the chairmen of the other committees are asked to consult with theberger at their earliest convenience. A memorial, containing the history of the entomological collection at the University which was started and developed by the late Francis Huntington Snow, has just appeared in a five hundred page number of the Science Bulletin of the University of Kansas. HISTORY OF F. H. SNO COLLECTION IN BULLETIN The book was edited by Prof. S. J. Hunter and contains several other articles on entomological subjects contributed to by Professor Hunter, Hunter, F. J., Williams, Dwight Isley, Prof. H, B. Hungerford, and W, T. Emery. The University authorities have decided not to put a light at the foot of the library cut-off, but will put a rail along the lower flight of steps. LIBRARY CUT-OFF WILL HAVE LOWER HAND RAH The place is considered by many students to be dangerous after dark, but the authorities could find no evidence to show that the cut-off was used enough after night to warrant the expenditure of $225 for the light. To Lecture on Gardening Herbert Hare will give his second lecture before the Living Plant class on Landscape Gardening, Thursday afternoon, at 4:30 in Snow Hall. Students who have been used. Those who are interested in this subject are invited to attend. Hawks Postnone Meeting Hawks Postpone Meeting The Hawk Club will meet Tuesday night, April 7th, instead of tonight as originally announced. LAWRENCE MERCHANTS TO ENTERTAIN STUDENTS Fifteen members of the Lawrence Merchants' Association have planned a spring style show for the students of the University to be held along Massachusetts street next Thursday evening. The fifteen merchants will dress their windows with their most attractive wares and keep open house all evening. Arrangements have been made for each merchant to have music for his visitors all evening, and nearly every musical organization in town will be represented. Some organizations will go from one store to another giving a short program to the students at each place. WOMEN TO BE BIG SISTERS Y, W. C. A. Starts Popular Movement in Meeting Yesterday—25 Have Signed Pledges This movement, which is comparatively new has been tried with great success at Leland Stanford, Minneapolis, Colo., and other large universities. K. U. women are to act as Big Sisters to the freshmen next year, Great enthusiasm was shown in the movement which was the subject of the Y. W. C. A. meeting yesterday afternoon. Twenty-five women have signed cards promising to look after one or more new students next year. The purpose of the movement is to keep the freshman girls from being lonesome and to help them for the first few days. The duties of a Big Sister consists in calling on the new girl, taking her to church, Y. W. Friars, Public School and etc. Her duties are not merely in helping the new girl but she must keep in touch with her throughout the year. Evelyn Strong, leader of the meeting, Naomi Simpson, Eloise Stevenson, and Mona Claire Huffman, gave talks on the movement and plans for the spring campaign were discussed. The work this spring will consist in securing Big Sisters for next year and in writing summer letters. SHE WOULD GIVE WOMEN K'S "The awarding of 'Ks" to women students of the University will be presented to the University faculty at the earliest opportunity," said Mrs. Cora G. Lewis of the Board of Administration, following the announcement that the athletic girls of the Kansas State Normal would receive "Ks" for their prowess at open-air-games. Mrs. Lewis believes that the lack of interest shown by women students in athletics is due to the fact that there is nothing to work for. She believes the women should be urged to compete for letters in the same manner as the men now compete for their athletic honors. Mrs. Cora G. Lewis Believes University Girls Should Receive Athletic Emblem for Merit ENTOMOLOGY EXPERTS TO INSPECT IMPORTED TREES H. B. Hungerford went to Rosedale yesterday where he will inspect three consignments of fruit trees shipped into Kansas from Chateenay, France. The entomology department has three men who are regularly employed in its inspection of shipments of various trees in different parts of the state. Mechanicals to Meet George H. Vansell, of the department of entomology, is in Parsons, today inspecting two shipments of forestry from Boskoop, Holland. Under the law passed, in August, 1912, the department here inspects all shipments coming into the state from foreign countries. The inspection is made at the point of destination. A meeting of the American Society of Mechanical Engineers will be held at the home of Prof. F. H. Sibley, 1607 Tennessee street, at 7 o'clock tomorrow evening. Papers are available on request read: Machinery, Scientific Americanism, Engineering Records, and Exhaust Turbine Stimulants. Get Tickets Now Friday, April 3. is the last day that tickets may be secured for the Uncle Jimmy Day banquet, Monday the 6th. The tickets have been going rapidly and the usual good time with them has elapsed. Hodges, Chief Justice Johnston, and Congressman Neeyle are to be among the speakers. The Achoth sorority will entertain with an indoor picnic supper tonight at the chapter house. STUDENT UNION NEEDS ALL PLEDGE MONEY Home for Students Must Have Its Bills Paid Or Move Out FEWER THAN HALF HAVE PAID Only 260 Have Given Their Money —The Rest Can Pay at Union or to Committee "All the money must be in by April 10, or we shall be forced to send around a collector for it. We need the money and do not care to be kicked out." "The Student Union committee must have the money pledged by the students," said Duke Kennedy, chairman of the committee today. "For the rent is due and the committee's are much less than its liabilities. Up to date about 260 students have paid their pledges, or less than $35 each. And the Union is kept going, and its bills paid the money must be turned in. Payment may be made to the man at the Union building or to Kennedy or other members of the committee. The following have naid: Frank C. Ackers, Howard Adams, Wm L. Ainsworth, Irw A. Allen, Benjamin H. Asher, Chester A. Badger, Austin Bainley, Irwin Baker, William R. Baker, Willis R. Banker, Walter Barger, Howard S. Barnaby, Martin Barch, Ellwood W. Beeson Jo. D. Berwick, L.C. Bell, J.L. Bliss, Kenneth G. Bishop, Fred E. Blachy, Edgar P. Blanton, E.M. Middington, Arthur L. Boman, J.Vernon Boothe, Victor Bottomly, Vernon J. Bowesrock, Roland E. Boynton, James A. Buchanan, E.M. Middington, Buck, Cale O. Buckles, Jesy Y. Burbank,Edmund C. Burke, Martin Burke, Ross E. Busenbark William S. Cady, John H. Calbeck, Willis N. Calkins, Adrian B. Campbell, Fred C. Campbell, Fred W. Campbell, Paul C. Carlton, Clark B. Carpenter, John W. Carson, Clarence Carpenter, John W. Carlisle, L. Clark, Gilbert M. Clayton, Ross H. Clayton, Neil F. Pline, Harold C. Coffman, Claude L. Coggins, Olin Dorwan Collier, Curtis T. Collinson, Claude O. Conkey, Vernon G. Corn- ley, Michael K. Creighton, Ralph S. Crow, Walter V. Cullison, John E. Curran. Eugene Wilson Davis, Philip Lind Davis, Herry E. Day, Harold L. DeBenham, Fred S. Degen, David Dergue, Paul A. Diehl, Oscar A. Dingman, Kennech C. Doddierden, Donna F. Doddierden, Preston F. Dubach, Merle Dubach, Arthur W. Duston, Junius W. Dyche, Paul L. Dyche, James H. Eggleston, Ray L. Eldridge, Frank B. Elmore, Cecil P. Embry, A. G. Edwards, G. H. Fairley, Charles C. Fairchild, Samuel G. Fairchild, Ocho J. Fisk, Lee J. Eckert, Antoine A. Frank, Richard R. Frank, Hugh Frutzmacher, W. W. Ferguson. Joseph E. Gaittskill, Jesse F. Gardner, George R. Gear, Clyde R. Gelvin, Charles E. Gibson, Willard M. Glassey, Guy C. Glenn, Roy Graham, Harry T. Gray, Roy I. Grayson, Edmond M. Guillefoy, Ray S. Gilford, Guilfoyle, E. B. Hackney, J. M. Hainbach, G. G. Hall, Reese A. Hall, Harry W. Hanson, Herbert C. Hansen, C. W. Harding, Winfred Harkerrad, G. B. Harrell, D. R. Harrison, L. A. Harsh, L. B. Hayes, J. M. Harsh, Hilton V. Holston, C. B. Holm, V. H. Holston, T. L. Howden, J. L. Hunt, Fred Hurd, H. B. Hutchings Samuel R. Ingals, H. C. Jackson, Lloyd E. Jackson, Leland H. Jenks, Clare B. Johnson, John M. Johnson, Samuel A. Johnson, Ogden S. Jones, D. J. Doseph, K. W. Kaiser, G. J. Kampert, Sherwin F. Kelly, James R. Kennedy, Harlen D. King, L. S. kingsbury, L. W. Winear, N. J. kielhege, L. W. Knapp, N. J. d. H. Lackey, L. L. Laird, L. A. Lambert, Walter A. Lambert, V. K. Meret, O. M. Larimore, W. M. Latimer, E. L. Lindera, W. H. Lindsey, W. M. Lowe, E. H. Lapton, E. I. Eldor R. W, MacGregor, W, W.Mack, J. C, Madden, W, C.Magathan, W, J. Malcolmson, D, Henry Maloy, J. A. Molssed, A. R. Malbaty, C. Maris, G. Malsoff, A. B. Mossel, M. Marshall, Francis I. Martin, H, F. Mattton, B. L. Means, D'Laskie Miller, John M. Miller, Lewis R. Miller, Lyle M. Miner, Verne E. Miner, J. Roffaff, D. Claire Moffitt, H. C. Morgan, G. Morrow, M. Morrow, F. M. McMeilland, R. T. McCluggage, W. H. McClure, Malcolm McCune, John A. (Continued on page 4) UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Official student paper of the University EDITORIAL STAFF JON C. MADENN . Editor-in-Chief LION HARREB . Associate Editor JOAN GLIJSNERN . Managing Editor HASHI RABBIN . High School Editor LANDON LAIRD . Sport Editor EPIN ARLA... Business Manager RAT EADURDUM... Circulation Manager JE BISPH... Advertising Manager CHARA S. STURTYVANT... Advertising CHARA S. STURTYVANT... Advertising REPORTORIAL STAFF LUCIE BABBER W. W. FERUSOUM HENBERRY FLINT RAV CLAPPER RAV CLAPPER WILLIAM S. CADY WILLIAM S. CADY CALVIN LAMBERT SAM DREMER HAYES AND JACK GLENSON ALLINE CHARLIS GIBSON RUSSELL LUCHELL HILDSONER LAWRENCE SMITH HELEN HATES Entered **second-class** mail matter Lawrence, Kansas, under the file of Marit Published in the afternoon five times a week, by students of the University of Kansas, from the press of the department of Journalism. Subscription price $2.50 per year, in advance; one term, $1.50 Phone, Bell K. U. 25. Address all communications to UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, Lawrence, Kans. The Daily Kaman aims to picture the students of University fields as they go to further Kansas to more print materials. The University holds, to plan for favorite topics, to be clean; to be cheerful; to be careful; to be curious about more serious problems to user heads; and to be diligent in helping the students of the University. WEDNESDAY, APRIL 1, 1914 Unruly blasts wait on the tender spring—Shakespeare. THE WEARIN' O THE CAP Good for the freshmen. By a decisive vote they have decided to continue a custom which now has an excellent chance to become traditional at the University. The classmen of '17 should not consider their "postage stamps" as a mark of degradation but should remember that the freshmen, the senior laws, and the engineers are the only Mount Fellow students who foster fellowship by joining together and appearing with a distinguishing label. STILL MOVING The caps, the canes, and the sweaters should be followed by characteristic customs in all other classes and all other schools. It is practically impossible for students to have too many ways of getting together on a common democratic footing. The rules committee is planning and sweating as rules committees should, and the league is assuming definite shape rapidly. In spite of the fact that Manager Hamilton does not see his way clear toward furnishing a baseball or two to the boarding house leaguers, the organizations are managing to hobble along with a surprising amount of spryness. Twenty or more teams are expected to be represented at the meeting Thursday night when the recommendations of the rules committee will be threshed over. And by the way, if your club is not already entered it should do so by that time. GRADES AND A STANDARD Dean Tempin's stand for the standardization of grades is gratifying and shows a likelihood of actual results. Why isn't the suggestion a good one to send out questionaires among the seniors in order that some basis may be obtained to work from? Seniors know what courses are unfairly hard or unfairly easy and they ought to be glad to express frank opinions for the purpose of standardizing grades (and perhaps courses themselves) for the oncoming classes. In order to get anywhere a start will have to be made. Get facts from the students. Conclusions will follow. GOOD WORK Thanks are due Rowland's book store because of two recent gifts to the Student Union, a Kansas banner and several shrats. The merchants are showing their interest in the University this spring in a materialistic manner. References have already been made in this column to several other donations to the Union and a number of live merchants are offering cups to the winners in the various baseball leagues. There's always room for one more loyal donor, however. WHY ACCEPT PAY AT ALL? News note: The Lawrence merchants have asked the State Auditor to send professors' checks to Lawrence from Topeka more promptly each month. Heavens and chinch bugs! Will our faculty idly sit by and allow this effort to go through unfoubt? Horrors and sleeping sicknesses! Just think of this wicked attempt to hurry the underpaid professors's remittance into the coffers of these merchants—for such prosaic articles as breakfast food, or pants! To arms! The faculty must show its spirit and prove conclusively that the professorial blood still runs red. Anyone can see that the old slow going plan is the better. Let the state continue to show our revered but self-assertionless instructors that it still has the same fatherly thoughtfulness illustrated by the paternal ancestor who wrote, "There's no use sending Jim's allowance just yet; he'll spend it as soon as he gets it anyway." HARVARD KNIFES BASEBALL PLANC Harvard will have none of the current baseball slang when the season opens. The powers of the Harvard Crimson, which is the undergraduates' daily newspaper of the college, have decided that a spade will be called a spade in the columns of the Crimson hereafter. The words describing the baseball games of the Harvard teams will be perfectly pure and guaranteed to be in good usage. And withal, the stories of the games will be so clear that the students can easily archaeology and 'Indian philology will understand what happened on the ball grounds. In the first place, the word so dear to the space account of the undergraduate correspondent will be barked "Varsity" is the triangular question. In the Crimson, Harvard will have a "university baseball team," not a "varsity combination." The men will steal bases instead of "purloring," "pilfering," or "swing" them. The batters will hit the ball out the outfield instead of "slugging the pill to the gardens." ENDS AND ODDLETS No, Mr. Freshman, the suggestion to wear the caps today was not an April Fool's joke! SENTIMENTALLY The Student Council of Kansas University declared the office of the editor-in-chief a vacant. The treasurer over a disagreement of the Council will some of the views of the editor-in-chief. A great deal of sentiment has been stirred up over the matter—Purdue Exponent. LATEST DANCE HOWL He who doesn't hesitate is lost. Gargoyle. SENTIMENTALITY can, "My pigs will soon be ready to Many a freshman is congratulating himself because dad has to do the spring spading this year. CY AT HIS WORST An enemy the scavenger man, Cried, as he scavenger marbage "A flatterer," says Ariotole, "is a secret enemy." Send us about twenty enemies please.—Wisconsin Sphinx. FRESH In order to forestall any difficulties that might result from attempts to hold unorganized rushes the Senior General Committee has ruled that no freshmen will be allowed until Monday andanquet tonight—Cornell Daily Sun. sent, I never found the swill so swell." —C. W. Byron. FRESHMAN RULES And at Kansas they object to wearing freshman caps! WITH K. U. POETS TO GOD, THE ARCHITECT BY HARRY KEMP, FORMER STUDENT ALICE, WHERE ART THOU? Three different varieties of Alice appeared in the advertisements of last night's Kansan. There was Alice Eldridge, pianist; Alice Joyce, peerless photoplay star; and Miss Allys, young woman of education and foreign travel. Who thou art I know not, But this much I know: Thon hast set the Pleiades in a silver row; Town hast reared a colored wall Twist the night and day. Town hast sent the trackless woods Louse upon their way; Thou hast made the flowers to bloe; And the stars to shine, Hid rare gems and richest ore In the tunneled mine; But, chief of all thy wondrous works Supreme of all thy plan— Thou hast put an upward reach In the heart of man' TWAS EVER THUS Up in Lawrence, Kans., where droop brihm hats are so common as to attract no attention, writes a K. U. graduate in the Kansas City Star, a wrong-minded city administration is at loggershead with the town's natural rulers over the matter of some posters tacked to trees and telegraph poles. Nay, the long arm of the law has even reached out to drag a few students from bed at dead of night and toss them into the city office, it implies, or the credit of the long arm had to wait until they had gone to bed before it caught up with them. But the row might as easily have arisen over any other inconsequential thing. Always there has been enmity between town and gown... There was, for instance, the famous Scoop Club edition of the Lawrence Journal. One of the town's dailies was turned over to the students for one edition. Then a bit ditched it. And a bunch whose sociological researches in the beervending part of town had been painstaking and thorough, printed a list of the places in town where beer might be bought. Also, the names of those who owned the houses rented for joints—and there was a town official or two in the bunch. The edition sold out fast enough. In May, the day after Monday, when a deputy sheriff drove up on the Hill with a buggy load of subpoenas, citing students to appear as witnesses. They swooped down on us in class and slaughter was appalling. But somebody escaped and bore the fatal tidings to the Law Building, where those culprits not engaged in tossing pennons on the front step were taken away. Doc Burdick's classes. The messengers got there ahead of the deputy and a large number made their getaway through the open windows, for it was spring and the campus was dotted with "queeners." There were one or two who, in an extremity of caution, even went to Topeka and remained a day or two. And the Lawrence Journal, just to show its heart was taken away. Doc Burdick wrote all of the students cited as witnesses. Which, it was considered, branded a man a rum bound and an enemy of the republic... And yet, for all our pretended hostility, we were really on pretty good terms with the town. As a point of honor, one was the sworn enemy of the police department—all three of them—although I personally have had a tenderness even for them since an evening when we met at the school to two friends who were feeding ice cream to their girls. The force, when appealed to, grinned at our friends and refused to pursue. Of course, we had our natural allies in the town. Cab drivers could be counted on, for instance, for assistance in any dark deed that one had afoot. Theirs was a loyalty quite out of proportion to the modest stipend they demanded. They were willing to help you evade the law for the pure joy of the thing; they were-cab drivers and lineal who owned all of the Forty Thieves. It was always a mark of special distinction if you had a cab driver of your own, some battered Jehu who could be depended upon to take you downtown free once in a while, salute you on the street, smoke your cigars and "charge it" without further explanation. I saw my own Jehu, who bore the curiously lamb-like name of Pearl, last time I was in town, and he handed me the many gifts I once distinguished him and was driving a motor car. It wasn't much of a motor car, it must be admitted, but all the same it robbed him of his birthright of picturesqueness... Flosse Footlights—Why did you go out with young Globe when Jack was waiting for you at the stage door? Kitty Lightfoot--Why, he is so rich. He even has Diamond tires on his car.—Ex. "There is something about you, dear," he sighed, "that appeals to me." BOWERSOCK THEATRE MATINEE AND NIGHT Saturday, April 4th "Ges, you must have looked dad up in Bradstreet," she answered.— Wisconsin Sphinx. THE SENSATION OF THE SEASON RETURNS THOMAS A. EDISON'S GENUINE Talking Pictures PRESENTING AN ENTIRE NEW DRAMA CONSISTING OF THE FOLLOW- ING SUBJECTS JOHN J. McGRAW MGR. NEW YORK GIANTS A WAR DRAMA ENTITLED "THE DEAF MUTE" SEYMOUR, DEMPSEY & SEYMOUR RAGTIME ENTERTAINERS AND OTHERS CONSISTING OF MUSICAL COMEDY, FARCE, VAUDEVILLE AND DRAMA Everything New---Change of Program Each Day PRICES: Night, 25c, 35c, 50c Matinee, Adults 25c, Children 10c CITY CAFE 906 Mass. Strictly Home Cooking Get one of our meal tickets. Eat When it's most convenient Sam S. Shubert Bert Wadham THE COLLEGE BARBER On 14th Street MAT. WEDNESDAY & SATURDAY "The Traffic" W. J. Francisco For MAYOR He will appreciate your support. He will appreciate your support. The Event of the Season Bowersock Theatre Wednesday, April 1st ONE NIGHT ONLY Oberammergauer Tyrolian Singers Musicians, Players, and Dancers Duets, Solos, Quartettes, Ensembles of Tyrolian Airs The World Renown Musical Trio And the Fascinating Original "Schuhplattler" Dance Prices - 25-35-50-75c STANDISH M.K. ARROW COLLAR 2 for 25¢ Cluett Peabody & Co. Inc. Makers SPRING SUITINGS FRANK KOCH TAILOR 727 Mass. You Can Earn a Good Living and lay up some money too, on graduation from the Lawrence Business College. Enroll once at Lawrence Business College. Free Employment. Bureau at your services. Free Employment. Bureau at your services. Best Business College. No vacations. LAWRENCE Business College Lawrence, Kansas. Kansan Want Ads Pay Mr. Baseball Fan Are you interested in the Varsity team,the fraternity leagues, and the inter-club league? If you are,you will want to get all the dope of the games. Mail fifty cents to the University Daily Kansan and have it delivered the rest of the school year, until June 5. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN ANNOUNCEMENTS Beginning this week the orchestra will meet every Monday night. Hash House League meeting, Student Union, Thursday night, 7:30; important. All teams desiring to enter Hash House League must hand in names to Kansan before Thursday noon. The Mott Campaign Committee of the Y. M. C. A. will meet tonight at 9:00 o'clock in Myers Hall. Hawk Club meeting Tuesday evening April 7th. Room 110. Fraser Importer WANT ADS LOST—Between Fraser Hall and Ad. Building, a meerschaum pipe, six inches long with heavy engraved gold trimmings. Bowl covered with chamois. Reward to finder. Call 1018 Bell. Student Union. 124-2^wednesday 7:30 Botany Club, (Snow.) LOST—A aameo locket in F. A. H. call Bell 692. ninder. Finder 124-3* Found Notebook Found last week, pocket notebook containing notes on international law. Owner can have same by calling at Daily Kansan office and paying for this ad. Moving Picture Plays Wanted $10 to $100 each. Big demand! Send twenty-five cents for alphabetically arranged list of names and addresses of prominent film producing companies. The Aytuzee Producer's List. Box 347 Pueblo, Colorado—Adv. Send the Daily Kansan home. PROTSCH The Tailor THEY ARE HERE A GOOD PLACE TO EAT AT ANDERSON'S OLD STAND JOHNSON & TUTTLE 715 PROPS. Mass. McCOLLOCH'S Drug Store Should Be YOUR Drug Store WATKINS NATIONAL BANK Capital $100,000 Surplus and profits $100,000 The Student Depository PROFESSIONAL CARDS W. O. M.COONNELY, Physician 48 H.W. O. M.COONNELY, Physician 48 W. O. M.COONNELY, Residence, 1364 Tenn. 68 W. O. M.COONNELY, Residence, 1364 Tenn. 68 DR. H, W. HAYNE, Oculast, Lawrenco, Kansas. G. A. HAMMAN, M. D. Eys, ear, and throat specialist, Stats-Baths-Dick Building. *Dick Building.* J. F. BROCK, Opomorist and Specialist of the Office of Office 802 Mass Bell phone 606-573-2411 HARRY REDING. M, D Eye, ear, nose Laughing. Phone 513, Home 512. Phone, Phone 513, Home 512. J. W. O'BRYON. Dentist. Over Wilson's Drug Store. Belt Phone 807. J. BEGHTEL, M. D. D. D. O. 833 Mass achieves技. Both phones, office and telephone. G. W. JONES, A. M. M., D. Disease of Nurses in the Army, 1908. G. W. JONES, A. M. M., D. Disease of Nurses in the Army, 1908. DR. H. T. JONES, Room 12 A. A. Bldg. Reddence 130 Tenn. Phones 211. DR. H. L. CHAMBERS, Office over Phone. Both phones DR. BURT R. WHITE Osteopath. Phones. Bell 938. Home 257. Office. 745 Mass. St. Ed. W. Parsons, Engraver, Watchmaker and Jewelry. Bell Phones 1. Mass. 3. Mass. S. T. GILLISEP. M. D. O. Office corp- ernment St. Residence 728 Phone 5060 Mail 5060 CLASSIFIED Plumbers Phone Kennedy Plumbing Co., for good goods and Mazda lamps. 937 Mass. Garage. 120 W. 6th St. Ladles Tailors MIRS ELLISON. Dressmaking and Ladies' Workwear. 1092 Phone Boll 2411 West. Queen City College. System and sewning. City College. System and sewning. Mrs. G, Mark Brown. 834 KY. Heil. Mrs. G, Mark Brown. 834 KY. Heil. Hair Dressers Hairdressing, shampooing, scalp and facial massage, shampooing, hair-fairs, "Marilyn ballo" ballet class. Call Bell 1872, Home (51), Select Hair Dressing Shop, 927 Mass Bt. Barber Shops Go where they all go! J.C. HOUK 113 Mass. Student's Co-op Club. **$3 to $30 per** week 1340 KY. Geo. H. Vancell Steward. Around Mount Oread The Engineers in Dean Walker's class in contracts learned of a new kind of title for land yesterday. When Jean Walker asked Will Weidel what kind of deed a person would give to their good, weak, Weidel, when prompted by George Washburn, replied, "a quick-claim deed." Ione Trees, sophomore in the College, will spend the Easter vacation at her home in Sabetha. Mrs. J. O. Lovejoy will go with her to visit at the Trees' home and with her daughter at the college in the high school there. Miss Lovejoy was graduated from the University in 1911. George Ware, the "Man with the Smile" in Rowlands' Book Store, occupied a box at the track meet in Convention Hall Friday night. A charming girl in the night next accosted him in the stall before?" she said. George blissedly denied the accusation, but replied that he would be charmed to meet her. "INDED!" she answered haughtily. Turning to another member of the party she said, "I have looked a lot more looks just like that butter Auntie had several years ago, the one that stole the spoons." Someone, with an idea of the value of advertising penciled the following line on the board in a room in Fraser noted for its archaic chairs: "Where in Sam Hill is our new chairs?" Ed. Keraus and Carl Carmean, freshmen engineers had only four lessons to prepare last Saturday. They report the fishing to be fair along the Wakarusa, but poor in the Kaw. Vincent Brainard had a harrowing experience the other day, which he says often happens to some of the K. U. boys. Ke kindly opened the door of Haworth Hall for a certain girl of his acquaintance and before he could release it just twenty-one passed through it in single file. "Of that whole bunch only one of them thanked me for holding the door open," said Brainard. The public speaking class has a new sergeant-at-arms who can preserve order. Buster Coolidge was elected to the position yesterday morning. An engineers' stag dance given by Arthur Stacey, Howard Baugher, Norman Pierce, and others was suddenly stopped yesterday in unexpectedly walked into the assembly room and saw their fancy steps. There are probably very few seniors who leave K. U., without having visited old Aunt Sylvia at least once. Oscar A. Dingman, a senior engineer, became curious about his future the other day and consulted her. He confesses that she knew him a fine thing about himself. "Call up 62 Bell, Willie," said one of the boys at the Angney house, 1339 Ohio last night. "Someone called and wants you to call them." Willie Levite had got—the police station. This morning one of the ten o'clock classes in the School of Law April fooled a certain professor. Everyone answered roll call; then in a body the class walked out, leaving a petition on the professor's desk, which read as follows: We, the undersigned members of this class, agree to walk out on account of this being April the First. Daily Kansan Students, Professors, and Alumni Want Ads Reach 3000 Use Our Advertising columns. K. U. Calendar 11:00 Entomological Club. (Mu.) 4:30 The architectural Eng. Soc. Library. 7:30 Amor, Soc. Mech. Eng. (130) 8:00 Amer. Practice, Fra. (Fra.) Ohio) Thursday Wednesday 11:00 Assembly, Dean Bates, University of Michigan, School of Law Fridav 4.00 Economics lecture, Mr. John A. Prescott, of Kansas City President K. U. Alumni As- ociation, "Marketing Cor- porate Securities," (Snow). 8:00 Student Council Dance, (Rob 8:00 Student Council inson gymnasium.) 8:00 College Dance. (Robinson gymnasium.) Sunday Saturday 3:30 Sacred concert, auspices Y. M.-Y. M. W. The* University Orchestra, Y. M. C. A. Quarter, Dean Skilton, Professor fessor Hubach, Miss Davis, and others. (Fraser chapel.) Athletics Apr. 17. Baseball, University Apr. 18. Baseball, University Hospitality, Lawrence Apr. 18. Drake Relay Games at Des Moines. Hawaii, at Lawrence. May 1-2 Seventh Interscholastic tennis tournament. McCook. Apr. 23. Outdoor interlass meet. McCook Apr. 25. Outdoor interclass meet. _Me'oook_ lay 1 N. U-K. U. dual track meet, McCook. May 2. Eleventh annual interscholastic track mee. McCook. static track May 5. K. S. A. C-K. U. dual track May 14-15. Baseball, M. U., at Columbia May 6-7, Baseball, M. U., at Law, 7829 May 16. M, U.-K. U. dual track meet at Columbia. May 23. Annual invitation H. S. track meet at Lawrence. Mar. 31. Piano Recital, Alice Eldridge May 30, M. V. track meet. St. Louis. June 6. Western Conference track meet at Chicago. Apr. 15. 29-30 Eleventh Annual Music Festival. Apr. 25. Spanish play. May 11-14. Kauai Newspaper Week National and State News. State Newspapers May 5-7. Merchants' week Plenty of Good Box Paper McCOLLOCH'S Drug Store A. G. ALRICH Binding, Copper Plate Printing, Bubber Stamps, Engraving, Steel Die Embossing, Seals, Badges. 744 Mass. Printing K.C. HIGH SCHOOLS TO HAVE BASEBALL K. C. K. and Northeast Take Lead to Revive Diamond Sport Kansas City, Kans., April 1—Baseball, as an interscholastic sport in the Kansas City high schools, is about to be revived. Two schools, Kansas City, Kan., and Northeast, of Kansas City, Moe., have already announced their intention of putting teams in the field for the 1914 season. Westport and Manual are also considering the idea. Central is the only school to state definitely the policy of "no baseball." The last high school baseball league in 1909 was composed of four teams, Central, Manual, Westport, and Northeast. Central, under the leadership of Brooklyn League, now with the Brooklyn National League team, won the pennant. When the spring of 1910 rolled around most of the Central stars had graduated and no effort was made to revive the organization. In 1911 service schools had teams, but the absence of a league race destroyed all interest. THE FLOWER SHOP Physicians of the Kansas have the benefit of the bacteriological and chemical analyses made upon request in the University laboratories in cases of cancerous disease, typhoid, hydrophobia, etc. The state hospital at the University School of Medicine at Rosedale was already cared for several hundred cases of the indigent poor of the state. Through its investigation, many suffering diseases as pellagra and infantile paralysis it is doing direct service for the state and humanity. A. D. S. Peroxide Cream is a choice vanishing cream 25 and 50c. A. D. S. Lig. Complexion Powder, 25c at O. P. Barber & Son's, the A. D. S. Store.-Adv. Specials Every Day and Night At— Lee's College Inn The High School Student who feels an interest in such a vocation as Mechanical Engineering should be encouraged in knowing that the growth of industry, and the modern striving after efficiency, open a broad way of opportunity to the able mechanical engineer. He is always in demand. His position is often one of large responsibility. He is well paid. a four-year course in mechanical engineering with the advantages of fully equipped shops and laboratories, prepares the student to enter this broad field under the best conditions. VOCATION EDITOR University Daily Kansan Lawrence, Kansas EASTER LOVES and NECKWEAR Let us urge you do your Easter shopping for these items early. While our stocks are complete now, we always sell low in some items just before the day. Weaver's Special Prices Cal. sweet, Naval oranges, doz. 15c Cal. sweet, Naval oranges, doz. 20c Cal. sweet, Naval oranges, doz. 25c Cal. sweet, Naval oranges, doz. 40c Argentine, monos, doz. 20c We also carry a fine line of candies 3ell Phone 482. West India Limes, doz. 25c Fancy California figs, box. 35c Fancy California oranges, box 25c Fancy Rose brand figs pkg. 10c Bananas, 10, to 30, doz. and cigars. See us for specialties California Fruit Stand Next to the Vaudeville Student Plays Student Dances Student Mixers PAY When they are advertised in the Daily Kansan. 3,000 Students Faculty and Alumni read it every day. The Clothes Question College clothes are different. Our advertisers will show you the correct solution. Ober's Johnson & Carl Peckhams J. House & Sons Skofstad They will appreciate it if you tell them you "saw it in the Kansan." UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Music Style Review for Spring "1914" Musie On Thursday night, April 2nd. at eight o'clock we will open house to display the latest FASHIONS and MODES in men's apparel. We invite you to be our guest for the evening. No goods will be sold. Johnson & Carl Music Music STUDENT UNION NEEDS ALL PLEDGE MONEY (Continued from page 1) McCurry, G. D. McEilhenny, H. P. Mfadden, N. Norton H. McKean, Jea A. McKone, E. Mowry, L. O. Northrup. S. B. Nelson, H. L. Newby, Verne T. Newton, A. C. Nicole, A. J. Nigg, L. E. Nofsinger, R. H. Norrick, H. E. Nottingham, F. L. Nutting, M. J. Nystrom, A. F. Oiney, J. W. Orton Tom O'Neal, C. M. Patterson, H. W. Paul, W. R. Pickering, C. J. Poirier, Fred W.松, Jr., Orrin T. Potter, L. R. Potwin, K. W. Pringle, A. K. Rader, V. S. Rader, D. M. Rankin, Fred W.松, Jr., Orrin T. Potter, R. A. Reynolds, C. E. Richardson, I. R. Briggs, C. A. Ritter, C. R. Roberts, J. B. Rogers, A. M. Root Jr., T. B. Root, Paul Ross, E. C. Roswurm, Runmel, H. Rumsfield, O. H. Huth, L. W. Rutherford H. C. Simpson. Leland C, Schmitter, C. W, Schroeder, J. L, Sellers, A, Seavillah, C. F, Sloan, C. I, Smith, C. H, Smith, E. W, Smith, Errett G, Smith, Lawrence Smith, Lester L, Smith, Lewis B, Smith, Robert Smith, William A. Smith, Rachel Smith, M. L, Marhin, F. W, Sterns, D. W, Stiles, J. E, Stillwell, N. F, Strachan, C. E, Strickland, G. E, Strong, C. B, Skyes. T. T, Taylor, Jr., F. C, Thomas, V. H, Turkington, A. B, Underwood, G. Van Der Lap, Ed Van der Vries, G. H, Van Dijk, Ed Van Drijk, Veatch, G. W, Von Schrills, W. J, Waite, James K. Walker, Roy M. Walker, A. H, Wallack, H. N, Wallis. M. H. Warren, I. H. Waqch, E. M. Welch, C. E. Welsh, L. E. Weltmer, H. H. Wentworth, L. H. Whiteside, F. E. Whitten, W. G. Whitten, E. T. Wible, A. Wickert, A. H. Wieters, S. G. Williams, C. E. Williams, H. S. Willson, W. Wingart, G. H. Yeokum, R. A. Young, J. P. Zemer. WEATHER MAN MAY STOP VARSITY GAME Mud on Diamonds Will Probably Cause Postponement of K. C. A. C. Game The game between the Kansas City Athletic Club and the Varsity baseball team, scheduled for tomorrow may be called off because of the muddy condition of McCook field. Manager Hamilton made a tour of inspection of the field this morning and found the baselines and battery box a mass of mud. Unless the sun and wind get busy this day, the ball will be called off. Manager Hamilton will inspect the field again late this afternoon and decide whether the Kansas City team can meet the Jayhawkers. The game probably will be postponed until Saturday or next week. The rain and mud has kept the Varsity baseball men from practice and a game tomorrow probably won't be able to run until unfit for a contest. The Varsity men will get down to real work as soon as the mud on the diamonds is dry and will be ready for the opening game with William Jewell next week. HASH HOUSE LEAGUERS MUST BE AT MEETING (Continued from page 1.) of the teams shall agree before the game the number of innings to be played. In case a disagreement or the drop to 7, shall be considered an official game. Report of Games **Report on games** **Rule 1.** The manager of the winning team shall report the result of the game to the Daily Kansan before noon of the following day; games played on Friday or Saturday to be reported before Monday noon. The report shall also contain a list of participants. Rule 1. Division championships shall be decided on a percentage basis. In case of a tie, a game shall be played between the teams that have the same average to decide the championship. Rule 2. The League championship rule 3. A game between the division champion and the winner of Championship Rule 3. In case any team withdraws from the League before it has played all its scheduled games all games unplayed or played by that team shall be declared forfeited to its opponent. I is the abbreviation for iodine, following in a chemistry exam. "I can dissolve in alcohol but not in water." - Wisconsin Sphinx. Send the Daily Kansan home. DETWILER RECEIVES NEW INJURY TO LEG While Harnessing A Bad Mule Football Captain Is Kicked-Result Not Serious Captain John Detwiler, of the Varsity football team, was kicked by a mule on the Detwiler farm near Smith Center, last week and injured on his left leg. The kick bruised the wound which Detwiler received in the Drake game and although the new goalkeeper had been to the recovery of the wound, Detwiler was harnessing the mule when its feet went astray. Captain Detwiler was operated on in February for an injury in his left leg. The leg is slowly improving and, unless the recent injury proves serious, Detwiler will be in the game next fall. It is a true story of a Russian Jew who escapes to America from Russia, having been imprisoned there because he resented the slaughter of his father by the Cossacks. Don't miss this picture which is being shown at the Grand today and to those few people in Lawrence because of the inability of the managers of the theatre to raise it under the present law. This is quite unusual and lower than it has been anywhere. -Adv. A Boy and the Law A Boy and the Law The students of the University of Kansas see this picture which has been endorsed so enthusiastically by the educators of many cities, both east and west, where it has been shown. LAW INTER-FRATERNITY LEAGUE SEASON 1014 Freshie—Will you go canoeing with me? Soph girl—Sorry, but I can't swim—Wisconsin Sphinx. SEASON OF 1914 | SIGMA DELTA PHI | PI UPSILON | KELTZ | PHI BETA PI | SIGMA PHI SIGMA | PHI ALPHA DELTA | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Pi Upsilon April 18 | Sigma Delta Phi April 18 | Phi Alpha Delta April 17 | Sigma Phi Sigma April 18 | Phi Beta Pi April 18 | Keltz April 17 | | Keltz April 24 | Phi Beta Phi April 25 | Sigma Delta Phi April 24 | Pi Upsilon April 25 | Phi Alpha Delta April 25 | Sigma Phi Sigma April 25 | | Phi Beta Pi May 2 | Phi Alpha Delta April 28 | Sigma Phi Sigma May 1 | Sigma Delta Phi May 2 | Keltz May 1 | Pi Upsilon April 28 | | Sigma Phi Sigma May 9 | Keltz May 9 | Pi Upsolin May 9 | Phi Alpha Delta May 9 | Sigma Delta Phi May 8 | Phi Beta Phi May 9 | | Phi Alpha Delta May 15 | Sigma Phi Simga May 16 | Phi Beta Phi May 16 ' | Keltz May 16 | Pi Upsilon May 16 | Sigma Delta Phi May 15 |
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PAN-HELLENIC LEAGUE The Lawrence Fashion Show Thursday Evening, 8:00 p.m. Not only is this a display of all the newest styles in Spring Merchandise, but also a Musical Event that will be remembered for many a day. Practically every bit of talent in Lawrence is engaged for this evening. So be sure and come and be the guest of Messrs. Weaver, Peckhams, Pierce, Starkweather, Fischer, Winey & Underwood, Obers, Robertson & Strachan University Book Store, Wiedemann Skofstad, Innes Bullene, Ericksen, Bell Brothers, Phillips and Newmarks. Inspiring to The Young Man are the stories of achievement in Civil Engineering Graduates of the School of Engineering of the University of Kansas have had an important part in many of the modern marvels of engineering work, from the carrying through of the greatest irrigation projects to the planning and construction of the unique sea-going railroad on the Florida Keys. Address Vocation Editor UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Lawrence, Kansas OPENING BASEBALL GAME Kansas vs K.C.A.C. Postponed Until Saturday Admission 25c. Student Tickets Good 3:45 p. m. Grand Stand Cushion Seats 15c STATE HISTORICAL STATE TOPEKA KAN. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN VOLUME XI. NUMBER 127 H. H. LEAGUE WILL ORGANIZE TONIGHT Boarding House Basebal Teams Will Meet at Student Union TEAMS MUST BE REPRESENTED All Clubs Must be at the Meeting Tonight to Enter the League Representatives of all the teams in the Hash House League will meet at the Student Union tonight at 7:30 and complete the work necessary to prepare for the rules prepared by the Commission will be submitted to the meeting. According to a rule passed by the Commission no team can enter the league unless it is represented at the meeting tonight. The Wouldst Club is the latest addition to the League. The members are: E. Blince (captain), F. E. Bill, W. Blair (manager), L. A. Curry, J. A. Elliot, I. R. Elswick, A. J. Fecht, D. S. Miles, H. E. Nottingham, H. T. Jenson, C. F. Sloan, E. E. Tillotson, L. Weibel, C. Yager. The Co-op club has announced the following additional members: Leo Spurier, Paul Incommen, Sherwin Meller, Lera Meroy Melril, Francis Martin, Walter Steinhower, Owen Maloney, Allen Ivan. The Nutting Club handed in the following today: E. Richardson, Henry Samson, J. P. Buckhennan, Orin Ruth, Carl Baer, Lawrence Smith, Frank Miller, Hugh Brown, J hunt, Andy Groff, Carl Carmen, Jon Hunt, Bertrand Moore, Nutting, Clyde Smith, Chas. Sturtevant, Jack Horner, L. Harsh, Chary. Art, Boman, Ed. Kerans, Harlan King. To Entertain Some Engineers Teachers Discuss "Grading." At the Practice Teachers' meeting in Myers Hall Wednesday the subject under discussion was "Grading." Special problems under different teachers were also considered. Two More Candidates 10 Entertain Stone Engineers Dean and Mrs. P. F. Walker will entertain students in the departments of chemical, mining, architectural, and sanitary engineering at their home from 8 to 10 this evening. Two More Candidates J. W. Dyche, a sophomore in the College and a student in the department of journalism, and Harry Shimn, sophomore College, have announced for the Student Council. Five sophomores now have announced from the College. Alpha Chi Sigma Initiates Initiation was held last night by Alpha Chi Sigma for the following men: M. L. English, of Dodge City; L. E. Jackson, of Chamute; D. P. Parkhurst, of Kinsley. A dance will be given by the chapter Saturday night at Ecke's Hall. Send the Daily Kansan home. UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS THURSDAY AFTERNOON,APRIL 2,1914 CARNEGIE MAN MAKES STUDY OF LAW SCHOOL Alfred Z. Reed, a representative of the Carnegie Foundation, was here yesterday making a personal study of the School of Law. He has already visited most of the law schools in California and goes from here to California. The purpose of this study is to make a classification of the law schools throughout the country with regard particularly to admittance and graduation requirements. A similar study of the medical schools was made by the Carnegie Foundation a short time ago. CHANCELLOR STRONG MAKES GIFT TO STUDENT UNION Presents Chairman Kennedy With Ten Dollars "To Be Used Where Most Needed" Chancellor Frank Strong made the Student Union a present of $10 yesterday. He made no recommendations as to how it should be spent. Chairman Duke Kennedy said this morning that he would be pleasurable of getting rid of it. He said the Chancellor had started he good move. CHEMISTS AID IN SURVEY Water Analysis Department Will Ex- amine the students' townships School Yard The water survey department at the University is planning to cooperate with the students in the Rural Sociology class in their survey of Wakarusa township. Samples of soil from the hill school houses in the districts by Remington Kellogg, a student member of the health committee of the survey, with the assistance of a man from the water survey department. In one district, the water from all in one district will be analyzed by the water department. MEDICS SWEAT BLOOD IN MID-TERM EXAMINATIONS The mid-term examinations of the School of Medicine will begin tomorrow. The regular time for these examinations is next week but the students in Anatomy have already completed their work and on this account will be given their chance a week in advance. The remainder of the examinations will not be given until after the Easter vacation. This is due to the fact that the examinations would start on the day that vacation begins. Prof. Galloo Talks on Paris Prof. Eugenie Galloon gave an interesting illustrated lecture on "The Landmarks of Paris," before La Cercle Francais, yesterday afternoon. Mrs. L. E. Sayre, wife of the Dean of the School of Pharmacy, is sick at the home at 1323 Ohio. Her physicians are in doubt as to the exact ailment, although there are symptoms of typhoid fever and malaria. Who with the wise consort will wise become.—Menander, POSTPONES K.U.-K.C.A.C. GAME TILL SATURDAY Because of Flooded Field Manager Hamilton Puts off First Game of Year The baseball game between the Kansas City Athletic Club and the K. U. nine was postponed until Saturday because of wet grounds. McCook field was flooded with water Monday and yesterday morning the diamond had enough moisture to float a battleship. Yesterday's wind helped dry the field but Manager Hamilton decided to postpone the game until Saturday when the field would be dry, and he will give the Varsity men a chance to limber up and get some stiff practice for the contest. Coach McCarty took the 'Varsity squad out for a couple of hours on the golf links yesterday afternoon. The baseball diamonds were too wet for hard practice. The players worked out their arms and dusted off their eyes by a short batting practice. Coach Bond had a healthy bunch of recruits trailing after him on the green yesterday. A large gang of freshmen are enrolled in Bond's class with the most fortune. The freshman coach expects to thin out his squad again and send in a strong lineup against the regulars. DEAN BATES CAN'T COMF Chapel Speaker For Tomorrow For bidden by Physician to Make Trip —Regular Program A telegram has been received from Dean Bates, of Michigan, stating that he has been forbidden by his physician from making the trip to Friday. Consequently the regular church services will be held tomorrow. Formerly the chapel committee endeavored to get another man when one cancelled his date, but experience proved that when one man could not come, the date was "hoodoed." Some of the committeemen say a "hoodo" date is foreordained because it is the earliest, but all agree that it is best not to try to substitute another speaker. INVITE ALL WOMEN TO A TEA FOR MRS. BROWN An informal tea for Mrs. Eustace Brown will be given by the Women's Pan-Hellenic at the Kappa Alpha Theta house Friday afternoon from 3:30 to 5:30. The girls of the University are cordially invited. Electricals to Meet The Electrical Engineering Society hold a short meeting Friday morning at 8:50 in Room 104, Marvin Hall. Faculty Recital Tonight The fourth faculty recital will be given this evening by Professors C. E. Hubach and C. A. Preyer in Fraser Hall. No admission will be charged. SIXTY SOPHOMORES HOLD STAG PARTY Second Year Men Meet at Student Union and Get Acquainted About sixty men of the sophomore class gathered at the Student Union last night for the second sophomore stag party of the year. After short introductory remarks by Harry McColloch, chairman of the smoker committee short talks were made by Clyde Van Derlip, manager of the sophomore hop. J. M. Johnson, president of the class; E. M. Johnson, chairman of the fun committee; Tony James, vice-president of the class; Russell Gear, president of the junior class; J. W. Dyche, chairman of the social committee and C. B. Johnson, chairman of the memorial committee. Ward Lockwood then entertained the crowd with several chalk drawings of people often seen on the hill. At the business meeting, after the feed, Mr. I. C. Gregory, who has charge of the Student Union, gave a short talk. Freshman caps and emerald were the main objects of discussion at the business meeting and a resolution to help the freshmen see that their rule about wearing the caps was observed was passed. NAMES Y. M. C. A. STAFF President-elect Announces All But Three Officers For Next Year Harold C. Coffman, president-elect of the University Y. M. C. A., announced the following members of next year's Y. M. C. A. staff. The offices of publicity and membership and finance have not yet been filled. Coffman is looking for good live men to fill the positions. Religious meetings, Hugo T. W. Wedell; mission finance, Smith W. Poos; mission study, Ernest E. Blincoe; faculty finance, George H. Vansell; Bible study, Fred L. Soper; new students, Harry B. M. Colmachl, music; Bob L. Colmachl, music; Murdoch M. Curdry; gospel team, Willard A. Burton; boys' work, Victor Bottomly; and employment, McKinley H. Warren. PAN-HELLENIC LEAGUE TO OPEN SEASON FIRST The Pan-Hellenic baseball league will be the first of the three organizations to open the baseball season in Lawrence. The Greeks will start the fireworks, Tuesday April 7, when the Betas and the Phi Gamma cross town for the first time, taking daily on the fraternity property or on nearby vacant lots. Aldo Livingood, a graduate student, was called home to Corning, Kans., yesterday by the sudden death of his mother. Chancellor Frank Strong will go to Topeka, April 13, to address the Topeka Training School for Sunday School Workers. LATE SCIENCE BULLETIN LARGEST EVER PUBLISHED The eight volume of the University Science Bulletin which is just off the press is the third volume to appear this year. It is the largest one ever issued and contains about forty-five plates. "The frequency of the appearance of this bulletin is good evidence of the work we are doing for science in Kansas," said Prof. W. J. Baumgartner managing editor of the bulletin, today. "There never were as many as three volumes published in one year before." EXTENSION DIVISION SETS NEW RECORD IN LIBRARIES Department of General Information Sends Out More Packages Than Ever Before The department of general information of the Extension Division established a new record for package libraries last month when it sent out 1039. This brought the total for the period from Sept. 1, 1913 to March 31, 1914 up to 4401. This total is nearly five hundred more than the one for the entire year of Sept 1, 1912 to Oct. 31, 1913. The department has libraries and books on more than four hundred subjects, some of which are so popular that there is always a waiting list for the libraries. Some of these schools in March were: alien law labs, child welfare and child labor, cost of living, democracy, eugenics, government ownership, heredity, immigration, Ireland, Irish home rule, Japan, Mexico, minimum wage, municipal ownership, negro problem, newspapers, national calls and forfeitations, playgrounds, swat the fly, and white slaughter. The popular list shows how alive the people of Kansas are to the big questions of the day. For instance, the libraries on government ownership and immigration, both of which are very extensive, have not been in use for several days. For a longer period than the time required to remail them. The libraries go mainly to the schools over the state and to various cities. SIGMA KAPPA SORORITY HOLDS BIRTHDAY PARTY Sigma Kappa celebrated the first anniversary of the establishment of the chapter last night with a banquet at the chapter house. Only members and pledges were present, twenty-eight in all. January 30. 1913. Sigma Kappa granted a charter to Delta Psi, a local sorority and it was installed April 1. Another Council Candidate H. R. Boon has announced as a candidate for the Student Council from the School of Medicine. Freshman Called Home Pauline McLaughlin, a freshman in the college was called home before because of sickness of her mother. The Botany Club did not meet last night as announced in the University calendar, but will meet next Wednesday. SPRING FOOTBALL WILL START TODAY Gridiron Warriors for 1914 Season to Work Out— Mosse Issues Call WILL LAST FOR TWO WEEKS Coach Will Put Men Through Kicking, Tackling, Signal Running, and Maybe Scrimage The first spring football practice will be held on McCook field this afternoon from 3:30 to 4:30 o'clock under the direction of Coach Arthur Mosse. The coach issued a call yesterday but only a few men appeared and because of the wet field no practice was held. Coach Mosse will take the gridiron men through an interim training for them. This practice will be for all Varsity men and members of the freshman squad. "I want to emphasize the importance of spring practice." Coach Mosse said today. "All Varsity men and especially the freshmen should be out every afternoon. We haven't had a good spring practice since 1909 and I would like to see a big bunch of men out." "The practice will consist of kicking, tackling, signal running and if enough men turn out, scrimage will be held. "The real benefit of spring practice is the scrimmage work, and I hope enough men will show up to make scrimmage possible." To Talk on Corporation Stock To Talk on Corporation Stock John A. Prescott, president of the K. U. Alumni Association now an investment banker in Kansas City, will lecture to the students of the econo- logy department at 4:30 in Snow Hall, on the way in which corporations stock is marketed. The lecture will be based on Mr. Prescott's wide experience in the investment business in Kansas City. Churches For Better Schools Kansas churches will hold educational services Sunday. The plan is to give the morning services to making a plea for the public schools and for advocating legislation which will better the conditions of the schools. D. C. Coissier, will go Lansing to deliver an educational sermon. Gives N. Y. Tribune Files R. G. Elliott, one of the oldest settlers of Lawrence, has presented the library with a complete set of files of books from the Tribe from 1865 to 1875, besides incomplete files of later years. Seniors. Want That Degree? All seniors who have not filled out application blanks for degrees should do so at once. The blanks are obtained at the registration office in Fraser Hall. K. N. G. to honor Col. Barber The Kansas National Guard will go to Topeka at 12:37 to attend the funeral of Col. S. E. Barber. Send the Daily Kansan home. K. U.'s Proposed New Administration Building, One Wing of Which Is Already Completed UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Official student paper of the University EDITORIAL STAFF JOHN C. MADDER . Editor-in-Chief LION HABBB . Associate Editor JONN HABBB . Management JOHN R. HANDBROOM . Sport Editor LANDON LAIBB . Sports Editor REPORTORIAL STAFF U S INFANTE ERWIN ABBEL Business Manager RAT EYDENBORC Circulation Manager JOB BIRMISH Advertising Manager CHARLES STURTENVE Advertising CHAR S. STURTENVE BAM DROUGH SAM DRORG BEN HARLEY MALTOY BEN HARLEY GIBSON CHARLES GIBSON BEN HARLEY HUNGER LOUIS HUNGER JIM HUNGER JIMMET WILLIAM S. CADY GLENN CELTON JOHSPHONE HOWARD JOHSPHONE HOWARD WILLIAM S. CADY GLENN CELTON JOHSPHONE HOWARD Entered by second-class mail matter Lawrence, Kansas, under the act of March Published in the afternoon. Five times a week. Kannas, from the press of the department of Mining. Subscription price $2.50 per year, advance; one term, $1.50 Phone, Bell K. U. 25. Address all communications to UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN. Lawrence, Kans. The Daily Kansan aims to picture the students of Kansas to go further. *Jamie* printing the news by standing behind her favorite notebooks; to be clean; to be cheerful; to have more serious problems to widen heads; to be able to improve her ability to succeed at the University. Learning by study must be won; 'Twas neer entailed from son to son. —Gay. THURSDAY, APRIL 2.1914 DOING THINGS AT ONCE The Student Council, by selecting a PERMANENT Union committee at the meeting Tuesday following out the suggestions in the Daily Kansan, has the right idea. Nothing is easier than to postpone work on the eventual Union until next week, next month, or until some shadowy future when "conditions will be more favorable." Now is the accepted time in making any effort a success. The present Council can turn over to its successor plans which are fairly complete and comprehensive—and it looks as though that end will be attained. THE NEW BANISTER Making the steps safe on dark nights when the weather is bad is the important thing. If experience proves that the new banister is inadequate, the cost should be no bar to the installment of a light. It shouldn't be necessary to wait until a serious accident makes the improvement too plainly needed, either. If the cement steps at the foot of the library cut-off can be made safe by the erection of a banister, the plan of the University authorities will probably be just as good—and a great deal cheaper—than the suggestion to erect a street light at that place. CASH IN The Student Union is calling for money. Not new fees or pledges but funds promised by the students and which should have been paid weeks ago. The Student Union is yours. It is not a private concern. You do not owe a dollar to the Student Council, to the Union committee, or to Duke Kennedy, chairman of the committee; you owe it to yourself. It is up to YOU to get busy and pay YOUR debt. Don't forget the meeting of the "Hash-house" league at the Student Union tonight. BASERALL, RULES, ETC. The rules drawn up by the committee will be revised and passed, and if you want a part in the discussion you must be at the meeting. The probabilities are that the regulations as they now stand suit about one out of ten club members but they can certainly be revised to suit the majority. It might be wise to remember that more rules mean more trouble and worry. The fewer laws on petty particulars, the better it will be for all concerned. HUMOR The sense of humor of some people is almost unfathomable. They tie a tin-can to a dog's tail and laugh themselves into tears at the antics of the frightened animal; they break a plate-glass window on Halloween night and can hardly survive their glee; they play wierd April fool jokes on professors and laugh up their respective sleeves at the brilliancy of their humorous ideas. The average person who unfortunately cannot appreciate this sort of wit, merely pites the perpetrators—or ignores their capers in disguise. THE MISSOURI RIVER "Way back in the pleistocene history of the rivers of this country, the Missouri river did not flow into the Gulf of Mexico, but emptied into Hudson Bay. The rivers of Kansas also flowed into the Hudson Bay. The Ohio drained into the Pacific ocean and the Missouri flowing along the Wakarusa south of Mt. Oreal." writes Prof. J. E. Todd, assistant professor of geology and mineralogy in a current issue of Science. "When the great glacier came down and covered the central north of America, it forced the rivers that once had a northeasterly direction are now channels and streams to rivers merely retained their new courses," he says. late new channels and when the river holdtoward the rivers merely named their new courses," he says. Professor Todd traces the course of the river when the field of ice extended down to Kansas as far asaska, Lawrence, and Kansas City. The high bluff of Kansas City held the ice from going far south. Probably done. Don helped so, too, which made the Missouri river came west from Wyoming as far as Fort Stevenson, North Dakota, where it was stopped by the ice field from flowing on to the Hudson and was turned south along the flow of ice to Plain View, Nebraska, where it cut across a new territory. From Plain View the great river followed the ice edge across Nebraska until it came to the Big Blue river, a tributary of the Kansas. From here on, the Missouri had easy going until it came to Topeka. Also, there were several large lakes for a time in "When the Missouri got as far as Topoka" Professor Todd continues, "the glacier had extended across the Kaw. Here the water backed up into a lake and finally cut a channel through the divide and formed the Wakarusa which runs parallel to the Kaw until just below Lawrence. "Before the glacier came the Kansas river joined the Platte river of Nebraska near Weston, Missouri and continued on eastward." Professor Todd points at the various levels of the land along the Missouri and that just a few miles east; in each case the level was several hundred feet lower. Just forty miles east of Fort Stevenson the level is 600 feet lower. From this two eastward there is an island, all the way to the Hudson Bay. 900 away. The Gulf is just twice as far. When the ice withdrew from Nebraska the river dropped back to the better bed just to the east which it still has. At one time with an earlier glacier period the Missouri river cut across from Nebraska City to the central part of Missouri, not coming near Kansas City. But when the Kansas glacier had brought the river through Manhattan, Topke, Lawrence, and Kansas City, the river was unable to get back past the high bluffs of Kansas City. So today the vast drainage of the United States is turned in the Gulf of Mexico just because a groundwater leak has flooded the land and forced the little streams before it. ENDS AND ODDLETS The old saying that "Life is one d—— thing after another" is being literally demonstrated to the editor of the University Daily Kansan. Everything from a jail sentence in the morning to being legislated out of the county headed County Council at night has come his way. And still he continues to reign supreme in the editorial sanctum.—Ottawa Campus. WELL BUTE, WHY IS IT? "Early every evening. Down in the dark front rows, None of the movies he'll notice. And why do you 'stope he goes?" -Yale Record. DIE JUNGE HAUSFRAU “The water is cooking; now if I only knew what to do next.”—Wisconsin Sphinx. NO PLACE LIKE HOME "I pithee find my infant child." "A frantic mother cried; "The woods are wet, the night is wild The kid should be inside." C. W. Pruen WITH K. U. POETS DIE JUNGE HAUSFRAU If men shall call thee good, or brave, or learned C. W. Byron. To cry thee great, and pain with flattering, — SUCCESS BY ANNA R. MANLY, '12 If women crowd in orchid-scented halls if women charge in, children dare not move, or be forced to hide. if to thy sanctum, black with books, shall cropt sulta cribed Great soils from that choice fete the histories twarde names nests; If Fortune and her changeful sister, Fame Shall one time favor thee with laurels due: Thou not that thou hast known the full of life; Nor shalt thou live till in the sequent years These few, forgetting, snatch thy garners away Representing thee with a crown of thorns; Till thou behold't thyself despised, and then forgot. Thou hast thou lived, if, like the Nacreens; Thou must call them friends, unbatteri ADVICE TO THE ADVISOR To the Editor of the Daily Kansan: I was one of the few "prospective sons-in-law" who attended chapel service last Friday and heard the address of the Advisor of Women. This address was announced as a statement of the purposes and principles to be followed in her work by this new official. CAMPUS OPINION Several of the views expressed by Mrs. Brown were decidedly interesting. One of them especially, attracted my attention. The Advisor of the "girls" said—I think her exact words were—"I have always believed in smoking, as long as it did no injury." Now, I am an old-fashioned boy, trained (for which I shall never cease to be thankful to my dear, old-fashioned mother) in the belief that the use of tobacco is useless, expensive, offensive, and dangerous. The people of Kansas seem to have some such opinion or they would never have adopted the law against cigarettes. The Board of Administration apparently has some such prejudice as evidenced by the maintenance of a "welfare" department by their non-smoking rule and this department largely devoted to the anti-tobacco crusade. It would seem advisable for the University management to get together on its nicotine policy. poor. I have been told by one of my "sisters" that the Advisor of Women stated in her talk to the "girls" alone that it was her ambition to get these same "girls" to regard it as their mission in the University to improve the moral condition of the young men. Now, what am I to do when a bevy of teenagers engage in sagittal zeal, undertake to convert me to this revised but authorized version of the credo tobaccoins? And then, what account must I take of the views of my mother—my old fashioned, real one at home, I mean? There is another and yet more serious phase of the battle for women. Did you now did not limit her approval to masculine smoking, but to cases or individuals "as long as it did no injury." It is said that smoking among women is increasing. I hope not, but will not this strange teaching from the Chapel rostrum give encouragement to this temptation. And ought it not, if it is I have a sickening image of myself coming home some evening and finding my wife enveloped in a cloud while pulling away at a meerschaum. Should I find my tongue for remonstrance I might be told that the performance was in accordance with the teaching of the official Advisor of Women in our Alma Mater. In view of this dreadful possibility any one may try to guess in which direction I shall not turn when I start out, as did a famous ancestor of ours, in search for a wife. Mrs. Eustace Brown said this morning that her statement in regard to smoking was "I believed in smoking UNTIL I learned that it was injurious. That was many, many years ago," she added. "What I had to say on this subject was very moderate indeed since my personal knowledge and personal experience has been enough to make me extremely antagonistic to the tobacco habit." Nichtraucher He—"Since you lost the bet, I think I can claim the forfeit." She—"I really don't know what you mean; and besides, someone might see us."—Yale Record. "If all the saloons were at the bottom of the sea—" "Lots of people would get drowned."-Michigan Gargoyle. He—Do you like Rex Beach? She—We never summer any place but Atlantic City.-Pennsylvania Punch Bowl. BOWERSOCK THEATRE MATINEE AND NIGHT Saturday, April 4th THE SENSATION OF THE SEASON RETURNS THOMAS A. EDISON'S GENUINE Talking Pictures PRESENTING AN ENTIRE NEW DRAMA CONSISTING OF THE FOLLOW-ING SUBJECTS JOHN J. McGRAW MGR. NEW YORK GIANTS A WAR DRAMA ENTITLED "THE DEAF MUTE" SEYMOUR, DEMPSEY & SEYMOUR RAGTIME ENTERTAINERS AND OTHERS CONSISTING OF MUSICAL COMEDY, FARCE, VAUDEVILLE AND DRAMA Everything New---Change of Program Each Day PRICES: Night, 25c, 35c, 50c Matinee, Adults 25c, Children 10c CITY CAFE 906 Mass. Strictly Home Cooking Get one of our meal tickets. Eat When it's most convenient Sam S. Shubert MAT.WEDNESDAY & SATURDAY "The Traffic" Bert Wadham THE COLLEGE BARBER On 14th Street W. J. Francisco For MAYOR He will appreciate your support. STANDISH LINES ARROW COLLAR 2 for 25¢ Cluett Possy & Co. Inc. Makers CITY CAFE 906 Mass. Strictly Home Cooking Ever try our Special 15c Lunch? You'll like it. A. G. ALRICH Printing Binding, Copper Plate Printing, Bubber Stamps, Engraving, Steel Die Embossing, Seals, Badges. 744. Mass. A GOOD PLACE TO EAT AT ANDERSON'S OLD STAND JOHNSON & TUTTLE 715 PROPS. Mass. SPRING SUITINGS FRANK KOCH TAILOR 727 Mass. You Can Earn a Good Living and lay up some money too, on graduation from the Lawrence Business College. Enroll at once for free. Complete your course online or Free Employment Bureau at your service for catalog or online best and best Business College vacations. LAWRENCE Business College Lawrence, Kansas. Kansan Want Ads Pay Mr. Baseball Fan Are you interested in the Varsity team,the fraternity leagues,and the inter-club league? If you are,you will want to get all the dope of the games. Mail fifty cents to the University Daily Kansan and have it delivered the rest of the school year, until June 5. --- UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN ANNOUNCEMENTS Beginning this week the orchestra will meet every Monday night. Hash House League meeting. Student Union, Thursday night, 7:30 important. WANT ADS FOUND—Lady's white silk glove. For left hand. Call at Kanasn office. Sunday, 7:45, Plymouth Ch. Gaul's Passion Service. Doors closed 7:00...Adv. 127-2 Want to have a good time Friday night? Come down to the Methodist church.-Adv. 127-2 Baseball supplies; gloves, balls, bats, etc. Keeler's Book Store, 939 Mass. St.-Adv. New Vaudeville Theatre Mon. Tues. Wed. Mon. Tues. Wed. THE GREAT HENELLA, Magician and Illusionist. Introducing Rosa The Singing Head EDDIE CRAWFORD The Entertainer WARNER'S THREE REEL FEATURES CHANGED DAILY 2:30 Matinee Daily 2:30 Continuous Each Night. Commencing at 7:45 Any Place, Any Time 10c One Dime 10c PROTSCH The Tailor THEY ARE HERE Violet Dulec Talc Sweet and fragrant 25c cans MeCOLLOSH's Drug Store WATKINS NATIONAL BANK Capital $100,000 Surplus and profits $100,000 The Student Depository PROFESSIONAL CARDS J. F. BROCK, Optometrist and Specialist Education Center, Office 802 Mass Phone 650-3791, Phone 650-3792 W. O. MCOONNELL, Phylaudan and B. O. McKenna, Phylaudan W. O. HOLLIDAY, incidence, 1348 Tamm E. W. O. JOHNSON, incidence, 1348 Tamm E. HARRY REDING, M. D. Eye, ear, nose and throat. *A. A. A. A. A.* Ball 813. Ball 813. Ball 813. G. A. HAMMAN M. D. E. eye, ear, Satisfaction Guaranteed. Dick Building. DR. H. W. HAYNE, Oculist, Lawrence KEMP J. W. O'BRYON, Dentist. Over Wilson's Drug Store. Belt Phone 507. J. R. BRECHTEL, M. D. D. O. 833 Mass Street, Street. Both phones, office and address. W. JONESB, A. M, M. D. D. Disness of Rutine II, 1956, B.A., Residence, Rutine I, 1957. DR. H. T. JONES, Room 12 F. A. H. Residence 1300 Tann. Phone 2115. D. H. L. CHAMBERS Office over Squirrel Studio phone DR. BUFF RYE White Dr. Osteoplasty Phone 745 Mass. 257. Phone 745 Mass. St. Ed. W. Parsons, Engraver, Watchmaker and Jewellery. Bell Phone Jewellery Monmouth and Jewelry. Bell Phone S. T. GILLIE SPHE M. D. Office corp office. St. Residence 728 Iphone. Phone 590c CLASSIFIED Plumbers CLASSIFIED MRS. ELLISON, Dressmaking and Ladies tailoring. Evening wear at a wedding. 1032 845-729-6155. www.mrsellison.com Phone Kennedy Plumbing Co. for gas supplies 650, Marda lampe. 197 Mass. Gardner, PA 19442. Ladies Tailors Queens City College. System and sewing school. Mrs. M. Garvine, B84 KY. Hell, Mrs. G. Marvine, B84 KY. Hell. Hair Dressers hairdressing, shampooing, scalp and facial massage, shampooing, hair-farrows, "Mariello" nylon collars, hair-absorbing cell call B1 1872 Home st. 51, Salers Hair Shop Dress, 937 Mass st. Barber Shops Go where they all go 140 Ivy Man. 192 Maa. students' Open Club 650 to 800 to $3.00 per 1440 Kurt H. H. Mann Stuard Around Mount Oread Wallace McCaslin spent the last week-end at his home in Kincardie. "Mac" goes home again Easter, and gives as his excuse to go down with Jack McCurry and Arthur Duston in their search for oil around Kincardie. Although the spring elections are still some little distance ahead, three candidates for president of the Engineering school have announced their intention of making the race. Floyd Nutting, Buster Brown, and O. L. Potter expect to be in the running when the whistle is blown. Ever get hungry for a Bullfrog Chorus, with the anthems, solo, duets, et cetra? Steal over to the unfinished part of Administration building some day and listen. It will do you a world of good if home sick for Dad, the cows and the old pond in the corner of the pasture. "I won't wear one of those horriest freshman caps," said Watson Dodge, of Oakley, yesterday morning; "they make a man look so kiddish." "Better wear one," said the boys at the house. "You will be sorry." And Watson was. A bunch of upper-classmen caught him in front of the Law Building. Watson wore his cap today. Earl Plowman is a cribbage champion. After a series of victories at the U.S. Open, he is ready to "fifteen-two-fifteenour" anyone for the K. U. title. It has been quite a while ago since he slipped, but the memory still lingers. So John Messick, a student in the School of Pharmacy will stay in Lawrence during the Easter vacation and attempt to invent a concrete that will not allow ice to form on it or get wet. He is just perfectly smart, just how he will do this, but thinks that salt added to the mixture just before it is allowed to set might help. We're all for you, Messick. Go to it. Forrest Joss, a freshman in the College last term, will spend the week-end visiting at the Acacia house. Joss is now running his father's farm near Topeka while "Dad" takes a vacation. Next year, it is expected. Farmer Joss will be back at K. U. Sue McDonald is back on the campus after an absence of two weeks caused by an attack of appendicitis. And now to make up that back work! Winona McCoskay, sometimes referred to as "the Portia of the Law School," since she is the only woman student taking law at the University of Kansas, is spending a few days at her home in Chanute. Martin Taylor, a candidate for the freshman baseball team, bids fair to be its most heady member. Tuesday night when Taylor was practicing in Ohio Street with other aspirants, an overthrew ball came up from another group of players and hit him squarely on the back of the head. The ball bounced about twenty feet in the air, and came down in time for Taylor to pick it, grin, and throw it back down the street. "I should hate to have the May scraps of former years return," said E. F. Crocker superintendent of buildings and grounds, as he surveyed the littered state of the campus after the paddling yesterday. Sunday, 7:45, Plymouth Ch. Gaul's Passion Service. Doors closed 7:50— Adv. 127-2 Four designs of individual moulds for Easter. Reynolds Bros. Bell 645. Home 358.-Adv. Daily Kansan Want Ads Reach Students, Professors, and Alumni 3000 Use Our Advertising columns. K. U. Calendar 11:00 Assembly, Dean Bates, University of Michigan, School of Law 4:00 Economics lecture, Mr. John A. Prescott of Kansas City President K. U. Alumni Ai- society President "K. U. Alumni Ai- society" Securitate, (Snowy) 7:30 Amer. Soc. Mech. Eng., (130) 8:30 The practice, Practice (FRA), Oblie) Thursday Friday 8:00 Student Council Dances (Robinson gymnasium.) 8:00 College Dance, (Robinson gymnasium.) Saturday 3:30 Sacred concert, auspices Y M.-Y. W. The University Orchestra, Y. M. C. A. Quartet, Dean Skilton, Professor fessor Hubach, Miss Davis and others. (Fraser chapel.) Sunday tpr. 17. Baseball, University of Hawaii, at Lawrence. Apr. 18. Baseball. University of Athletics Apr. 18. Baseball. University Apr. 18. Drake Relay Games at Des Moines. May 1-2 Seventh Interscholastic tennis tournament, McCook. Apr. 25. Outdoor interclass meet McCook. McCook. May 2. Eleventh annual interschol. May 2. Eleventh annual interschool astic track mee. McCook. May 1 N. U.-K. U. dual track meet Mc'ok. May 5. K. K. S. A. C.-K. U. dual track meet at Manhattan May 14-15. Baseball, M. U., at Columbia. May 6-7. Baseball, M. U., at Law rence. day 16. M. U.-K. U. dual track meat. at Columbia May 28. Annual invitation II. S track meet at Lawrence. july 6. Western Conference track June 14 at Chicago. dar. 31. Piano Recital, Alice Eldridge. Future Events Apr. 15. 29-30 Eleventh Annual Music Festival. Apr. 25. Spanish play. May 1. Sophomora hop. May 5-7. Merchants' week. May 11-14. Kansas Newspaper Week —National and State Newspaper Conference. Brick ice cream furnished in any color or combination desired. Reynolds Bros. Bell 645. Home 358- Adv. STATE CONVICTS MAY GO TO K.U. BY MAIL A college education by correspondence for prisoners in the state penitentiary will be possible if the plan originated by Chancellor Frank Strong and Prof. D. C. Croissant of the University Extension Division is adopted by the Board of Administration. Chancellor Strong would have the privileges of the extension division, including operational training to convicts at the penitentiary at the expense of the state. The details of the plan will be worked out by the Board of Corrections. Chancellor Strong Plans to Furnish Inmates of the State Pen Free College Education "By this means a man could learn to be self supporting," said Cancellor强 in discussing the prison plan, "and when he was released he would not be an incubus on the community. Then, too the convict might have been killed by an officer can government which possibly would make him a better citizen. "The plan as Professor Croissant and I have worked out seems practicable, and I have no doubt but that the board will accept it. The board believes in making the University of as much use as possible to the people of the state. And a little college education in the penitentiary certainly is being placed where it has an opportunity to do the greatest good." The extension division of the University now offers work in 29 subjects, under the direction of 92 members of the University faculty. Social Notes Sigma Phi Sigma has pledged Constant Poirier, Merie Dubach and Preston Dubach, of Wathena. Kappa Kappa Gamma has pledged Mary Reed of Dallas, Texas. Alpha Delta Pi announces the following pledges: Helen Thomas, Waterville; Mildred Farragher, Sabetha. The Acacia fraternity will entertain with a party at Eagle's Hall, Friday night. Sigma Delta Phi will give a party Friday night at Eckes Hall. FRESHMAN Smoker Tonight. Odd Fellows Hall Tickets 25c. Will be sold at door THE FLOWER SHOP The High School Student who feels an interest in such a vocation as Mechanical Engineering should be encouraged in knowing that the growth of industry, and the modern striving after efficiency, open a broad way of opportunity to the able mechanical engineer. He is always in demand. His position is often one of large responsibility. He is well paid. a four-year course in mechanical engineering with the advantages of fully equipped shops and laboratories, prepares the student to enter this broad field under the best conditions. VOCATION EDITOR University Daily Kansan Lawrence, Kansas "UNCLE JIMMY BANQUET" TO HAVE NOTED SPEAKERS The big Uncle Jimmy Day Banquet of the School of Law will occur on Monday. Incidentally the banquet will be preceded by a hollownight. The important speakers at the banquet are to be Governor George H. Hodges of Olathe, Chief Justice Daniel Porter of Cedar Rapids Court, and Congressman George A. Nesley, of Hutchinson, from the seventh district of Kansas. Mr. Nesley is a graduate of the School of Law, class of '04. First Baptist Church Sunday 7:45 p. m., cantata; "From Olivet to Calvary"; Maunder, by chorus of twenty-five voices; solo voices, soprano, Mrs. Eva Morgan-Blackman, Mrs. Beverly Raymond; tenor, Mr. Herbert B. Fooe; baritone, Mr. Clyde Smith. —Adv. 127-2. The Suit Room is completely ready Fancy Tailored Suits at $19.50, $23.50, $27.50 Specially Priced for Friday and Saturday 38 HANDSOME SILK SUITS, several new models just arrived, on display in the Fashion show tonight... $35.00 to $60.00 PRETTY SILK DRESSES. Crepes, Printed Crepes in combination, Foulards, Taffettas, and Silk Poplins, most reasonably priced from ... $13.95 to $35.00 STYLISH SPRING COATS. In silk or wool materials; several new models shown first time for Friday. Selling ... $10.00 to $25.00 CHARMING BLOUSES. Silk, Crepes, Crepe Meteor, Chiffon, and nets. There's hardly a shade which is not represented at ... $3.95 to $8.00 COTTON BLOUSES of Crepe, Rice Cloth, Stripe Ratine, Voile or Dresden Crepe, in new and stylish models at ... $1.25 Onnes. Bulline & Hackman Drink Coca-Cola It Scores Whether you drink it to quench thirst—for refresh- Whether you drink it to quench thirst—for refreshment—for pure pleasure in its deliciousness Coca-Cola scores goal. It satisfies you in a manner and with a completeness possible to no other beverage. Delicious—Refreshing Thirst-Quenching THE COCA-COLA CO. Atlanta, Ga. Wheneret you are an Arrow thin of a Cobra. The Clothes Question College clothes are different. Our advertisers will show you the correct solution. Ober's Johnson & Carl Peckhams J. House & Sons Skofstad They will appreciate it if you tell them you "saw it in the Kansan." UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN This is Gala Night at OBER'S The Fashion Show College men, we are expecting you for a while this evening You will find us bedecked to greet you. All of this season's styles in men's clothes and wearing apparel will be artistically displayed. Come in; wander over the store; and see for yourself the extensive line of suits, shoes, shirts, hats, and many other accessories the well groomed young man desires. An orchestra has been provided to make the evening more enjoyable for you Ober's HEAD-TO-FOOT OUT-FITTERS . KANSAS ORCHARD OWNERS SHOULD BEGIN SPRAYING Horticulturists Should Start Treatment of Fruit Trees at Once—Prof. S. J. Hunter "Right now is the time for the farmers and fruit growers of Kansas to begin to get ready to spray their trees," said Prof. S. J. Hunter today. "The first spray should be put on when the blossoms have about half fallen off. This spray should be a mixture of lime sulphur and arsenate of lead. The trees should be thoroughly drenched and the operation should be repeated in about ten days or two weeks. "To ward off seab or blotch the trees should be sprayed three weeks later with the Bordeaux mixture. This is all that is necessary and if properly applied will insure fruit without a defect." The University carried on an experimental orchard for two years but this had to be dropped on account of the increasing work of the department. The experiment provided the value of the care of orchards. CHICAGO COACH TABOOS THE WOMEN AND TOBACCO Women and tobacco are two things which Coach Alonzo Stagg, of Chicago University, has tabooed from his football squad. "No fussers or smokers are wanted." Coach Staggs recently posted a notice on the athletic bulletin board at CCNY for a meeting with coaches in practice. On the bulletin was written these words: A. D. S. Peroxide Cream is a choice vanishing cream 25 and 50c. A. D. S. Lig. Complexion Powder, B. A. D. Bag & Sons', the A. D. S. Store—Adv RAIN WASHES AWAY PAPT RAIN WASHES AWAY PART OF NEW TENNIS COURTS The recent rain carried away part of the tennis courts south of Robinson Gymnasium and deposited it along the side of Mt. Oread and in the gully below. The courts were graded last fall but cold weather stopped before it was in winter. Dr. Naismith will have the new courts reconstructed this spring. These courts will be used by the women students. "BILL" LOSES NINE LIVES IN FLY WHEEL ENCOUNTER Engineers' Cat Gives Up Number of Ghosts as Machinery Catches Him Up Bill, the engineers black cat, was caught in the flywheel of one of the big engines at the power plant and whirled to his death Tuesday afternoon. The accident was not discovers machines were stopped for the night. Bill has been the pet of the engineers ever since he happened into the power plant one day about a year ago, a hungry stray cat. Loyal engineers have fought over who should be allowed the honor of holding Bill and stroking him during lectures. The little black cat had a warm place in every west-ender's heart. But now Bill is gone forever. Pete, the older gray cat, remains to comfort the stricken students. A couple of years ago, Pete narrowly missed a seat in the same wheel that "finished" Bill. Sunday, 7:45, Plymouth Ch. Gaul' Passion Service. Doors closed 7:50— Adv. 127-2 Sunday, 7:45, Plymouth Ch. Gaul's Passion Service. Doors closed 7:50—Adv. 127-2 Aurora Theatre Last Day of Alice Joyce in "The Shadow" Your Spring Suit Can be one of the best in town and still not be expensive. Our one popular price of $15 for suits gives you values equal to other's $20 ones. Compare these in style, fit, tailoring and material and be your own judge. See our north window for Serges and south one for Fancy Suits. Be sure and see these. We are sole agents in Lawrence for Kahn-Tailored-Clothes $20 to $45 M. J. SKOFSTAD 829 Mass. St. MUNICIPALITIES AGITATE OWNERSHIP OF UTILITIES Many Kansas Towns Voting Bonds For Water Works and Lighting Systems Municipal ownership of water and lighting plans is an agitated question in Kansas just now. Due to a widespread belief that better rates and service can be obtained from municipally owned plants, all towns which have these utilities or which are providing for them are eager to know about the working of public ownership. The municipal reference bureau of the university has had a great many inquiries lately from the smaller towns concerning water plants. The drought last summer undoed the effects of the need of a dependable source of water and many of the western towns are voting this spring for such plants. One town of 250 people will vote on a bond issue of $12,500 for a water plant; another with 400 will vote on $30,000 for both water and light, and one town of 300 has already voted for both plants. The city of Lebanon, 750, recently completed an $18,000 plant and held a big celebration in which the neighboring towns took part. Municipal water plants are becoming almost universal in Kansas 160 out of 175 plants being owned by the Department of Lighting facilities is also gaining in percentage. The present ratio is 72 out of 163 plants. BASKETBALL Athletic Board Gives Players' Distinctions at Noon Meeting The following men were given the letters: Lefty Spruff, Bully Green-renewed Stuff Dumire, Bill Weaver, Waddle, Weidlein, and Ed. Van der Vries. Basketball K's were awarded at the meeting of the Athletic Board at the union. Gibbs-I went on a journey the other day and took a box of cigars Today Nibbs—Suppose you had a good smoke. Gibbs—Sure, but when the train came with the find that I had no matches with him. Nibbs- How on earth did you light your cigar? Student, at teller's window—You have made a mistake. Gibbs — I opened the box, took out the cigs and made the dox a cigars lighter. —London, England. Teller--Sorry. You are too late. Student-All right. That will help to pay this week's board—Pennsylv- hania Punch Bowl. OREAD GOLFERS TO HOLD ONE-CLUB TOURNAMENT Sunday, 7:45, Plymouth Ch. Gaul's Passion Service. Doors closed 7:50—Adv. 127-2 Come out Friday evening and have a good time at the Methodist church — Adv. 127-2 Social for young people Friday Stealing a television of church staff for news—Adv Send the Daily Kansan home. Second Contest of Year to be Made Novel Sport For Members Oread golfers are practicing for the second tournament of the year, a one-club meet which will be held in Saturday. The last scores must be in Saturday. The golfers began saving their score cards yesterday and during April. They had to make sure they and the handicaps for the various tournaments will be arranged. Proposed H.H. League Rules Number and Eligibility of Players Rule 1. Players on the Varsity will be required to play some position other than their regular positions on the Varsity. Any team playing a Varsity player in his regular position shall forfeit the game or games to its opponent. Rule 2. Section 1. Any club which has less than 13 able-bodied men as qualified players shall be allowed to play them until 13 men have been secured. Rule 2. Section 2. No club may enter more than six outside players. Rule 2. Section 3. The manager of each team, when handing in the name of players, shall be required to have guarded the team, and which are outside men. Rule 2. Section 4. When any new members come to a club they shall be allowed to play after their completion and to approved by the Commission. rule 2. Section 5. The Commission shall have the power to decide on the eligibility of players, both club men and outside players. Rule 2. Section 6. Any team playing other than qualified players shall forfeit the game or games to its opponent, unless the captain opposes them and agreed before hand that an ineligible man may play. Grounds Rule 1. The grounds upon which the games are to be played shall be designated on the official schedule. If for any reason the field is not available at that time, it shall be the duty of the chaplain to notify the managers of each team at least 12 hours before the time scheduled for the game. Time of Playing Rule 1. The managers of two teams may jointly change the time for playing a game. Rule 2. Any team which fails to appear within 15 minutes of the scheduled time of the game, or fails to commence play when the umpire calls "Play Ball." shall forfeit the game. Rule 1. The umpire shall be se- lected to joint agreement of the anwars. Rule 2. The umpire shall have power to bench any player for any good cause, and the umpire shall have power to field. The umpire shall have power to forfeit the game. Protested Games Rule 1. The Commission shall have power to decide all protested games, each team to be represented at the meeting of the Commission when the case comes or for consideration of five factors of the Commission shall constitute a quorum the chairman to have no vote except in case of a tie. List of Players Rule 1. The manager of each team shall prepare a list of players and place it in the hands of the Commission, who shall keep possession shall be made to this list without the consent of this Commission. Rule 1. Each team shall provide a ball for each game that will pass the inspection of the opposing pitcher. Balls Number of Innings Rule 1. The managers or captains of the teams shall agree before the game the number of innings to be played. In case of disagreement or neglect to specify 7 innings shall be considered an official game. Report of Games Rule 1. The manager of the winning team shall report the result of the game to the Daily Kansan before noon of the following day; games played on Friday or Saturday to be reported before Monday noon. The report shall also contain a list of participants. Championship Rule 1. Division championships shall be decided on a percentage basis. In case of a tie, a game shall be played between the teams that have the same average to decide the championship. **rule 2.** The League championship game between the division championship games. Rule 3. In case any team withdraws from the League before it has played all its scheduled games all games unplayed or played by that team shall be declared forfeited to its opponent. Tonight Style Review for Spring 1914 Displaying the latest ideas in men's apparel. We expect to see you. Music Johnson & Carl Student Plays Student Dances Student Mixers PAY When they are advertised in the Daily Kansan. 3,000 Students Faculty and Alumni read it every day. who are so fortunate as to have and who are wondering whether the development of their abilities would place them in a remunerative profession will be interested in the experience of the 24 graduates from the School of Fine Arts last year. Musical or Artistic Talent High School Students Ten are holding well paid positions. Five are continuing their studies. The others did not desire positions. . The ten have positions in piano, organ, voice, organ and choir directing, painting and expression. The Daily Kansan's Educational Department will see that inquiries addressed to it are answered by the ones most competent to give full particulars regarding any vocation and the University courses preparatory for it. Address the Address Vocation Editor UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Lawrence, Kansas STATE HISTORICAL SOCIETY UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN VOLUME XI. NUMBER 128. 16 HASH HOUSE TEAMS READY TO PLAY BALL Drawings for Places in Divisions Held at Final Meeting Last Night SLIGHT CHANGE IN RULES Representatives of sixteen boarding house baseball teams met at the Student Union last right and adopted their mascot in the two divisions of the league. Must Always Be Five Regulars From Each Club—League Limited to Teams Now Entered The rules were adopted as presented by the Commission, with one exception. Section two of rule two was changed from "no club may enter more than six outside players" to "a team must at all times play at least five men from the boarding house it represents." The rule allowing a team to take less than eight members men to draft men until thirteen have been secured was subjected to a lengthy discussion and was only adopted after several amendments had been proposed and voted down. The sixteen teams that were represented last night will constitute the league, and no more teams may enter. They are divided into two divisions, as follows: First division, Ellis, Gillespie, Co-op, Knights of Columbus, Ko-op, Martin, Marks, K. K. Second division, Babb House, Daniels, Wouldt, 1221 Club, Hope, Stevenson, Nutting, and Midway. It was voted to retain the present Commission, consisting of John Gleisner, chairman, Daily Kansan, Whitney Ellis club; S. M. McHargz, Whitem. Ellis club; S. M. McHargz, Stevenson club; J. D. Berwick, Babb House. The commission will meet Sunday and arrange a schedule, which will be printed in the Daily Kansan the following day. Play as soon as after Easter as possible. Another motion passed at the meeting was that the manager of each team should hand in an official list of players to the Daily Kansan not later than Monday noon, the lists to be printed and to constitute an official roster of members of the league. The following are the rules as adoited: Three cups have been offered the League, one by Allie Carroll and one by Bob Rowland for the division championships, and one by Manager Hamilton for the league championship. Number and Eligibility of Players Rule 1. Players on the Varsity will be required to play some position other than their regular positions on the Varsity. Any team playing a Varsity player in his regular position shall forfeit the game or games to its opponent. Rule 2. Section 1. Any club which has less than 13 able-bodied men as qualified players shall be allowed to play until 13 men have been secured. Rule 2. Section 2. A team must at all times during the game play at least five men from the boarding house it represents. Rule 2. Section 3. The manager of each team, when handing in the name of players, presents the team to the players belong to the team, and which are outside men. Rule 2. Section 4. When any new members come to a club they shall be allowed to play after their enrolment and to approved by the Commission. Rule 2. Section 5. The Commission shall have the power to decide on the eligibility of players, both club men and outside players. Rule 2. Section 6. Any team playing other than qualified players shall forfeit the game or games to its opponent, because of its opposition of the opposing team have agreed before hand that an ineligible man may play. Grounds Rule 1. The grounds upon which the games are to be played shall be designated on the official schedule. If for any reason the field is not available at that time, the Commission of the Commission to notify the managers of each team at least 12 hours before the time scheduled for the game. Time of Playing Rule 1. The managers of two teams may jointly change the time Rule 2. Any team which fails to appear within 15 minutes of the scheduled time of the game, or fails to commence play when the umpire (Continued on page 4) JAYHAWKERS WILL BE DELIVERED ON MAY 15 UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS FRIDAY AFTERNOON, APRIL. 3. 1914 "Holders of Jayhawker tickets will get their books May 15," said Manager Guy Voh. Schritte, this morning. The annual, of about five hundred pages, will be delivered to the editor and manager by May 10 and will be ready for delivery May 15. The picture of Registrar George O. Foster will occupy the place of honor. All the cuts and jokes for the Jay- hawkere are in and have been sent to the publishers. Only a few ad- vertisements remain to be sent. Crane & Co., of Topeka, have charge of the work. SOCIOLOGISTS PLAN LAST ACT OF SURVEY Burgess, Blackmar, Sippy and Crumbine Will Talk at Belleville Prof. E, W. Burgess left last night for Belleville to make preparations for "Know Your City Day," which the citizens are planning with the assistance of the department of sociology at the University. Monday is the day set for the celebration. Charts based on the statistics taken during the recent social survey made in the city will be exhibited and explained by Prof. E.W. Burgess, Prof. F. W. Blackmar will lecture in the evening on "Community Efficiency." Dr. S. J. Crumbine will speak on "Public Health," and Dr. J. J. Sippy will discuss the statistics gathered in the survey. ALBINO RABBIT MAKES DEBUT IN K.U. MUSEUM Freak Bunny From Anderson County to Have Important Place in His Set A rabbit has just been received at the museum from Anderson county. It is a common rabbit, except that it is entirely white. Most people believe that any white animal that comes from a dark species is certainly an entirely new species. Because of this fact, people over the state finding any white animal from a darkened species immediately ship it to the museum here. Several of these specimens are mounted at the museum. These animals are of scientific value only in the study of albinism and melanism but they are of concern to scientists in unique specimens of the animals. Among these rare animals at the museum are several white quail, a perfectly white squirrel which was taken from a nest of dark red squirrils, a white o'possum, a white kingbird, a white meadowlark, and a common crow almost entirely white in plumage. A white animal that comes from a species that is usually white is simply an albino of the species to which it belongs. The difference is explained by authorities on albinism in animals by the fact that there is an absence of pigment in the lower layers of the epidermis which is necessary for the color of the animal. SURVEY FOR LAWRENCE All of the eight organizations which are interested in city affairs have agreed to undertake the investigation. The department of sociology will outline the campaign in detail tonight. The department of sociology, together with the civic organizations of Lawrence, will begin the social survey of Lawrence at a meeting in the city Y. M. C. A. Building tonight. Department of Sociology Will Direct Municipal Examination The fraternity questionaires which were sent out by the department of sociology last winter, are still coming in and a large majority of the papers are in Dr. Stanton Oliger is conducting the investigation and has received questionaires which cover all sides of the subject. FRATERNITY QUESTIONAIRES ARE COMING IN SLOWLY "We have received some excellent material," Dr. Olinger said today. "We are present all sides of the subject, we will be a great help in our work." Send the Daily Kansan home. Will Celebrate Dean Green's Seventy-first Birthday on April Sixth UNCLE JIMMY BOYS TO HOLD ANNUAL BANQUET GOV. G. H. HODGES WILL SPEAK Executive Will Respond to Toast- Chancellor Strong and Congress- man Neeley to Give Talks The Uncle Jimmy Day banquet will be held Monday night at 7:45, at the usual place, the Eldridge House. It is expected that about one hundred and forty will attend the celebration, which this year commemorates the seventy-first birthday of the eighth grade students of the School of Law will follow the banquet, coming on Tuesday, the seventh, instead of on Monday as stated in yesterday's paper. A. R. Buzick will be toast-master of the occasion and the program of speeches is as follows: Gov. George H. Hodges, "A Lawyer's Duty to the State." Chancellor Frank Strong, "The University and the Law School." Chief Justice Wm. A. Johnston, "The Bay and the Bench." Congressman George A. Neeley, "The Great American Pastime." Dr. W. L. Burdick, "'Lore' and Logic." K. K. Simmons, '13, "Drive On." C. Stewart, '14, "Ex Post Facto." Freeman Alexander, '15, "All That Glitters is not Gold." Harland Hutchings, '16, "In the Embryo." Mechanicals Vote in Favor of Prop position at Meeting Last Night ADOPT CONSTITUTION It was decided to adopt the constitution drawn up by the governing board for the organization of an association of all the engineering societies, and the publication of an engineering journal at the meeting of the American Society of Mechanical Engineers held last evening. This governing board is now composed of two men elected to temporary membership from each society;chanical engineering society elected Malcolmson and Orin Potter ter permanent members of this board. When this constitution was presented to the Electrical Engineering society for ratification, at their meeting yesterday, the society voted the proposal not adopted until some minor changes were made in it. WILL ISSUE JUNIOR PROM INVITATIONS THIS WEEK Invitations for the junior prom will be sent out this week-end. They are a little later than usual, owing to a delay in printing, and it is necessary that they be turned in at the last week in Fraser the first of next week. The one club golf tournament is under way on the Oread links this week. F. H. Gibb was the first golfer to post a score and a net total of 75 for eighteen holes is Gibb's achievement. The contestants can use but one club in this tournament. Mid-iron and mashies are the favorite clubs. The tournament closes tomorrow afternoon. Members of the finance committee to 11 to 12 every day next week. Committee members are: Frank Godding, Vic La Mer, Agnes Engle, Anderson, Mary Shuckart, Harry Jackson, Ben Asher, and Harry Evans. The University Mathematics club will meet Monday at 4:30, in Room 202. Administration Building. The program is in charge of the physics department and is as follows: "Seismograph," H. Liatimer, and "Representation of Properties of Light," Austin Bailey. Math Club Will Meet Golf Tourney In Progress Another Candidate Petitions have been circulated for Ocho J. Pisk for the Student Council. In the modern movement among universities toward rendering direct services to the state, the University of Chicago is doing it, having begun such work in 1866. Kansas, Oklahoma and Colorado Clash in Words Wednesday COLLEGES TO MEET IN TRIANGULAR DEBATE COLORADOANS COMING HERE Olney, Mattoon, and Shinn Wil Argue With Visitors—Atherton, Joseph, and Frank to Norman Kansas, Oklahoma, and Colorado Universities will clash Wednesday night in the annual triangular debate. Kansas will talk against Colorado in Fraser Hall while three Kansans represent the University at Norman, Okla. Colorado will entertain a team from Oklahoma. All three debates will be held Wednesday night, with the question of unicameral legislature in the several states. The Kansas men have been busy on the subject for months. The debate in Fraser Hall against Colorado is the chief bone of contention. The Jayhawkers have not defeated Colorado on the rostrum since 1808 and have won the victory. K. U. will have the affirmative side of the question and the men who talk for the Jayhawk are Avery Olney, Harold Mattoon and Henry Shinn. Colorado will send King, Black, and Dowden, three of their best men to bring back Jay Hacker. Oliver Atherton, which will orate in Oklahoma, consists of Oliver Atherton, Don Joseph, and Arvid Frank "We are anxious to win both debates, especially the Colorado contest," said Harold F. Mattton, of the Kansas City team, who defended Colorado in debate for six years but we stand a good chance to win Wednesday night." *RESHMEN ADOPT CLASS SONG* First Year Students Make Prof. H. A. Rice's K. U. Anthem Official at Mixer. The freshmen had a real mixer last night . It was the largest of the year, with the exception of that given in honor of the football team. John McKinney, a professor for Professors Thorpe, Hill and H. A. Rice. The chief entertainment of the evening, however, was a battle royal between five shines with Mick Foley, the state of Oklahoma, acting as referee. President Dorr Harrison presented the honorary class numerals to the men who played football last fall. Those who received their numerals for giving the Varsity its daily work schedule, Gray Heath, Fisk, Arnold, Burke, Craig, Dilley, McKone, Thiel, Henshaw, Robbins, Jones, Cowels, G. Kampfert, Ammons, Barnard, and Clark. The men who won their 17 in the class games are Allen, Moberly, Eberly, Dubach, Campbell, H. Kanker, Stockton, Murphy, Small, Chase, Poorer, Gemple, and Baldwin. The class on the suggestion of the following class adopted the following class song. 1917 Marching Song; words by H A Kies, (tumble up the street); Music by G Warner. We'll sing it over and over again. Three cheers now for old K. U.! We'll sing a song of the Red and the Blue; Hurrah! for red and blue. Hurra! cheers! for old K. UI Dr. James Naismith, of the physical training department, is attending a meeting of the basketball rules committee in New York City. Long may her colors wave so true, Colors so dear to us—colors of hers. DR. NAISMITH ATTENDS BASKETBALL RULES MEET DR NAISMITH ATTENDS The session will close on Saturday. Dr. Naismith will be in St. Louis Monday and Tuesday to attend a convention of physical training teachers. He will return to Lawrence on Wednesday. LITTLE "BILLY" HUMBLE REMEMBERED BY LAWS The junior class of the School of Law today presented little "Billy" Humble with a beautiful pink and white bouquet accompanied by a bouquet of flowers. Buy it in Lawrence. PROF, BAILEY TO ATTEND CINCINNATI MEETING Prof. E, H. B. Sailley, of the chemistry department will go to Cincinnati next week to attend the annual meeting of the American Chemical Society in the capacity of Councillor for rhe Kansas City sec- He will also attend while there a special conference of the joint committee on standard methods of water and sewage disposal of the American Chemical Society and the American Association for Water Quality which has been appointed for the purpose of standardizing the methods for water and sewage analysis. DODD APPOINTS A UNION COMMITTEE Council President Names Mer to Make Plans for Permanent Student Home Leslie Dodd, president of the Men's Student Council, selected his commission yesterday to make a thorough investigation into plans for a permanent Student Union building. The following are on the commiss sion of the emeritus, Harold Ragle and Harry Evans. "The men will draw up plans for a Student Union home," said Dodd this morning, "and have it ready for next year's Student Council. Union buildings at other schools will be investigated, plans for raiding the school office and trails worked out. The plans followed at the University of Michigan and at Ohio State will be particularly looked into." DEAN BLACKMAR FAVORS K. U. SCHOOL AT PRISON Investigator of Conditions at Lansing Says Extension Department Could do Good. The recent plans of the Extension Division to furnish instruction to the prisoners of the State Penitentiary at Lansing meets the hearty approval of Dean W. Blackmar of the Graduate School of the state committee in charge of the rebuilding of the prison. "Years ago there was no attempt to educate prisoners at all," said Professor Blackmar today. "Finally a little school was started on Sunday afternoon, and later evening schools, but these have been poorly equipped and poorly managed. Today the school meets part in the dining room, part in the chapel, and part somewhere else. "The whole problem at present is inadequately treated. There should be a schoolhouse, with a professional teacher appointed by the warden or the governor, or whoever has power, and he should have such paid assistance as he needs. He should use it as his sole capable of giving him further assistance. But the whole system of education should be changed. "The penitentiary is made to save men, not to destroy them, and first of all they should be educated to do something useful. With the amount of power that is developed by cheap coal and cheap labor, it would be very easy to install an industrial education which would be valuable to the prisoners. Perhaps the education in the elementary branches should be continued for all but the would be school be talked of so much ought to be changed into a real systematic education which would satisfy the various needs of the prisoners. Where necessary, short time in labor should be given prisoners to allow them to attend school. "A trade school could be so arranged as to become self-supporting by the production of education. While the present effort of value is still being accomplished, our pears to me that the educational work might be greatly enlarged." Indians to Sing at Y. M. The Haskell gospel team and quartet will be at the University Y. M. C. A. Sunday. These entertainers appeared before an audience of twelve hundred men at Lincoln last fall after the Nebraska-Haskell football game. Ralph C. Erskine and Horace G. Chittendon, of the Manhattan chapter of Acacia, in Lawrence today, and will attend the dance giver by the local chapter at Eagle's Hal this evening. SENIORS TO CHOOSE QUEEN OF THE MAY Fourth Year Women Will Name Fairest Sister After Chapel Tuesday WILL BE CROWNED ON DECK Queen to be the Guest of the "Hardy Captain of the Pinafore." The Queen of the May will be chosen from the senior class on Tuesday following chapel, when the Queen will be crowned from their ranks their fairest sister. Be she fair or be she dark, ye Queen is to be the guest of the "Hardy Captain of the Pinafore", and will be crowned with flowers on her shoulders. When you watch the performance of the jolly tars and their maids. The choice of the queen has been an established custom at the University for a number of years and each year claims no little attention, but this is not always led by the queen, until this year. This year the nature of the performance will not admit a pageant but the girls feel that they must choose the queen just the same. The queen may be chosen in a palanquin by attendants and welcomed by the captain and the full opera chorus. PROFESSOR HIGGINS WILL BE IN SCHOOL NEXT YEAR Prof. W. E. Higgins will in all lawry back in the School of law next year. FINE ARTISTS MAY WIN PRIZE FOR BEST DESIGN Last spring when he secured a leave of absence he expected to be out for two years in the interest of certain work which he is doing in the line of legal reform, but the failure of his health last summer prevented his taking up the phase of the work with which he had expected to be completed. Consequently the work he is doing in this line will be completed sooner than was the original intention. Professor Higgins is now carrying on investigations in England and has entirely recovered his health. Students in the Fine Arts school have an opportunity to win a $25 prize which is offered by the Missouri Equal Suffrage Association for poster design suitable for an advertisement of the Suffrage campaign. The designs must be submitted to the committee in charge not later than May 15. Any one desiring to enter this information can provide additional information from Prof. W. A Griffiths, head of the department of drawing an design. Y. M. AND Y. W. WILL GIVE SACRED EASTER CONCERT The annual easter services of the Y. M. C. A. and Y. W. C. A. will be held in Fraser Hall, Sunday afternoon. April 5, at 4 o'clock. The program is varied. Dean Skilton will give a few organ solos; the Y. M. C. A. quartet will sing; Helen Wooler A. Wooler will give a reading; Ella McDonagh will be a vocal solo by Edna Davis and a piano solo by Edna Dietrich. The University Orchestra, with Miss Gorsuch at the harp, will render several selections and John Martin will give a violin solo . No More Cakes and Coffee Beginning with next year the freshmen at Harvard University will submit to physical examinations to find out whether they are sufficiently nourished or not. The Harvard authorities hope to eliminate the possibility of having insufficient nourishment, which they must take their meals in their own dormitories under the watchful eye of a physician. Instructor's Mother Dies The mother of C. W. Doxsee, instructor in rhetoric, who was called to his home in Long Island. N. Y., last week by the serious illness of both his parents, died last Sunday, according to word received this week. Mr. Doxsee's father is still critically ill. Bible Teachers Picnic The University men and women who are teaching Bible classes at the Haskell Institute, a picnic in the park, is yesterday noon. Twenty-five were present. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Official student paper of the University of Kansas EDITORIAL STAFF EDITORIAL STAT JOHN C. MIDDEN JOHN C. MIDDEN JOHN C. MIDDEN JOHN GUINNESS JOHN GUINNESS JOHN GUINNESS LANDON LAUBB Associate Editor-in-Chief Associate Editor High School Editor High School Editor Sport Editor BUSINESS STAFF REPORTORIAL STAFF B U N I S E N T s EDWIN ABEEL Business Manager RAT EUDHORNE Circulation Manager JOB BISHOP Advertising Manager CHAR C SHARPERY Advertising JOB S HARPERY Advertising BAM DRUG GLEENDON ALFINE CHARLES GIBSON LUCIDE HILDINGER LAWRENCE SMITH LAWRENCE CLEAVON LUCK BANGER LUCY BANGER *GREEN JEWELDEN HARBERT FUNKT RAI GREENLAND BAIR CLAPPER WILLIAM S. CADY JOSPH HOWE "HOVER" Entered on second-case mail matter Jawhar Lawrence, Kansas, under the net of March Published in the afternoon. Five times a week. Received from Ramaas, from the press of the department of Physics. Subscription price $2.50 per year, 1 advance; one term, $1.50 Phone, Bell K U. 25. Address all communications to UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Lawrence, Kans The Daily Kaman aims to picture the challenges underway for students to go further and nearly in response to the news by standing for the policies, families; to be clients; to be cheerful; to be serious; to be curious; to be more serious problems to user heads; to be more serious problems to university students of the University. FRIDAY, APRIL 3, 1914. So much is a man worth as es teems himself>-Rabelais. You can't pass very many quizzes without preparation and the better your preparation, the more chances you have of making a I. QUIZZES AND FOOTBALL A football team can't win very many games without practice and the more practice, the better its chances of being ever-victorious. Spring workouts began yesterday and will continue for two weeks. The number of men who appear each afternoon on McCook and the amount of "pep" shown will have a direct bearing on the likelihood of Kansas winning the Missouri game next November. Do you know a football player who hasn't donned a suit? HERE'S TO THE WOMEN With the last "Faculty Tea" on Thursday, the women of the University close a most successful series of social events. While we have been waiting and pleading for a bigger and broader social life for K. U. the women have been busy laying the cornerstone of a new social structure. This year they have done their best to be hostesses to every student in the University. The different schools have been brought together with the result that students have a social interest more nearly in common. The women connected with the University are to be congratulated for doing what they could to unify social life. May their efforts continue. ALL "FANS" ATTENTION! Tomorrow is the time. McCook field is the place, and the first baseball game is the attraction. Boarding house leaguers, and fraternity players should be able to give the team valuable criticism from the bleachers. Everybody else ought to go down for the sheer fun of the thing. Remember we had the Valley championship last year. Help repeat the feat this season by showing your interest and enthusiasm. ANOTHER YEAR The School of Pharmacy has announced that after this year no student will be admitted without first having had four years work in high school. The standard of College entrance requirements is being raised gradually but certainly. The change is particularly noticeable in the professions. The School of Law as well as the School of Pharmacy has seen this difference in the past two years. Education is a serious business and graduates of an institution with high standing must be better prepared than they were a few years ago. The extra year that students spend on Mount Oread will be worth while many times over because of increased efficiency after graduation. GOOD THINGS COMING The Y. M. C. A. staff announced yesterday has the responsibility of leading the association in what promises to be its most successful year, the one beginning next September. A week for religion with John R. Mott in attendance has already been planned. Incidently, however, if you have not paid your dues this year, or if you can use a membership card this summer, the best time to see Con Roffman is today. Extracts From K. U. Congressional Record (Now that we have a University Senate instead of a University Council on Mount Oread, the Daily Kansan considers that it is fulfilling its duty to its readers by publishing verbatim reports of the congressional proceedings from time to time. Only the most interesting and important discussions will be reprinted.) On the motion of the Senator from the Department of Physiology the senator was swearing in aorous meeting was dispensed with because of press of business. The Senate met at 4:30 o'clock p. m. Senator Boynton: Mr. President. The Vice President: The Senator from the Department of Justice. Senator Boynton I have here a petition from the Men's Student Council declaring vacant the office of the editor of the Daily Kansas. The Council solicits the moral support of the senate to get the official out Senator Young: Mr. President. The Vice President: The Senator from the Department of Water Analysis. Senator Young: I wish to go on record as being heartily in favor of the deposition of the present editor of the Daily Kansan, whom I consider to be careless and entirely incompetent to hold down so important a position. Through his negligence or that of some of his satellites I was recently misquoted in the columns of that sheet. Senator Day: Mr. President. The Vice President: The Senator from the Department of Home Economics. Senator Day: The editor should be put out of office. His reporters are a constant source of bother to capuccip the work of my department. Senator Boyton: Mr. President. The Vice President: Does the Senator from the Department of Home Economics yield to the Senator from the Department of Ordinary Economics? Senator Senator Boynton: I wish to go on reason why being constantly on the alert, watching the grades of the editors of the Kansan with an eagle's eye. (Laughter). I am constantly seeking whom I may devour on the Kansas board. (Applause.) I wish to state that the present editor has managed to keep about two jumps ahead of the Committee on Eligibility, of which committee I have the honor of being chairman. In consequence of this fact it seems to me that we should not overlook this additional opportunity to evict the editor from his office. Senator Day: With pleasure. The Vice President: Word has just been received from the Student Council seeking the withdrawal of the request on demand of their con- (The Senate then proceeded to the consideration of routine business.) How does the department of economics expect to get a crowd of students out to hear a lecture on "Corners. Stocks?" and "Investments?" starry Erwin Bard, a director of the American Association for International Conciliation visited the university this week. The Moor Hall Council has the Council-Kansan controversy has reached such a serious stage as all that. ENDS AND ODDLETS GET A LIBRARY DATE Byron is a clever guy. His jingles they are jolly; his wit, his style, would be the height of flayl. But anyway, I'd like to say, Don't be a mid-week "mooner" If you were out the night before Just say you went to Spooner. WITH K. U. POETS —Wiseguy. BY WILLIAM HERBERT CARRUTH, 'So Formerly Vice-Chancellor of the University. UNDER THE LEAVES A carpet all of faded brown, On the gray bough a dove that watches. greeves, Death seemeth here to have his own But the spring violets nestle down Under the leaves. A brow austere and ad gray eyes. Locks in which Care her silver violetes; Hope seethmnt tombed no more to rise from the grave; she loves Love for Love's sunshine saving fescues. love for Love's sunshine waiting lies Under the leaves. THE STORY OF MY LIFE ED. T. HACKNEY I attended the country school near Wellington until I completed the common branches, then took a thorough course in the business college and from the business college went to the Southwestern College at Winfield, and there completed my sophomore year. While in that institution I took an active part in the literary societies and in the oratorical contests, winning second place in the contest and representing Southwestern in the State Oratural Convention. I was business manager of the student paper at Winfield during the last year that I was in that college and also was head of the business college department of that institution. I served as postmaster at Wellington about eightteen months, resigning to go to K. U., where I graduated in 1895 with the degree of A. B. I represented the University in the State oratorical contest in the spring of 1895 and served as editor of the college paper after all of various publications had combined into one paper known as the Student Journal. I was admitted to the bar in 1896 and a few months thereafter was elected to the legislature; was made chairman of the Judiciary Committee, the most important committee in the House and handled the University appropriation bills. I was the only old K. U. student that was a member of the House at that time. Since that time, have devoted myself to the practice of law. I was married in 1900.to Mabel Rogers, former University student and librarian. Since March 20, 1913, have served as a member of the Board of Educational Administration. HARVARD MEN GET JOBS HARVARD MEN SEN 2002 According to a report made by Roger Pierce, general secretary, the appointment office of the Harvard Alumni Association has in the past five years placed 482 Harvard graduates in technical or business positions. In four years the majority of those placed have reported their salary. The average of seventy in 1909-10 was $777; of eighty-five in 1910-11, $806; of seventy-three in 1912-13, $975. Last year there were ninety-nine men placed by the association office and forty by the faculty. The reports of ninety-eight of the former showed aggregate salaries of $300, 440, or an average of $824. There were 600 men remembered in service during the year 253 calls were made upon the association. of the ninety-nine positions filled three in banking and brokerage, four in engineering, two in insurance, fifty-six in manufacturing, six in journalism in journalism, five in public service corporations, one in real estate and management and six in secretaryships. Of the forty positions filled by the faculty twenty-four were by the Graduate School of Applied Science, eight by the Graduate School of Business Administration, five by the chemistry division and three by the finance department. The thirty-one salaries reported aggregate $355,33 an average of $1144. Of the total 139 positions filled in 1912-13, sixty-six were in Massachusetts and six elsewhere in New England. New York gave eighteen, Pennsylvania ten, Illinois nine, Ohio eight, District of Columbia five, Missouri seven, New Jersey one each other States one each. There were also two in South America and one each in Panama, the Philippines and Canada. Mr. Pierce reports that "The office is not as well known among employers at large as we hope it may be, particularly among those in the mercantile and manufacturing concerns, inasmuch as we have an increasing number of each year's gardaining class registered at this office." The services of the office are free alike to employers and to Harvard men seeking employment.—Boston Transcript. "He is regular upstart." "Yes. I heard he always rose to the occasion."-Pennsylvania Punch Bowl. WHOM YOUR TAILOR? TRADE MARK REG. 1908 BY ED. V. PRICE & CO. C If you're striving for a prosperous future — —if you really hope to accomplish something worth while, don't lessen your chances by wearing indifferent clothes. Tell us to have ED. V. PRICE & CO. tailor your clothes to individual order,they'll make youlook successful at a price you can afford to pay Leave Your Measure Today S. G. CLARKE 707 Mass. St. Eldridge Hotel Bldg. Mr. Baseball Fan Are you interested in the Varsity team,the fraternity leagues, and the inter-club league? If you are, you will want to get all the dope of the games. Mail fifty cents to the University Daily Kansan and have it delivered the rest of the school year, until June 5. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN ANNOUNCEMENTS The try-out for the University swimming team will be held Monday at 2:30 in the gym. WANT ADS The decoration committee of 'the junior prom will meet in Room 110, Fraser tomorrow afternoon, at 2 o'clock. The manager of the junior prom wants to meet the members of the finance committee in Room 110, Fraser tomorrow afternoon at 2 o'clock. FOUND—Lady's white silt globe. For left hand. Call at Kannam for right hand. Sunday, 7:45, Plymouth Ch. Gaul's Passion Service. Doors closed 7:50.— Adv. 127-2 Want to have a good time Friday night? Come down to the Methodist church—Adv. 127-2 Baseball supplies; gloves, balls, bats, etc. Keeler's Book Store, 939 Mass, St.-Adv. Grape Juice. Reynolds Bros. Bell 645, Home 358—Adv. New Vaudeville Theatre Friday Saturday THE GREAT HENELLA, Magician and Illusionist. Introducing Rosa The Singing Head EDDIE CRAWFORD The Entertainer WARNER'S THREE REEL FEATURES CHANGED DAILY 2:30 Matinee Daily 2:30 Continuous Each Night. Commencing at 7:45 Any Place, Any Time 10c One Dime 10c PROTSCH The Tailor THEY ARE HERE WATKINS NATIONAL BANK Capital $100,000 Surplus and profits $100,000 The Student Depository PROFESSIONAL CARDS W. C. M'OONNELL, Physician and surgeon. Ottawa, ON. Specialty: Residence, 1346 Teen. St. Ball 1023. Home 936. PROFESSIONAL CARDS J. F. BROCK, Optometrist and Specialist in Sclenheim Dental School. Office 802 Mass. HABRY REDING, M. D. Eye, ear, nose and throat. Glasses fitted. Office, F. A. A. Bldg. Phones, Bell 513, Home 512. A. HAMMAN M. D. Eye, ear, and throat. Dick Building, Satisfaction Guaranteed. Dick Building. DR. H. W. HAYNE, Oculist, Lawrence, Kansas. BRYON. Dentist, Over Wilson's Drivet Store. Bell Phone 807. J. W. O'BRYON, Dentist. Over Wilson S. Ball Store. Bell phone 507. R. J. BECHTEL, M. D., D. O. 832 Mass. accentuate Street. Both phones, office G. W. JONES, A. M. M. D., Dilease of Butee's Bits, 11, A. M. Bliss, Residence, 1920. DR. H. T. JONES, Room 12 F. A. H. Residence 1300 Tenn. Phones 2111. DR. H. L. CHAMBERS. Office over Enquiries. Studio. Both phones. DR. HURT R. WHITE Osteopath, Phones, Bell 938, Home 257, Office, 745 Mass. St. Ed. W. Parsons, Engrave Watchmaker and Jewelry, Mammals and Jewelry, Bell Phone University of Pennsylvania S. T. GILLISEPI, M. D. Office corp milton公园 Mgrs. st. Residence 728 Immanuel House 301 CLASSIFIED Plumbers Phone Kennedy Plumbing Co. for Good and Masda impae. Mgss Mass Co. Queen City College. System and sewing machines. Mrs. B. Kearney, 834 W. Kyla, mrs. M. G. Mark, Brown 834 KY. Holi MISS. MELLISON, Dressmaking and Ladies Varnish. Phone 2411 West. 1052 Vernon. Phone 2411 West. Ladies Tailors Hair Dressers hairdressing, shampooing, scalp and facial massage, shampooing, hair-fair goods, "Mariano toli," toli, 1742. Bazaar Barber Shops Go where they all go! J 403 815 913 Mass. Student's Group Club. $2.50 to $3.00 per set. Tak K. Harnell Steward. Around Mount Oread Albert Richter, who died at his home in Kansas City, Kans., last week from injuries received while here in school by a fall in the gym, was an excellent student while here. All of his grades were I's. "It was just such a spring as this in 1901 when I was manager of athletics," remarked genial George O. Foster regarding this brand of weather. "The rains continued well along into April and we thought that we never would get on the field because it was so hot, house league is one of the best things that the Daily Kansan has advocated this year. I would like to see every man in the University on some team. It's a great stunt." Students might well take a lesson in industry during these trying spring days from a little black and white mangy dog belonging to one of the jantors on the hill. Every day they run back and forth any time running back and forth on the links on the dead run. It is seldom not on the move. "The quartet will now sing," said Harry McColloch, chairman of the smoker committee, at the sophomore stag party the other evening. Six men arose and proceeded to play piano. Harry immortally wilted, and afterward said that the management had slipped one over on him. Clyde Maris, senior engineer, is conducting a class in the art of "raising" the freshman cap gracefully in the freshman all fresman engineers is compulsory. Both the city fathers and the University authorities have endeared themselves greatly in the estimation of students going to campus (massgap) street this spring. The city has placed electric lights on two or three of the heretofore dark corners and the University has placed steps leading up the hill back of the Administration Building, besides making a cinder path through the swamp leading down to the golf links. STANDISH ARROW COLLAR 2 for 25¢ Cluett Pebody & Co. Inc. Makers CITY.CAFE 906 Mass. Strictly Home Cooking Ever try our Special 15c Lunch? You'll like it. Bert Wadham THE COLLEGE BARBER On 14th Street W. J. Francisco For MAYOR He will appreciate your support. If "Alkali Ike" the funniest man of the "movies" should ever come to Lawrence and have occasion to eat at a Lawrence cafe he would probably be greatly surprised to see him shooting biscuits" for the customers. "He is Aaron Coleman, a senior law, noted in the law school for the many I grades that he manages to annex. Prof. F. C. Dockery the other day requested members of his philosophy class to write out the reasons why they took philosophy. One of his students wanted to know if it was necessary - that the reason be one of those suggested. "No," replied Professor Docker, "for instance I took philosophy because I was very much interested in a case." Then after a pause, "And I have never never lost interest in either the subject or the individual." The question is, how many in Professor Docker's philosophy class are interested in a certain individual? Sammy Degen, middle law, attended a moving-picture theatre Wednesday night. Absorbed in the antics of Tommy Moore and the beauties of Alice Joyce, which were flashed across the screen, he failed to notice the entrance of a couple of week-night daters, who took seats at his side. A voice aroused him from his seat, "What is that person looking too?" "Well, he is rather attractive," her friend imparted. Sammy waited to hear no more. The Student Council with the Lawrence police force on its heels never reached a door faster than Sammy did the entrance. John M. Henry is a careful man. Yesterday he was wary of anything that might develop into an April fool joke and regarded all his friends with deep suspicion when they approached him. About four You Can Earn a Good Living and lay up some money too, on graduating from the lawrence Business College. Enroll at one of our two colleges or a Free Employment Bureau at your service. Write for catalog to Kansas' best and best college admissions counselors. L. T. PARKER LAWRENCE Business College Lawrence, Kansas. New Easter Creations in Neckwear by Dame Fashion Sam S. Shubert MAT.WEDNESDAY & SATURDAY "The Traffic" Collars for blouses, collar and cuff sets, fiches, in every imaginable new style—of mull lace, batiste, or net, plain and fancy All the new Pleatings-chiffon, net, and lace, 50c and up. WEAVER'S o'clock the telephone rang and a voice (masculine) was heard by the man who answered the 'phone asking for Henry. But Henry absolutely refused to take the guaranty that no joke was being played. He was so relieved on finding the call bona fide that he kept the dollar. MeCOLLOCH'S Drug Store THE REXALL STORE. How many times have you said, "I'd give a dollar for a Kodak now?" Get one at SPRING SUITINGS FRANK KOCH TAILOR 727 Mass. For one day only Saturday, Apr. 4, 25 lbs. beet granulated sugar, $1.00 25 lbs beet granulated sugar, $1.00. Also a special price on this day for fresh fruits, dried fruits and vegetables. Dummies phones 58—Adv. In its issue of March 4th, the Musical Courier of New York City, the largest music journal in America, devoted nearly a page to the dissertation on Matisse's secret of the phenomenal success of this organization. It has grown to be and will continue to be the greatest annual event of its kind in America. It never grows as large as it begins, but to the little city to hear this wonderful chorus. Festival week this year is April 5-12.—Adv. A portion of the K. U. Vaudeville took a trip to Midland the other night and staged a performance for the villagers. The curtain rose at 8:45 before a good sized audience. The program was given by A. Babb, Claire Dietrich, Harold DeBenham, G. Babb, W. Wood, B. Miller, L. Dyche, W. Lytle, F. McEwen, and J. B. McNaught. The Board of Regents of the University of Nebraska recently made arrangements for uniform spelling in all the university publications, Heretofore one department has used one method and another another. The Board wished to do away with this. Special Mashed potatoes twice doubly salted, and served in sherbet glasses with pretty pink red pepper dip was the desert the Betas received at noon on April Fools Day. Half of them bit. Raymond's Drug Store Spring Time is Kodak Time Time's come for up-to-date men who look the part to look to their clothes and desert back-number fashions for the new Easter styles from The House of Kuppenheimer In style, in fabric, in color shades—these clothes are all that go to make for clothes excellence or they wouldn't be here. $18.00 to $28.00 Choose your Easter togs now—while our assortments are complete. Copyright 1914 The House of Kuppenbeimet BOWERSOCK THEATRE MATINEE AND NIGHT Saturday, April 4th 729 Mass. St. J. House & Son Lawrence, Kansas Talking Pictures PRESENTING AN ENTIRE NEW DRAMA CONSISTING OF THE FOLLOW- ING SUBJECTS JOHN J. McGRAW MGR, NEW YORK GIANTS A WAR DRAMA ENTITLED "THE DEAF MUTE" THE SENSATION OF THE SEASON RETURNS THOMAS A. EDISON'S GENIUS SEYMOUR, DEMPSEY & SEYMOUR RAGTIME ENTERTAINERS AND OTHERS CONSISTING OF MUSICAL COMEDY, FARCE, VAUDEVILLE AND DRAMA Everything New----Change of Program Each Day PRICES: Night, 25c, 35c, 50c Matinee, Adults 25c, Children 10c ANDERSON'S OLD STAND JOHNSON & TUTTLE 715 PROPS. Mass. A GOOD PLACE TO EAT AT A. G. ALRICH Printing Binding, Copper Flate Printing, Bubber Stamps, Engraving, Steel Die Embossing, Seals, Badges. University Daily Kansan Mechanical Engineering who feels an interest in such a vocation as The High School Student 744 Mass. should be encouraged in knowing that the growth of industry, and the modern striving after efficiency, open a broad way of opportunity to the able mechanical engineer. He is always in demand. His position is often one of large responsibility. He is well paid. VOCATION EDITOR A four-year course in mechanical engineering with the advantages of fully equipped shops and laboratories, prepares the student to enter this broad field under the best conditions. The Clothes Question College clothes are different. Our advertisers will show you the correct solution. Ober's Johnson & Carl Peckhams J. House & Sons Skofstad They will appreciate it if you tell them you "saw it in the Kansan." UNIVERSITY DAILY KANRAN Spring 1914 The "York" One of those classy new double breasted English models by "Society Brand." Just the suit for you to "step out" in on Eastermorning. Natural shoulders.no lining, athletic vest,narrow trousers. Priced at $25 Inspect It Tomorrow Easter Hats, Shoes, Shirts and Neck- wear to Match It Ober's MARKETING FACTORY Society Brand Clothes 16 HASH HOUSE TEAMS READY TO PLAY BALL (Continued from page 1). calls 'Play Ball' shall forfeit the game. Umnire Rule 1. The umpire shall be seated between joint agreement of the two managers. Rule 2. The umpire shall have power to bench any player for any good cause, and if the player refuses to bow, the umpire shall have power to forfeit the game. Protested Games Rule 1. The Commission shall have power to decide all protested games, each team to be represented at the meeting of the Commission when the case comes up for consideration of the Commission shall constitute a quorum the chairman to have no vote except in case of a tie. Rule 1. The manager of each team shall prepare a list of players and place it in the hands of the Commission, who shall keep it on record. No addition shall be made to this about the consent of this Commission. Balls Rule 1. Each team shall provide a ball for each game that will pass the inspection of the opposing pitcher. Number of Innings Rule 1-2. The captains of the teams shall agree before the game the number of innings to be played. In case of disagreement or neglect to specify 7 innings shall be considered an official game. Rule 1. The manager of the winning team shall report the result of the game to the Daily Kansan before noon of the following day; games played on Friday or Saturday to be reported before Monday noon. The report shall also contain a list of participants. Championship Rule 1. Division championships shall be decided on a percentage basis. In case of a tie, a game shall be played between the teams that have the same average to decide the championship. Rule 2. The League championship shall Rule 2. by a game between division championship and division champion. Rule 3. In case any team withdraws from the League before it has played all its scheduled games all games unplayed or played by that team shall be declared forfeited to its opponent. Brick ice cream furnished in any color or combination desired. Reynolds Bros. Bell 645. Home 358. Adv. $15.00 or more weekly can positively be made introducing the new University of Kansas Belt among the students of your field today. Full particulars free. Gem Specialty Co., 208 N. 5th, Ave., Chicago, Ill.-Adv. 123-3* Sunday, 7:45, Plymouth Ch. Gaul' Passion Service. Doors closed 7:50: Adv. 127-2 A FRESH SUPPLY OF Fancy Fruits and Candies at CALIFORNIA FRUIT STAND Bell Phone 482 "Next the Vaudeville Fischer's Shoes are Good Shoes Hurley Shoes MARRY And they're the shoes of a welldressed gentleman. You can choose Tan or Black. You'll look pleasant in a pair because they FEEL PLEASANT. You'll give your feet a "Joy Ride" in a pair. $5.00 VARSITY TO MAKE DEBUT TOMORROW Fischer's K. U. Nine Will Cross Bats With K.C.A.C.on McCook McCook The Varsity baseball nine will make its first appearance at 3:45 tomorrow afternoon when it plays the star team from the Kansas City Athletic Club on McCook field. The game is the first of the schedule and will mark the opening of the baseball season. McCook field gave up its moisture yesterday and unless more rain comes, the infield will be as dry as a bone. Baseball fans will not only see the regulars in an all-for the first time to impress, but will for the first time to upset the new baseball diamond which has been reconstructed after the big league plan. Coach McCarty gave his men a good practice yesterday afternoon and says they are in good shape for tomorrow's contest. The wet grounds caused the baseball swaters to miss several days on the diamond and may slow them up to tomorrow. The Kansas City team is of unknown quality but Manager Hamilton expects the stars to put up a fast game. The bunch is composed of ball players with collegiate reputation. Three former Kansas stars, Swede Carlson, Porter, and Pete Allen, will play for the visitors while Bill Owen, Coach Bennie Owen's brother will catch for K. C. A. C. The batteries will be: K. C. A. C. Allen and Owens; Kansas, Bishop and Sommers. Coach McCarty announced the following lineup today in batting order. Sommers, c.; Van der Vries, ss; Smee, l. f; DeLongy, 2b; Chinery, c. f.; Painter, 3b; Sproull, 1b; Wieler, r. f; Bishop, p. Scholarships for K. U. Women Applications for the scholarships open to women students for 1914-15 should be made to the committee before April 15. The scholarships offered are: The Marcella Howland Memorial Scholarship, $87.50. Open to young women of the junior and senior classes of the College. The Eliza Matheson Innes Memorial Scholarship, $100. Open to women students of the University for a year or to women students of the Graduate School. The Daughters of the American Revolution Scholarship, $100. Open to women students of the College above the freshman year and to women students of the Graduate School. The Association of Collegiate Alumnae Scholarship, $50.00. Open to women of the junior and senior years of the College. The Caroline Mumford Winston memorial scholarship of $55 is open to women students of the College of classes above the freshman. The Lucinda Smith Buchan Memorial Scholarship maintained by the alumnae of the Pi Beta Phi sorority is a loan scholarship of $200. It is open to women students of the College. Committee: W. O. Hamilton, who is in charge of Doctor Naismith's class in principals of physical education, gave an informal lecture to the class Wednesday on the management of high school athletics. The Betas defeated the Sig Alphs in a practice baseball game at Woodland park yesterday afternoon, 22 to 6. COACH HAMILTON MEETS DOCTOR NAISMITH'S CLASSES E. Galloo. Ida H. Hyde. Hannah Oliver. Four designs of individual moulds for Easter. Reynolds Bros. Bell 645. Home 358.—Adv. K. U. ENTOMOLOGISTS HAVE HELPED FARMER It does not require a musical training to enjoy the Messiah at Lindbsorg. It appeals to the rained and untrained alike. People who have been in the habit of coming from year to year bear test fees for their service, and visitors they enjoy it more. Special train service has been arranged for those who plan to hear Alice Nielsen and the Messiah on April 5th.-Adv. University Experts in Regulating Kansas Bugs Saved Millions in Past Year Man's greatest enemies are bugs. On the other hand, some of his best friends are those in the insect world. And it is to find out these relations and make the best use of them, the entomology department of the University of Kansas is working. In the past year the department has carried on work of great benefit to the state, and the results have been set forth in the Entomological Number of the Science Men of the University. Just issued. Among the principal services performed are investigations in alfalfa culture determination of the economic importance of insects, direction of the spraying of orchards, investigation of the horse plague in western Kansas, inspection of nursery stock, devising of methods to kill green bugs, guzmania and other pests, and aid to federal and state government in drafting legislation against the importation of insect pests. The alfalfa yield of the state has been increased one third by methods of culture devised by the University of Kansas entomology experts, and now used throughout the state. The Lawrence scientists were the first to show that bees improve the alfalfa yield and in furtherance of their ideas they distributed free four thousand copies of an illustrated manual on bee culture throughout the state. In the survey of orchards last year, 1,142,466 trees were examined and 162,585 sprayed under the direction of the department. The San Jose Scale and the Brown Tail moth have been detected by inspection upon their first invasion of Buxus ornamental trees. Detailed insect life surveys have been furnished in 35 counties, and collections of mounted insects have been furnished free of charge to high schools for experimental work. Much of the field work of the department is done by advanced students working not for pay, but for University credit, under direction of faculty experts. From 5,000 to 8,000 letters on general information a year have been answered by the department. The department of entomology is in charge of Prof. S. J. Hunter, who also the entomologist, and entomologist to the State Board of Agriculture. Five numbers from Handel's Messiah at the musical service, Sunday night. 7:45. Methodist Episcopal Church. Also numbers from the Crucifixion by Stainer and The Holy City by Gaul.—Adv. Baptist Church Sunday at 7:45 p. m., a cantata, "From Olivet to Calvary."—Adv. Sunday, 7:45, Plymouth Ch. Gaul's Passion Service. Doors closed 7:50— Adv. 127-2 Social for young people Friday evening at the Methodist church. Students invited.-Adv. 127-2 Come out Friday evening and have a good time at the Methodist church. —Adv. 127-2 Sunday, 7:45, Plymouth Ch. Gaul's Passion Service. Doors closed 7:50.— Adv. 127-2 Sunday, 7:45, Plymouth Ch. Gaul's Passion Service. Doors closed 7:50— Adv. 127-2 Baptist Church Sunday at 7:45 p. m., a cantata, "From Olivet to Calvary."—Adv. First Baptist Church Sunday 7:45 p. m., cantatita; "From Olivet to Calvary"; Maudner, by chorus of twenty-five voices; solo voices, soprano, Mrs Eva Moran; contralto, Miss Bessie Raymond; tenor, Mr. Herbert B. Foote; barton, Mr. Clyde Smith. —Adv. 127-2. Typewriting Done By Alvin L. Babb 1334 Ohio St. Bell 'Phone 1574 W GIRLS! Come down and get one of our standard $1.50 Tennis Racquets and learn the game of tennis. It's fine sport and healthful exercise. CARROLL'S Athletic Outfitters 709 Mass. Phones 608 The Oread Cafe The most popular Student Cafe in Lawrence. Why? Because the meals are home cooked, clean and wholesome. The fountain specials and sundaes are unsurpassed. Ask any of our many regular customers. The prices are most reasonable. Just try us and you will be a steady customer. E. C. BRICKEN, Sole Owner TRY REYNOLDS BROS. "The Cream That Satisfies" Ice Cream--- Vanilla Strawberry Chocolate Ice---- Caramel Nut Brown Bread Peach Grape Call Bell 645 or Home 358 for Sunday Delivery Today AURORA Today SAWDUST AND SALOME SNAKEVILLE'S FIRE BRIGADE Biograph's BUNCH OF THIEVES PATHE'S LATEST NEWS FILM Monday. One Day Only JOHN BARRYMORE IN- "The American Citizen" Millinery Style Show We have a style show in millinery every day. A new store filled with the new styles. STAR MILLINERY 838 $ \frac{1}{2} $ Mass. Mrs. McCormick Advertise in the Kansas OPENING BASEBALL GAME Kansas vs K. C.A.C. Postponed Until Saturday Admission 25c. Student Tickets Good 3:45 p. m. Grand Stand Cushion Seats 15c T O P E K A N UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN VOLUME XI NUMBER 129. M'CARTY'S TEAM WINS FIRST BASEBALL GAME Jayhawkers Annex the Big End of a 5 to 4 Score Against K.C.A.C. BISHOP AND SMEE PITCH UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS MONDAY AFTERNOON, APRIL 6, 1914. Varsity Men Hold Veterans in Pinches—Pass Them in Lucky Seventh Inning. Score: R H E K. C. A. C. ... 010 012 000—4 5 Kansas K. C. A. C. ... 010 020 10*—5 6 1 Warren; K. C. A. C. ... 010 030 10*—5 6 1 Wheaton and H. Allen; Kansas. Bishop, Smee and Sommers, Umpires Wilson, and Wilson. Coach McCarty's. Jayhawker, stepped ahead of the K. C. A. C. nine in the seventh inning and won a close baseball game on McCook field Saturday afternoon, 5 to 4. The weather was cold and the game was erratic in spots but the Kansans played good ball with Bishop and Hibiscus. Both games and twirled five innings. Smee finished the contest. Both pitches showed form and were effective in the pinches. K. U. opened up with a single tally in the first encounter and the Blue Diamonds came back in the second with a score. The Jayhawk hobbled ahead in the last of the second, but the game was tied in the first of the fifth, the Kauai team was two men crossed the home plate. K. C. A. C. tied the count in the sixth but a tally in the seventen won for the home team. The Kansans were weak in hitting while their opponents batted out thirteen safeties. The Varsity men landed on the ball for only six bingles. Costly errors by the visitors gave Kansas the game. ITALIAN HISTORIES ARRIVE AT LIBRARY New Books Purchased to Be Used for Sourr Work New books are arriving at the library daily. Among the most important is a set of 14 volumes of Italian history published in Italian. These books are to be used in the advanced courses in history as source books. The set is bound is quarter vellum and is said to be one of the most valuable of the Italian source books published. The set was purchased from Loescher & Co., Rome, Italy. The philosophy department has received a set of 34 volumes of Schleier's works. The set has been made available to the library in the Administration Building. A 60 volume set of "Folklore Sources" and several volumes in French have GRADUATE STUDENT WILL UMPIRE FOR PAN-HellenIC Hugo Wedell, a student in the graduate school was elected umpire for the Pan-Hellenic baseball league which opens tomorrow afternoon. The first game will be between the two teams. The series will be; Betas, Householder and Strothers; Phi Gams, Craig and Wickstroms; PAN-HELLENIC PLANS FOR ANNUAL TRACK MEET Plans are under way for the annual track meet in May. The eight fraternities will compete on the McCook cinders under rules which will be adopted by the Pan-Hellenic Council next week. Kappa Sig Master Here Mr. Kapp Sig Master Hire H. H. C. Hilmer of St. Louis president of the Kappa Sigma house. Mr. Hilmer is District Grand Master of this district and is on an inspection trip to the various chapters in his district. The Weather Temperature readings: atemperature readings: 9 p. m. . . . . . . . . . . . . 54 7 a. m. . . . . . . . . . . . . 54 2 p. m. . . . . . . . . . . . . 50½ .69 inch rain. Send the Daily Kansan home. CARSON OUT FOR PRESIDENT Member of Student Council Would Head That Body—Two Engineers Announce Candidacy Pettitions are being circulated on the hill today whose signers indorse C. W. Carson a junior in the College, for president of the Student Council. He is now a member of the Council. Vic Bottomly is the only other candidate who has announced for presid. Two men from the engineering school also announced their candidacy this morning. They are Dean E. Brown and William E. Brown, a junior civil class. AW DEAN WILL SPEAK HERE W. D. Lewis, of University of Pennsylvania, Will Talk in Chapel Tomorrow Morning William Draper Lewis, dean of the law school of the University of Pennsylvania, will speak in chapel tomorrow. Dean Lewis is a progressive but his talk will not be of a political nature. He is the author of a number of books and treats on trust leviation. He is an authority on the latter subject and has aided the government officials in some of the noted degrees of B., S. L., L. B., and Ph. D. WORK FOR PERMANENT UNION Members of Committee Will Prepare Plans for the Men Student Council Some sort of a definite plan for procuring a permanent Student Union will be presented to next year's Student Council by the committee recently appointed by President Dodd: L. W. Kninear, Harold Ragle, and Harry Evans. They plan to present the work in such a way that the new Council can take hold where they leave off. The committee is now sending to other schools where there are student unions for information of all kinds. Circular letters will probably be sent out to the Kansas alumni explaining the situation to them, and asking for suggestions. Other plans suggested, the whole to be embodied in a report to the new Council. DOESN'T AGREE WITH T. R. Prof. H. T. Hill, Public Speaking. Takes Exception to Lion- Hunter's Statement Col. Theodore Roosevelt, in his autobiography in the Outlook, says, "I am sorry I did not study elocution in college; but I am exceeding myself in the type of debate in which stress is lea, not upon getting the speaker to think rightly, but on getting him to talk glibly on the side to which he is assigned, without rehearsing or what they might be like." Professor Hill is not of the opinion that a man is doing himself or anyone else an injustice if after carefully studying a question on all sides he changes his mind, for most of our opinions are formed upon a very general sense of evidence. One of the chief values of practice in debating is to train us to form opinions from real evidence and not from hearsaver. "The purpose of debating," said Professor Hill "is to gain information and to secure training in presenting that information in a convincing way. Only a very few questions used in debates hinge upon morals. Most of the questions chosen are on politics and economics and are stated in such a way that they have two sides." Prof. H. T. Hill, of the department of public speaking, says in this regard: "There is no inherent wrong with a college debate, in which you do not believe. When a man appears in a college debate, his audience does not expect him to give his personal views on the subjec- tions." He has been signed to that particular side." The most noticeable features of weather for March, 1914, were the unusually clear skies and low humidities during the first two weeks, according to Prof. F. E. Kester, weather observer. The cloudiness below the March mean: the humidity, however, was not far from normal. In other regards the month was near the average March. Debaters to Meet Colorado and Oklahoma 100 HAROLD F. MATTOON AVERY F. OLNEY HENRY A. SHINN E. D. Cline 1917 OLIVER T. ATHERTON ARVID L. FRANK Two K. U. debating teams will argue the unicameral legislature question Wednesday, one at Norman, against the University of Oklahoma, the other in Fraser Hall, against the University of Colorado. The one at Oklahoma will argue negatively, the one in Fraser Hall affirmatively. Vacation Begins Thursday p. m. Thursday, April 9, at 5:30 the morning ends with the eight o'clock classes the following Tuesday morning. UNIVERSITY ISSUES FIRST CALL FOR FRESHMEN DONALD B. JOSEPH The men on the Oklahoma team, which leaves tomorrow afternoon, are: O. T. Atherton, A. L. Frank, D. B. Joseph. The men who will talk against Colorado are: Avery Olney, H. F. Mattoon, and H. A. Shinn. The debates begin at eight o'clock. The plan for the organization of a company of Military Engineers in the University of Kansas School of Engineering is being well received. This institution is to the entire School of Engineering and more than sixty per cent of the replies favor the organization of the company. FAVOR ORGANIZATION OF ENGINEER'S COMPANY Registrar's office Sends Cards to State High School Seniors Looking to Enrollment. Send the Daily Kansan home. The University has issued its first call for freshmen for service beginning next fall, and the call is being answered from all over the state. About three weeks ago the registration office sent out an email asking them to return a query card for further information about the University. Two hundred and fifty of the cards have been returned and more are coming in with every mail. The return of the cards usually continue until late in the summer. The seniors who return the query cards are assigned to a specific effective students and are sent catalogues and other material giving information calculated to be of interest to high school graduates. SMITH AND WILSON WILL DEBATE AGAINST TIGERS Will Argue the Negative of Immigration Restriction Law—To Be Held Here Harry M. Smith and J. Chrisity Wilson are the men chosen to represent the University of Kansas in the debate against Missouri, to be held here the latter part of this month. K. U. will argue the negative of the question: "Resolved, that immigration into the United States should be further restricted by applying to all immigrants a literacy test requiring the ability to read ordinary prose in at least one language or dialect." RESULTS OF BELLEVILLE TESTS TO BE REPORTED The department of state water analysis has just completed a survey of the Belleville water sources, the results of which will be used in the reports of the sociology survey just finished. This department will also work in cooperation with the sociology department in making a survey of the water of Wakarusa township. ENGINEERS WILL HAVE A SHADY LANE IN FEW YEARS In three years more, the Engineers won't endanger their complexion when going to and from classes. About one hundred trees, hard maple, Norway maple, and cedar are being planted along the sidewalk between Robinson gymnasium and Marvin Hall. WANT MEN AS BOY-LEADERS Welfare Workers Ask For Students to Work With Youths in Second Class Towns Young men who like, boys who know boys, who can manage boys and who will work with boys, can be suitable for this summer in child welfare work. Several of the second class towns of Kansas which are entered for the Stubbs child welfare prize, are looking for young men to act as by boy mentors in high school. The usual qualifications are a good moral character, some training in athletics, experience in farming, or some heavy mechanical industry, and an aptitude in the leadership of the applicant need not be a graduate. The work pays a fair salary and is an excellent opportunity for any young man who wishes to prepare himself for taking up some phase of the new social service. Prof. Wm. A. McKeever would be glad to see any one who is interested in this summer employment. BIG SISTERS GAIN STRENGTH Thirty-five Girls Would Be Friends to Freshman Next Year at Registration The "Big Sister" movement which is being forwarded by the Y. W. C. A., is gaining strength rapidly. Thirty-five girls have expressed their willingness to be big sisters to next year's freshman girls. Seventy-five are necessary for the success of the project. Each "Big Sister" has agreed to assist one or two girls in getting settled and acquainted at the beginning of the year, and to take her to University for a meeting. We will attend University affirmations. Besides the work of the first few weeks, she will continue in the capacity of friend and advisor throughout the year. TIE VOTE ON CAPTAINCY Bishop and Sommers Get Two Votes Each in Baseball Captaininy Election Two votes were cast for Bishop and two for Sommers for captain of the baseball team on the field Saturday by the four baseball "K" men. Another election will be held in Manager Hamilton, office tomorrow. The three will also take another tie the choice will be thrown open to the entire squad. The election of a captain was not necessary by the ineligibility or Business栓 ledger. MUST FILE APPLICATIONS FOR TEACHERS' DIPLOMAS "All students who are candidates for a degree in Education and those desiring a University Teachers' Diploma, either at the end of this year or at the end of the summer session, should file their applications with the clerk of the School of Education in Room 119. Praiser as soon as pos-," said Dean Arvin S. Olm, of the School of Education this morning. The office will be open from Monday until Thursday of this week from 8:30 to 12:15 and from 1:45 to 5:00. All applications should be filled out and filed not later than Thursday, April 9. ADVISOR'S NEW OFFICES RECEIVING LAST TOUCHES The work of painting the new offices of the women's advisor has begun and a partial view of the color scheme of the decorations revealed. The walls in the room corner will be painted a pearl gray with a floor of flemish ash, and wall paper of two shades of rather dark gray. The private office between the main office and the W. Y. C. A. rest room will be furnished to the Y. W. room will be finished and furnished in a color scheme of subdued green. EXCHANGE PROF. WILL TELL ABOUT GERMANY "My Experiences in Germany" will be the subject of Prof. E. M. Briggs' talk at the regular meeting of the German Vernie this afternoon at 4:30 in Fraser Hall. Professor Briggs was the exchange professor Shafer Nieman from Duke University near Berlin. Everyone who can understand German is invited to attend, and those who do not will be welcome. The Phi Gamma Delta fraternity entertained informally at the chapter house Friday evening. WHICH SHALL IT BE, OUR QUEEN OF MAY? Will Vote on Fairest Member of Graduating Class THE RACE ON TOMORROW Balloting to be Held After Chapel —Choosing the Queen an Annual Custom. Many whispered guesses are being hazarded by groups of senior girls, "under the Clock" and in the Tower to be the K. U. Queen of the May. The annual choosing of the "prettiest girl in the senior class" will take place in Fraser Hall tomorrow, in the chapel following regular chapel service. Every girl enrolled as a senior is eligible to cast a ballot. The chapel will be filled by a committee composed of one member of the W. S. G. A. council, the secretary of the senior class, and one faculty member. HOME ECONOMICS CLUB EATS ECONOMIC DINNER Prepares and Serves Banquet to Seventy-Five for Twenty-Five Cents a Plate The Home Economics Club entertained more than seventy-five members of the department Saturday evening with a four course banquet that was a record breaker for combining economy and elaborateness. The girls of the club prepared the banquet, served it, made out the menus, decorated the tables, and had the programs printed, all for the small sum of twenty-five cents a plate. K. U. songs, yells, and a number of musical productions composed for the occasion filled in between the courses. A trio composed of the Misses Buchanan, Engle, and Beamer, assisted by Miss Downey, led the musiciany yells and furnished music for the program that followed. program; Royal Chef, Lucy Dunbar; "The Onset," a prophecy for members of the club, Martha Hunter; "Sauce for the Goose," Adele Murphy; "Date Pudding," a la W. S. G. A., Mary Jane Simpson; "Staples, Prof. Edna Day; "Rarebits," Gertrude Russell; "Taffy," Lucy Barger; "Prune Whip," Miss Nowell; "Tarts," Marie Madden; "Bird's Nest Salad." Amarynatha Smith; "Sweethearts," Miss Downey. MILL LECTURE ON EDUCATION Prof. G. D. Strayer, of Columbia University Will Discuss Teaching Problems Tomorrow Night George D. Strayer, professor of Educational Administration in Teacher's College, Columbia University, will give a lecture in Snow Hall lecture room tomorrow evening at eight o'clock. His subject will be "Education in a Democracy." A general invitation is extended to all teachers and others interested in educational problems. Medics Take Exams Mid-term examinations are in progress at the School of Medicine. They differ considerably from the usual examination that is held on Mount Oread. Most College students have plenty of time to answer any questions of one instructor. The medics to satisfy the expectation of five before they have completed the work and are ready for their grade in the subject. Pay Checks Here The state pay warrants have been received. In a bulletin sent out by the University of Washington, Prof. S. L. Whitchob, of the Department of English at the University of Kansas, is referred to as a professor of zoology. The professor combes change and says that he doesn't know the difference between a starfish and a cinder beetle. Tis the taught already that profits by teaching—Robert Browning. Buy it in Lawrence. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Official student paper of the University of Kansas EDITORIAL STAF ADDITIONAL TITLE JOHN C. M. MOPPEN    U.S. BUSINESS EDWIN ARLENE RAT Eldredge JOB BISHOP CHARA S. STURGEY CHARA S. STURGEY Business Manager Circulation Manager Advertising Manager Advertising Manager Advertising Manager REPORTORIAL STAFF LOUIS RAGAGE W. W. FUNDOPSON HENRY HUNT HENRICH FUNIT RAY CARPENTER RAY CARPENTER WILLIAM N. CADDY JOHNETT HOWARD BENNETT HOWARD SAM-DEEN BENNISMANN BERNARD ALLEYE CHARLES BORNE BERRYBORNE LUCILE HIDDINGS LAWRENCE SMITH LAWRENCE SMITH GLENDARE CULATON Entered as 25 second-class mail matter Surrendered to the State Department. Lawrence, Kansas, under the date of March Subscription price $2.50 per year, in advance; one term, $1.50 Publicized in the afternoon. View these times from Kansas. From the press of the department of Kansas. Phone. Bob K U. 25. Address all communications to UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Lawrence, Rans. The Daily Kaanan aims to picture the future of humanity. He intends to nurture it in Kansas by go further "in the direction of the needy by standing for the fidelity of its people, by treating its people to be clean; to be cheerful to be helpful; to be kind to others; to be more worrisome in user heads; to offer to serve in the best of its ability." He is also aiming to improve the lives of the people. MONDAY, APRIL 6, 1914 Student government at the University is not perfect. No one would affirm that improvement is impossible. They who strive With Fortune win or weary her a last.—Byron A SUGGESTION Permanency in purpose and stability in membership are desirable qualities in the Councils. Any changes which would improve self-government in these respects are worthy of discussion. Here is a way the governing bodies would probably be made more efficient: Elect only part of the members at one time. Half might be chosen in the spring and half at the time of the class elections in the fall or some better method might be arranged without sacrificing the principle that the Council should always have half of its membership composed of members with some experience. The advantages would be (1) the Councils would always be able to go ahead with the matter under consideration without feeling that they should wait until they "get on to the ropes" (2) permanency would be added to a body which must always be more or less temporary because of the constantly changing student body. (3) the governing bodies would keep in more intimate touch with the sentiments of students if elections were more frequent (4) the Councils would be more likely to retain respect of the faculty and student body since the chance for ill-advised action would be decreased (5) in matters such as the Student Union there would always be experienced members present to carry out one consistent constructive policy. TEMPUS FUGITS SO CELERITE It really doesn't matter whether you proffer silver, bills or a certified check. It makes no difference if you earned the money or if it came from home. The time of the day is immateal, ten o'clock at night does just as well as eight-thirty in the morning. You can write, wire or appear in person. The committee on receiving overdue Union fees tries to be as accommodating as possible. It merely wishes to hint that March 1, the date for paying your dollar at the Union, went by several weeks ago. THE SPIRIT BEHIND It is certainly gratifying to see the way the graduates have responded to the suggestion that former students erect a bust of Dean Marvin in Marvin Hall. Alumni in the east, west, north, and south may be quite a distance from the University, but they are showing conclusively that they still hold the memory of K. U. dear. A class memorial should be just as important, if not more so, to the undergraduate who in later years will want to say that his class was instrumental in doing something worth while for the University of Kansas. The classes are responding, it is true, but how much more could be done if the members would join together with the same freedom and enthusiasm as the men behind the Dean Marvin memorial. MANHOOD AND RELIGION Seven hundred University of Pennsylvania students were converted at a Billy Sunday meeting last week. Among them were Young, captain of the football team; Watrous, captain of the crew; McCurdy, captain of the track team; Schwert, captain of the baseball team; Patterson, inter-collegiate 100-yard champion; and Minds, Marshall, and Bloom, all of football fame. This list of athletes who have become Christianized goes a little way oward disproving a belief, which prevails in some quarters, that only he weak and "nimitted" are Christians. The citation of concrete examples is the best way to change such a prejudice. A UNIQUE MEMORIAL Quite a novel idea for a class memorial is that adopted by the senior engineers at Michigan. They have decided upon a loan fund that will help to other engineers through their last year. This money will be left with the university treasurer and will be loaned to those seniors who, in the opinion of a committee of faculty members, done good work and feel the money. One half of the fund will be loaned each year on notes without interest, payable two years from date, so that there will always be men in school who are cared for. The other half will be increased at the different class reuniens and if possible its privileges will be extended to the juniors. UNION KEEPS STUDENTS IN COLLEGE TOWN The palmy days of the out-of-town banquet have passed. Now and then there is a desperate attempt at resuscitation. Those who labor for them have a difficult task, and only the heartiest and most persistent have been able to respond. A response, if done, does not mean to us what it meant to those who were here before the days of the Michigan Union. The privilege of these foreign trips has been grossly transgressed by the irresponsible student, as usual. He has made an orgy what is intended as a banquet. He injured himself and his university. The faculty has found it necessary to take steps to curb the practice and we have not heard any serious complaint. The days of the out-of-town banquets are numbered.—Michigan Daily. ENDS AND ODDLETS An unsuspected advantage of the new parcel post law illustrated by the headline, "State Convicts May Go To K. U. By Mail." The senior societies wish to make it clear that they do not "desire a memorial" for themselves, but for the class. MUST WEIGH UNDER 50 LBS. Now that women can vote and will probably receive athletic K's soon, about the only things left exclusively for mere men are opportunities to attend week-night movements and the count of membership in the Y. M. C. A. "Who's Your Tailor?" for the thousand-and-oneth time stares in the face and for the thousand-and-oneth time we confess we haven't any. From the Cleveland Leader: "Within a few years it may even be possible to chronicle the success of the college couple in getting engaged." A POOR ADVERTISEMENT University of Nebraska men have been acting as living models in the Lincoln spring fashion show and every man applied for a job as "after man" in the "before and after" poses. WITH K. U. POETS By WILLIAM HERERT CARRIBE, 80 Formerly Vice-Chancellor of the Uri- lons. CHILDHOOD IN THE SLUMS These little lips have learned The language of creath and sin; And the cheeks of one unused grow out. At the sounds his ears take in. Set the thoughts, winked good On the overwrought mother's part Has found its way past the tiger spots And broken the childish heart. CAMPUS OPINION To the Editor of the Daily Kansan: To the Editor of the Daily Kshanai: Behold the popular student! See his swagger and his 87 shoes. He is a boy who has been in school for the folks back home think his college career is wasted unless he comes home in the spring with a jeweled pin upon his waistcoat. His father is selling tinware to swell the youthful pocketbook. His mother is still a teacher. The year she really don't need them in a small town, and there are so many unexpected expenses connected with keeping a boy in school. Books and lab fees often mount to unbelievable heights. But Oswald will go on to study and he must make the best of his time. Yes Oswald, your gray mackinaw is rather becoming—tan overcoats aren't worn much this season. That is a neat looking tailored suit you can wear in the summer than your old plaid one. That is a sweet little girl you are strolling with. She belongs to one of the best sororities, you say, and her father is a big bummerman? She thinks your sister is a millionaire too, doesn't she? And you are going to entertain the fellows with a feed tonight, and a card game afterwards. That will be great. It is lucky your lessons are so easy for you. We let less interfeire with your social duties. It will make a man of you. Well, Oswald, I hope you win out. Critical. OTHER CHAPEL PROBLEMS There has been considerable talk about the decrease in chapel attendance and it has even been hinted that chapel attendance would be made compulsory next year unless there was a marked improvement during the remainder of the present college year. The Collegian "that there would be no cause for complaint if the chapel services were made interesting; There is not denying but that the chapel exercises have lacked "pep" during the past few months with the same routine of announcements and the theme all the hymns. We would not do away with a short devotional service at the beginning of chapel, but we believe that the time given to announcements could be given profitably to some good speaker while college songs would be much smaller and final. Announcements could be made from the bulletin board just as good as from the chapel platform if the students were accustomed to look there for their information; while there is a woeful lack of familiarity of the college songs among the students during a little life and spirit into the exercises, rather than chiding those present for the absence of the others? -Southwestern Collegeian. CLEVER THINGS THE OTHER FELLOW SAYS Bobbs—There is the best educated man that ever lived. Dobbs. How do you get that? You stand the standing of every major and minor league in the country—Pennsylvania Punch Bowl. Dobbs—How do you get that? Chauf—The fourth cylinder missing, sir. Bboo—Beats all how them things get away. Better put paddocks on them Henry.—Dartmouth Jack-O-Lantern. "That's true. They would be safer on the walks."—Pennsylvania Punch Bowl. horses on the street." Farmer Cortoseland—Era must be staying at a pretty well boarding-hill Farmer Jenks—What makes you think so? Farmer Cormotssel—He says that they have a couple of swell chickens there for dinner and supper every day.—Ex. "There goes a man that has done much for the America drama." uttered. "He never wrote a play.—Pennsylvanian Punch Bowl." What though success will not attend on all, Who bravely dares must sometimes risk a fall—Smollett. F. W. H. B. Scene From "WITHIN THE LAW Which will be the Easter Attraction at the Bowersock, Monday, April 13 STANDISH WITH E ARROW COLLAR 2 for 25¢ Cluett Psabody & Co. Inc. Makers THE COLLEGE BARBER On 14th Street Bert Wadham You Can Earn a Good Living and lay up some money too on graduation time. You can earn Business College good position get ready for your next job. Good position Free Employment Bureau at your services Best Business College. No vacations. LAWRENCE Business College Lawrence, Kansas. PROTSCH The Tailor THEY ARE HERE WATKINS NATIONAL BANK Capital $100,000 Surplus and profits $100,000 The Student Depository Mr. Baseball Fan Mail fifty cents to the Are you interested in the Varsity team,the fraternity leagues, and the inter-club league? If you are,you will want to get all the dope of the games. University Daily Kansan and have it delivered the rest of the school year, until June 5. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN ANNOUNCEMENTS There will be no meeting of the Mechanical Engineering Society this week. Pictures of the society may be had upon application at the mechanical drafting room in Marvin Hall. Hash House League team managers who have not done so should see to it that the list of their players is turned into the Daily Kansan, at once as the list will be published tomorrow, and should be complete. Seniors who did not get commencement invitations can get them from the committee up to the fifteenth. The committee is: Rose Dyer, Helen Alphin, Paul Serber, Floyd Devlin, Arthur Duston, and Sam Fairchild. All baseball K men will meet in Manager Hamilton's office tomorrow at 11 to elect a baseball captain. WANT ADS FOUND—Lady's white silk glove. For left hand. Call at Kanasn office. LOST—Silver purse, Alpha Delta Pi seal on back, lost on 3rd floor Fraser Thursday, Call B. 1835. LOST, STRAYED OR STOLEN— Will the ginko who stole the bunch of mule cartoons from the Kansan office please return same until we get them back. We'll stick to them back in the pigeon hole where you found them. Hank Maloy. Cottages in Estes Park for rent. X Care University Daily Kansas Junior Laws: Senior Laws: Junior LAWS: I have a limited number of Domestic Reliance Buildings and Damages. The prices are right. J. D. R. Miller 1041 Vl. street. Bell 2511—Adv. 129-3 Done By Alvin L. Babb 1334 Ohio St. Bell Phone 1574 W I have a number of Owen's Law Quizzer, Putnam's Law Quizzer, Haight's Law Quizzer. Be sure and speak to me before buying. J. D. R. Miller, 1041 Vt. St. B. 2511..Adv. Typewriting Done By Alvin L. Babb CITY CAFE 906 Mass. Strictly Home Cooking Ever try our Spaghetti Lunch? You'll like it. W.J. Francisco For MAYOR PROFESSIONAL CARDS He will appreciate your support. PROFESSIONAL CARDS W. C. MONNELLE, Physician and surgeon. Obsolete. Mass. Hospital of Indiana. Residence, 1346 Tenn. St. Bail 1023. Hall 803. I. F. BROCK, Optometrist and Specialist Office 802 Mass Sq. Bell phone 605-743-1955 DR. H. W. HAYNE, Oculist, Lawrence. HARRY REDING, M. D. Ear, koe. nose, Bobbie, Bell, Home 312 Home 313. Phone, Bell, I313 Home 312. G. A HAMMAN M. D. E. Eye, ear, and throat. B. HAMMAN M. D. E. Eye, ear, and throat. C. HAMMAN M. D. E. Eye, ear, and throat. D. DICK CLUB GUARANTEED. Dick Club GUARANTEED. Amazon **BRYON.** Dentist. Over Wilson's Drive Store. Bell Phone 507. R. B. BEOHTEL, M. D. D. O. 833 Mass sequentia Street. Both phones, office and phone numbers. G. W. JONES, A. M., M. D., D. Diasseis of Rutles II, Rutles I, A. B. Blige, Residence, 1920. DR. H. T. JONES. Room 12 M. A. A. Bldg. Residence 130 nenn. Phones 211. DR. H. L. CHAMBERS. Office over Outfitte Studio. Both phones. DR. BURT R. WHITE Osteopath Phones, Bell 938, Home 257, Office, 745 Mass. St. D. Ed. S. Warnors, Engraver, Watchmaker and Jeweler. Wares and Jewelry. Bell Phone Number: 719-360-8550. Mast. S. T. GILLISE, M. D. Office corner 892-754-1000 St. Residence 728 Indonesia Phone 506 CLASSIFIED Plumbers Phone Kennedy Plumbing Co., for Mazda lamps. 935, Mass. phone 688. Ladies Tailors MRS. MELLION, Dressmaking and Ladies Talorrington, Plumbers of 1411 St. Florida. Phone: 211-765-8000. Queen Oxy City College. System and sewing School. Office: 510-763-8292, Mrs. Oliver, Mrs. G. Mark Brown, 834 Kyl. Boll Hair Dressers Hairdressing, shampooing, scalp and facial massage, anamnothing, hair-fair goods, "Martialillo toilet preparations" For appointments, call 212-364-9500 or visit Hal Hair Design Shop, 927 Mass St. Barber Shops Go where they all go J. C. HOUK 913 Mass. Student's Co-op Club. $2.50 to $3.00 per week. 1840 KY. Geo, H. Vaneil. Stewart School. Around Mount Oread A reporter was transcribing a story on the typewriter. When he got half way through he was called to the telephone. Hank Maloy cartoonist, got at the typewriter in the meantime. The result: The Big Sister movement, which is being advanced by the Y. W. C. A., and which is to be put in practice next fall, is gaining strength rapidly. Thirty-five women have express their willingness to be "big sistersnow is the take for all goo men to com to the aid of the Party And all the little holes went to sleep in tye cheese, and the north wind sigher around the nouth corner of the old homestead And the gleeful songs of the birds penetrated thru it, and they moved into lumberjack also shifted nervously under the cover of the keg in the cellar. And once more the green cat let out a loud shrill call to its mate in the far away forest and the sun sank beneath the ruddy sky in the west all of which went to prove These beautiful spring days seem to be affecting some of the University students. Friday morning as Wilbur A. Fischer was leaving one of his classes he was heard to utter the following: "Spring, spring Beautiful thing, Just listen to the birdies sing." And to make it all the worse he claims that it is original. When the girls of the Chi Omega sorority decided that the yard around their house needed cleaning up they didn't call in a laborer to do the task. Far from it. Thursday afternoon every Chi Omega who had a "date," brought said date, "the girls of the sorority to me." As result a number of men are nusing blistered palms today and the Chi Omega yard is "spick and span." When the class in sociology visited the Kansas City Municipal Farm recently, Ryad Yelman discovered an old K. U. grad of 1907 doing time school up there," the prisoner said to Yeaman as he peered through the Spring Time is Kodak Time How many times have you said, "I'd give a dollar for a Kodak now?" Get one at Raymond's Drug Store SPRING SUITINGS FRANK KOCH TAILOR 727 Mass. A GOOD PLACE TO EAT AT ANDERSON'S OLD STAND JOHNSON & TUTTLE 715 PROPS. Mass. A. G. ALRICH Binding, Copper Plate Printing. Bubber Stamps, Engraving. Steal Die Embossing, Seals, Badges. McCOLLOCH'S Drug Store THE REXALL STORE. 744 Mass. Printing grated door out into the court yard where the others of the sociology class were playing ball, "and this is ending for a former law student." Funny how people will act on the first of April. Wednesday Mrs. E. S. Weatherby, who has a boy's rooming house at 1017 Indiana street, left three oranges in each boy's room. The next day the oranges were just as she had first left them except for signs of critical examination made by the boys to find if pepper had been hidden within. While 16 students of journalism were walking to Tonganoxia Saturday under the leadership of Prof. Merle Thorpe, a game of "spat and the kick" was started. Mr. Thorpe saw the mark on the shirt of the students remarked. "Gee, that's the first time I ever got to kick a prof." Harry McCormack, a freshman in the College last year who is now employed at Ames, Iowa, writes to Mount Oread friends that K. U. and Ames spirit cannot be compared except to Ames' disadvantage. "One would hardly know the College was here," he writes, "unless one happened to be an old resident. The town seldom hears of the school." It was at the last of the receptions given by the ladies of the University Faculty Thursday afternoon for the girl students that one of the women of the faculty remarked in her abstracted way at parting with a little group that she was so glad to see them there for the last time. Eleanor Myers to Speak The Y. W, C. A. will meet tomorrow in Myers Hall at 4:30. Eleanor Myers will lead the meeting and will visit with Mr. Ruffman and There." There will be a report of the nominating committee. After working strenuously for a week, Arthur Duston in the geology department has succeeded in identifying his fossil as belonging to the latyxophora lyxus, class Bchipodia, order Protomenida, family Orthidae. Jap Glaspac, a freshman, grew so fond of his distinctive little blue cap last fall that he continued to wear it right through the winter, although not during the day time. Jap has some very handsome black hair and a blue necklace, with the help of a necktie is more serviceable than a night cap. K. U. Calendar 7:30 Uni. Debating So., (110 Fra. Monday Tuesday Scholarships for Women 11:00 Assembly, Dean Wm. Draper Lewis, University of Pennsylvania School of Law. 3-4 Chancellor's open hour to faculty. 4:30 Y. M. C. A., "Here and There." Eleanor Myers. 7:30 Glee Club practice, (Fra.) 7:30 Y. M. C. A., "Miracles," Prof. R. A. Schwegler, (Myers Hall.) Applications for the scholarships open to women students for 1914-15 should be made to the committee before April 15. 4:30 Carole Francais, (306 Fra.) 4:30 Geological Club, (201 Ha.) 4:30 Practice Teachers' Meeting. (Miss Hall) 4:30 Vocations for College Women other than Teaching, first of series of talks by the Association of Collegiate Alumni. "Library Work," Miss Carrie M. Watson; "The Trained Nurse," Mrs. Mervin T. Sudler. (110 Fraser.) The scholarships offered are: The Marcella Howland Memorial School in Naperville to young women of the junior and senior classes of the College. The Eliza Matheson Innes Memorial Scholarship, $100. Open to women students of the College above 18 and other eligible students of the Graduate School. 7:30 Band practices, (Fraser.) 7:45 Civil Engineering Society. 7:50 8:00 K. U. Colorado Debate, "Immigration," Fraser chapel). 11:00 Entomological club (Mu). 5:30 Easter vacation begins. School resumes Tuesday at 8:00 a. m. The Daughters of the American Revolution Scholarship, $100. Open to women students of the College above the freshman year and to women students of the Graduate School. PETER H. SCHREIBER The scholarships offered are: The Association of Collegeiate Alumnae Scholarship, $50.00. Open to women of the junior and senior years of the College. The Caroline Mumford Winston memorial scholarship of $55 is open to women students of the College of classes above the freshman. The Lucinda Smith Buchan Memorial Scholarship maintained by the alumnae of the Pi Beta Phi sorority is a loan scholarship of $200. It is open to women students of the College. J. R. HOLMES will appreciate your support for MAYOR E. Galloo. Ida H. Hyde. Hannah Oliver Committee: Read the foreign travel ad in this paper.-Adv. NEW VAUDEVILLE THEATRE TONIGHT NEAL AND NEAL Nifty and Nonsensical Novelty Singing and Dancing . Heavy Weight Balancing KAUFMAN AND SAWTELLE Mixture Comedy, Music and Dancing Vaudevills Changes Mondays and Thursdays WARNER GREAT PHOTO PLAY In Three Parts THE MIDNIGHT STRIKE PICTURES CHANGED DAILY 2:30 Mattein Daily 2:30 2 Shows Each Night. Commencing Any Place, Any Time 10c One Dime 10c Millinery Style Show We have a style show in millinery every day. A new store filled with the new styles. STAR MILLINERY Mrs. McCormick 838 $ _{1/2} $ Mass. Special Prices Cal. sweet Naval oranges, doz. Cal. sweet Naval oranges, doz. Cal. sweet Naval oranges, doz. Cal. sweet Naval oranges, doz. Large Juicy Lemons, doz. 15c West Indies Limes, doz. 25c 16c Fancy Calarab igs, box. 35c 16c Fancy Coloranges, box. 20c 16c Bannas, 10 to 30c, doz. 10c Ve also carry a fine line of candies and cigars. See us for specialties. Bell, Phone 482. NEXT TO VAUDEVILL California Fruit Stand NEXT TO VAUDEVILLE FIRST: For publicity with efficiency of accomplishment along the lines of public sentiment and needs; ANNOUNCEMENT I wish to thank the citizens of Lawrence for the loyal support given me at the recent primary, and, now that no voter at the polls tomorrow may be in doubt as to what I stand for—what promises I have made and what I expect to do if elected, I hereby state that my department shall stand. SECOND: That I am not the candidate of any organization, faction, or clique and that I have made no single promise to any human being. THIRD: That all my time shall be devoted to the duties of office and that I will alwaysabor in the interests of every section of the city with fairness to them. W. W. CLEVELAND Candidate for Commissioner of Streets and Public Utilities. References exchanged. Address A young woman of education and experience in foreign travel will take a small party through Europe this summer on an extensive but comparatively inexpensive tour, leaving Kansas City, June first. Miss Allys, Care "Daily Kansan." Advertise in the Kansas Music Festival---Next Week Student Course Tickets $1.50 Four Great Concerts for the Price of One Get Tickets Now at The K. U. Post Office or from Fine Arts Students Student Tickets Exchanged at Woodward's, Tuesday, April 14th after 8 a.m. Bowersock Theater Monday, Easter, Apr. 13 Selvyn and Company with Bayard Veiller's World Wide Success WITHIN the LAW A Real Melodrama with a Big Story Full of Merriment and Life. Two years at Eltinge Theatre, New York. Greatest success New York has ever known Prices: 50c, 75c, $1, $1.50 Seats at Woodward & Co., Saturday MAIL ORDERS NOW Address, Sherman Wiggins, Mgr., City UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Next Sunday is Easter You'll want to "blossom out" in a new suit. You We an w nes. busin year. "I you new spr We want to sell it to you. That's what we are in the business for. If the merchandise we sell was not dependable, we could not have been in business here so long. If it had been "just ordinary" our business would not have grown much larger each year. "The proof of the pudding is in the eating." Come in tomorrow and let us show you new spring suits that are superior. Such well known lines as "Hirsh-Wickwire" 'Society Brand"— "Garson-Meyer" and "Styleplus" are here complete. It will be easy for you to make a selection. Our tailor is an expert.. We guarantee the fit of every suit we sell. Come in and see the new Easter styles we're showing $17 $20 $25 and $30 Easter Footwear Your Easter Hat $17, $20, $25, and $30 will be easily found in our large assortment. A great many men think the hat is the hardest part of their costume to select. Our showing this spring is so large and varied that it will surprise you how quickly you can make your decision. Stop in and try on some of the classy new styles priced at $3 and $3.50 Ask to see the new Kite Kap at $1.50 Silk Shirts That finishing touch to your Easter costume should be selected with a thought for comfort. The new English and French lasts we're showing you'll find as comfortable as the old shoes you discard. We have them in tan—chocolate and black—some with rubber soles and heels and others with rubber heels only. You'll find "Nettleton's" here exclusively priced at $6. The "Ober's Special" shoes and oxfords at $5. Others as low at $3.50. All guaranteed. New Neckwear We have just received a large shipment of crisp new patterns from New York. The new Tango shades are here galore. The new silk crepes in multi-colored combinations, new sun burst effects and plain colors. The largest assortment in the city—priced at 50c. Other high grade imported silks and patterns at 75c and $1.00. Ober's HEAD-TO-FOOT OUT-FITTERS Why not enjoy the comforts of a beautiful silk shirt for this Easter? We have a fine assortment of exclusive new patterns. Imported Silks at $3.50 and $5. A dandy China silk at $2.50—The colors are guaranteed. High Grade Madras and Percale Shirts at $1.50, $2, $2.25, and $2.50. Among these you'll find the newest in laundried cuffs.—French cuffs and reversible cuffs. Plain negligee and mushroom pleates. KANSAS VOTERS MAY LEARN HOW BY MAIL Young Citizens Will Be Offered Political Science Courses by K. U. To make the citizens of Kansas the most intelligent voters in the country, will be the purpose of a special correspondence course in citizenship planned by Chancellor Strong under the direction of the Division of Extension of the University of Kansas. It will be open to all citizens of the state, who are so than that correspondence voice might profit it, and at the same time, it will aim to teach the most elementary principles of political science. "Many women, otherwise good citizens, take no interest in voting, because they don't understand the processes of government," said Dr. Strong. "In this respect they are inconsistent with those who rule more than many men, who vote because their fatherids, whether they know what they're voting for or not. Indeed this course may be taken with benefit by most men voters." The course will be compiled by instructors in the department of political science, who will be guided in their choice of elementary principles and will be enrolled in their classes. It will include an outline of the American scheme of federal government, and the processes by which the elective principle is applied in the United States. The elective election will be emphasized and the means by which politicians undertake to win elections will be made plain. While in Joplin last Tuesday, where he was invited to address a club of mine owners and operators, Prof. Erasmus Haworth met two K. U. graduates, Wilford Keper, '06, and Oliver M. Wampler, '06, Both Mr. Keper and Mr. Wampler were mining engineers from their mining engineering, and are "making good" in mining work near Joplin. HAWORTH MEETS GRADUATES AT JOPLIN MINERS' CLUB There appears in this paper an ad relating to a cure sure it is it if interested—Ady. For Ladies Only! FRANK RIGGS WINS IN ONE-CLUB TOURNAMENT The second event in the schedule of the Oread Golf Club, the one-club tournament, which was completed Saturday, was won by Frank Briggs. His net score for the eighteen holes was 75. The second best score was made by Otta Graber, who took in the tournament. The Tournament proved a popular one, twenty players taking part in the contest. The next event on the spring schedule of the golf club will be a four-ball foursome. It will be a handicap event and will be played off during the present week. Players should arrange the foursomes mutually. The score of each team of two players should be kept on a separate card, and the cards must be turned in to members of the tournament. If the cards are the end of the book the cards will be drawn by lot and played against one another in regular tournament form, and the winner determined. Owing to the recent heavy rains the golf course has not been put in as good condition as was hoped for at this time. The club has purchased a heavy roller, however and the greens are being rolled whenever the weather permits. The putting greens have already been rolled several times, and the fair greens will be treated in a similar manner. Social Notes The last tea of the series given by the faculty women for the girls of the University was held Thursday afternoon in Haworth Hall from 3 to 5:30. Easter lilies and similas were used to decorate the long tea table. More than a hundred and fifty guests called during the afternoon. Mrs. Strong, Mrs. Haworth, and Mrs. Kester received. The Allemania entertained with a one o'clock luncheon Saturday in honor of their chaperon, Dr. Charles, of the botany department. Mr. Frank Jenkins, of Tonganoxie, and Fred Teel, of Wellsville, were guests at the Alpha Delta Pi house over the week-end. Moving Picture Plays Wanted $10 to $100 each. Big demand! Send twenty-five cents for alphabetically arranged list of names and addresses of prominent film producing companies. The Aytuzee Producers' List, Box 347, Pueblo, Colorado—Adv. Moving Picture Plays Wanted Buy it in Lawrence. TWO DOZEN TRACK MEN GO OUT FOR PRACTICE Two dozen track men were out for practice Friday night and made the cinders fly on McCook field. Large squads are reporting daily and the track outlook is brighter than usual. The first outdoor event will be the Drake relay games at Des Moines, April 18. Coach Hamilton expects to take one or two teams for the event. ALUMNUS WILL COACH K.U. PUBLIC SPEAKERS Prof. Arthur MacMurry Resigns at Ames to Head Department at K.U. Kansas rejoices when one of her sons who has distinguished himself abroad comes home again to serve his state. And when Prof. Arthur Sunny, Kay Ullrich, Miles Hickman new duties as head of the public speaking department of the University of Kansas, in September, 1914, there will be rejoicing among the students and friends of the University who know Professor MacMurray, an alumnus who has distinguished himself in his line of work, outside, as he distinguished himself in debating and athletics while attending the university. He has just received the position of forensic at awa State College at Ames, to take up his work here. Professor MacMurray went to Ames in 1908 and has built up forenices at that college, until it admittedly has the best department in the state of Iowa. The board of regents of the University tried to get him last year, but didn't offer enough inducement. Before going to Ames he lectured for three years for the Redpath Lyceum Bureau, with headquarters at the school. He has also tutored a school he has had particular success in debate coaching, and turned out teams that in the past few years have been associated with educated Drake and Grinnell, and won many state and interstate prizes. While at the University of Kansas, Professor MacMurray participates in athletics, and won his "K" in both football and track. He was prominent in scholarship also. But his best work was done on the K. U. debating team. He won several intercollegiate debates. The I. S. C. Student, the student's purpose is to get the job. The Profes- sor, Marc Murray, departures. His wide experience in student activities have made him a popular instructor, and under his direction the department of forensics at Ames uses them as a means of teaching friends are predicting a like success for Professor MacMurray at K. U. mac Murrays departure: "The resignation of Prof. Arthur MacMurray from his position at the head of the public speaking department at Iowa State College is being received everywhere on the campus with regard and, the current emphatic remark is that 'Ames doesn't seem to be able to keep her good men.'" "This remark is not unsupported by facts. In the years past many of I. S. C.'s most promising men have gone to other colleges and universities, replaced by men of the old college while others have momentally asleep and couldn't get a job elsewhere have been allowed to remain. "This condition is a grave one. While it is not as aggrudated as it was in the past, it ought to be remedied. The student body of the college and the people of the state who sent them here are looking to the university for help on their backs on the 'penny wise and pound foolish' policy. Now is the time to show that Iowa at least WANTS to keep her best men." 1915—Glad to get back to college? 1916—You bet. I worked all summer. Pennsylvania Punch Bowl. Send the Daily Kansan home. THIS MORNING'S EXPRESS Brought in a fresh shipment of ALLEGRETTIS 65c the pound The only real original Allegretti Try a box of these delicious candies CARROLL'S 709 MASS. ST PHONE 608 709 MASS. ST SPECIALS AT LEE'S --- EVERY NIGHT STATE HISTORICAL SOCIETY T O P E K A K A N UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN VOLUME XI. WONOA M'COSKRIE QUEEN OF K.U.'S MAY UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS TUESDAY AFTERNOON,APRIL 7,1914. Senior Women Elect Leader of Festival; but Won't Tell Whom THEY VOTED ON THREE GIRLS NUMBER 130 Miss McCoskrie, Leta Harsell and Beronice McFarland Candidates Discuss Royal Hair Winona McCoskrie was chosen Queen of the May at an election held in Fraser Hall today by more than fifty girls of the senior class. Only three contestants were nominated for the honor, Winona McCoskrie, Leta Harsell, and Berenice McFarland. A suggestion was made and sustained by a number of the girls, that the Queen confine her flowing locks in accordance with the dictates of the fashionable coiffure. A motion was then made and carried by a unanimous decision, the removal of queenly locks be left to the discretion of the queen herself. A motion was then made to keep the election a "dead secret" until the day before the Pinafore performance, but the result of the election was well known on the hill this afternoon. Miss McCrieskie is senior law student from Chanute. She is only the woman in the School of Law. A motion was then entered to count the ballots at once. It received ten seconds and a unanimous vote of approval, so the little band waited in silence while the ballots were counted; the majority of votes to one of the three. TWO WILL LECTURE ON WOMEN'S VOCATIONS Mrs. Sudler and Miss Watsor to Tell of Other Callings Than Teaching DEAN LEWIS ADVISES ABOUT PROFESSIONS The first two lectures of the series on vocational opportunities for women graduates other than teaching, will be given tomorrow afternoon in Room 110. Fraser, under the leadership of Association of Collegiate Alumnae. Head of Pennsylvania Law Schoo Says One Must Learn Capabilities An address filled with practical advice to young people who expect to enter professions was delivered by Dean William Draper Lewis, of the University of Pennsylvania School of Law, in chapel this morning. He declared that he did not have much confidence in the notion that one is naturally fitted for this or that you are not, and that the one that must learn to recognize his capabilities and act intelligently upon them. "Don't avoid obstacles, surmount them; if you can't do that, go back. don't try to go around; there is no obstacle that is not physical. Mrs. M. T. Sudler will talk on opportunities for trained nurses and hospital dieticians. Miss Carrie Watson will speak about libraries and will answer the lectures, questions will be answered about the work talked of. "Seize any real chance to widen effectively your opportunities: opportunity comes to the man who arranges to meet it. "In a democracy the citizen should be able at all times to express himself freely on public questions. Don't sell this, your birthright, as a potage of personal success no matter how savvy its pecuniary flavor. "The reward of the man or woman, who lives for ideals and for others rather than himself is the sure ability to make the man with which others will be tempted. You will act like a Christian and gentleman in a great crisis." The week following Dr. Margaree L. Johnson will lecture on "Playground Work" and Miss Benson on "Opportunities in Applied Design." In dome the science work and journalism will be given the third week. WILL DEFEND QUESTION HERE KANSAS WILL DEBATE TWO TOMORROW NIGHT Will Meet Colorado in Fraser Hall and Oklahoma at Norman Olney, Matttoon, and Shinn to Argue for One-House Legislature—Other Team Has Negative The annual triangular debate between the Universities of Kansas, Colorado, and Oklahoma is tomorrow. The debates will be held by the unicameral legislature, question The debate with Colorado's team, in the chapel room of Fraser Hall, will start at 8:00 o'clock. The admission charge is twenty-five cents, but student tickets will admit. Dr. W. L. Burdick, of the School of Law, will preside. The question: "Resolved, that the several states should adopt a unicameral form of legislature." Colorado, represented by King, Black, and Dowden, will argue negatively. The K. U. team, Olney, Mattei and Shinn, will defend the question. Kansas has not defeated Colorado in debate since 1908, and Prof. H. T. Hill, of the public speaking department, thinks that this is the year to turn the trick. The Aggies defeated Colorado recently, and that is another reason why Professor Hill is so anxious to have his men win. A banquet will be held after the debate in honor of the visitors. Those participating will be the visiting team, King, Kiing-li, Team B, team, Oleyn, Matton, and Shim; the three judges; Dr. W. L. Burick, Professors C. A. Dykstra, R. D. O'Leary, D. C. Croissant, and Chas. H. Talbot; and the faculty representative from Colo-teria Dyskstra will act as tostmaster. Uncle Jimmy Green, Dean of the School of Law, Patron Saint of K. U. Football, who was seventy-two years old yesterday. The School of Law celebrated the occasion with a banquet. While the debate is in progress i. Fraser Hall, another K. U. team will be arguing the opposite side at Norman. O. T. Atherton left this morning via his home in Emporia. he other B. members in D. P. C. and A. Frank, to leave this evening via Kansas City. They will arrive in Oklahoma City tomorrow at 9:30 a. m. and proceed to Norman in the afternoon. KANSAS TO COMPETE IN POOL Will Swim Against Manhattan Ages- spring in Rohnstein, Gymnasium Kansas may meet the Aggies in he swimming pool this spring. Arrangement was made last winter for a dual meet in wrestling and swimming, but the K. S. A. C. wrestler that part of the meet was called off. The Kansas swimmers will hold tryouts for the team this week and the swimmers expect to complete all tryouts with the Aggies in a few days. NAISMITH RETURNS FROM BASKETBALL CONVENTION Dr. James Naimith has returned from a trip to New York, where he attended the meeting of the rules committee on basketball. Dr. Naimith also attended a meeting of the board of the St. Louis Education at St. Louis Saturday. If the sun comes out and dries the Oread golf course a four-ball four-some tournament will be played this week. The entries will be posted according to handicaps and medal score will be counted. K. U. Dames to Meet The K. U. Dames will meet with M. C, R Watson, 945 Illinois street, Wednesday, April 8, at 3:00 p. m. GOLF TOURNAMENT IS UP TO OLD SOL HIMSELF Dr. and Mrs. Henhall, of Osborne, their daughter, Dordy, over the water. “There were but a few changes in the basketball rules,” said Dr. Naiamsh as today. The committee would well satisfied with the rules as they stand. A "last dance" in thevy room was taken by the summit for celebrations and reunions during commencement week. A dance will be held in Robinson Gymnasium on the Tuesday night of commencement week. One class is contemplating a memorial day service but has made no plans. A "Last Dance" in the Gym Send the Daily Kansan home 40 K. U. Dames to Meet LAWS HONOR UNCLE JIMMY GREEN K. U. BREAD INVESTIGATOR GETS YALE SCHOLARSHIP Edward Kohman, '12. Passes Quiz With Highest Grades Ever— Was Fellow Here Edward Kohman. '12 has just passed the examination for the Henry Bradford Loomis fellowship in chemistry at Yale with the highest grades that have ever been made in that examination. While in the University of Kansas Mr. Kohman made Phi Beta Kappa, Sigma Xi, and was a member of the Chi Chi Sigma chemical fraternity. Shipments of liquid air are leaving the chemistry building daily for various points in Mississippi. The flasks are shipped from Lawrence to Chicago, where they are transferred to a through train for the south. KANSAS LIQUID AIR USED BY PROF. PATTY IN SOUTH He worked for some time in the industrial research department under the late Dr. R. K. Duncan on a bread fellowship, granted by the Board of Appraisal. His work with salt-rising bread was particularly successful. The air is being used by W. B. Patty of Liberty, Ohio, who is touring the south this spring giving lectures on liquid air, radium and wireless telegraphy. All the liquid air used by him in his lectures is from the department of chemistry at the University of Kansas. Dr. James Naismith will lecture on resuscitation from electric shock, and will give a demonstration of the use of the pulmator at the meeting of the Society to be held in Room 101, Mariam Hall, at 7:30 tomorrow evening. The society will reconsider the adoption of a constitution providing for the formation of an association of all the engineering societies and the publication of an engineering journal. NAISMITH WILL EXPLAIN USE OF THE PULMOTOR Won't Meet Classes Prof. H, T. Hill, of the department of public speaking, will not meet his classes the remainder of this week owing to the fact that he leaves this evening for Oklahoma with the debating team. Mrs. F. H. Lourey, of Frankfort spent last week-end with her daughter, Maude Lourey. REPORTS ON MAJOR SYSTEM Faculty Sub-Committee Reports to Heads of College Departments A faculty sub-committee to recommend changes in the College major system turned in its report to a committee of department heads yesterday. This committee will pass upon recommendations of the sub-committee. Professors J. N. Van der Vries, of the mathematics department; H. C Allen, of the chemistry department; H. A. Mills, economics department; H. A. Miller, education department, and Dean Ellin Templin, of the College, compose the sub-committee WANTS MONEY AND DATES Prom Managers Urge Juniors to Pay Up, Promising Fair Weather and No Cabs and Flowers The finance committee for the junior prom urges all juniors to come in and pay their dues at once, as the committee is in need of the money. Seniors are also requested to turn in their dates at once. The report of the committee is not for publication until the plan has been adopted by the faculty. It is made that action will be taken soon. "We are expecting a change in the weather before April 17, so the fellows don't need to worry about those weather conditions," said a committee-man this morning. The members of the finance committee will be at the check stand every morning this week to receive dues. HIGH SCHOOL DEBATERS TO DECIDE SEMI-FINALS The semi-finals in the high school debating league will be held Friday and Saturday, April 10 and 11. In the first round of the interscholastic debate tournament, the Indor-Darling and Burlington were the winners. Burlington and Caney will clash Friday night, and El Dorado and Solomon Saturday night. The winners of two contests will come to awarders for May to debate for the state honors. Postpone Ball Game The opening of the Pan-Hellenic baseball league was postponed today because of wet grounds. The Betsas needed to start the season this afternoon. Send the Daily Kansan home. DECIDE UPON PLANS FOR INTER-FRATERNITY DEBATE Pan-Hellenic Council Instructs the Greeks to Pick Orators to Represent Each Society The Pan-Hellenic Council has made arrangements for the inter-fraternity debate in May. Each fraternity was instructed to elect a debater this week and the orators will meet on Thursday, time and subject for the talk fest. The plan is to divide the eight fraternities into two equal squads and the best taker will be chosen from the eight representatives. The debate will be for the Pan-Hellenic Association, which has won the fraternity which wins the cup three times gains permanent possession of the trophy. PRESIDENT OF ALUMNI FAVOROS STUDENT UNION the president of the University of Kansas Alumni Association believes that the Student Union idea is a good one, and backs up his belief with the actual cash wherewith the idea is earned and a permanent union developed. John A. Prescott is the Alumni Association president. When he was here last Friday to give an economics lecture, he visited the Student Union and met with it that he left ten dollars as his share towards its maintenance. Lawrence water is wholesome according to the State Water Analysists and Prof. F. H. Billings, of the biology department of the University. LAWRENCE WATER IS FREE FROM HARMFUIL BACTERIA "When we say wholesome," said Professor Billings today, "we mean that the water does not contain any harmful bacteria. Muddy water is often more wholesome than clear water. We have made some recent use of difference water and have been unable to find any harmful bacteria in it." Hargiss Can't Meet Classes CARRY these classes. H. W. Hinsley who takes his arm in the gymnasium yesterday morning, is able to be up today but will not meet his classes for several days. Dr. Naismith will meet the gymnasium classes this week. Mrs. J. B. Watkins will give a tea for the Presbyterian girls Friday afternoon at her home on Louisiana street. LAWS CELEBRATE UNCLE JIMMY DAY Honor Seventy-Second Birthday of Their Dean at Annual Banquet GOVERNOR HODGES SPEAKS Proud of Dean Green—Chief State's Executive Says Kansas is Justice Johnson Talks Uncle Jimmy Green, the grand old man of K. U., was seventy-two years old yesterday. Last night at the Eldridge house his boys gathered to do him honor at the ninth annual Uncle Jimmy Day banquet. Governor Praises Dean A six course dinner was served, including baked lake trout, roast young turkey, and punch a la Blackstone. A letter of congratulations was read from Prof. W. E. Higgins who is in England. Governor Hodges was called upon and made a short talk in which he called Dean Green the livest wire in the University. **Gandolf Rimes Dean** "The Church of the Uncle Jimmy," said its chief executive. "I wish him seventy-two more years of youth so that he may be able to live out a full rounded life. It gives me great pleasure to come here this evening to pay tribute to the man of Kansas, Uncle Jimmy Green." "Men are mistaken who think that money is all, that fame is all," said Chancellor Strong. "I want to impress on you that no man can do can be impressed to his country than in moulding its youth. Long life to Judge Green." Mr. W. W. A. Johnston, chief justice of the Supreme Court of Kansas, expressed himself as pleased to come to Lawrence between sessions of court to hear "that great public benefit for whom everybody loves, Uncle Jimmy Green." Chief Justice on Uncle Jimmy "The truth," he added, "does not swell his head, nor narrow his influence with the boys nor with all mankind. He is the same, sympathetic, broadminded, Uncle Jimmy that he has always been." Hon. George A. Neeley, representative from the seventh district of Kansas, said he expected to find covered upon a tomb many years from not hiscription, "Uncle impress in the state of Kansas." in introducing ar. W. l. Burlick of the School of Law to maestroster Lazack read the following telegram- Woodward, H. C.; boutique "We simply rely on our inability to attend the ninth annual Uncle Jimmy Day banquet. Would like to hear Doc, Burck need a few good ones. Woodrow Wilson, Champ wark, W. J, Bryan." Kenneth K. Simmons, graduate of the law school last year said he thought the secret of Dean Green's success was that, in the words of the poem, he had lived in a house by the road and been a friend to man. Suffice it to say that they certainly used some coworkers. C. C. Stewart of the senior law class spoke on the subject, "Ex Post facto," and Freeman Alexan prophetically said that "All That Glitters is Not Gold." The Student Speak Harland Hutchings spoke on behalf of the junior laws on the subject. "In the Embryo." When the toastmaster introduced Dean Green, the first gentleman of America, the cheering was loud and long. The room was darkened and a light flashed on a portrait of Uncle Jimmy in the far end of the room. "I owe a great deal to this law school," he said in a quiet voice. "It is a source to me of perpetual youth. Though I am seventy-two years old today I feel as you now as I did when I began my work on the bill. That can be accounted for by my association with you, young men, drawing from you your youthful spirit. I am deeply grateful to all of you." Today is a holiday in the School of Law and we continue the celebration in honor of our teachers. GRADUATE STUDENT WILL UMPIRE FOR PAN-Hellenic Hugo Wedel, a student in the graduate school was elected umpire for the Pan-Hellenic baseball league which opens tomorrow afternoon. The first game will be between the two teams. The games' varieties will be; Betas, Householder and Strothers; Phi Gams, Craig and Wickstroms; Send the Daily Kansan home. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Official student paper of the University of Illinois EDITORIAL STAFF JOHN C. MADENN Editor-in-Chairs HARBON HLSON Associate Editor B. HENDERSON High School Editor FRANK B. HENDERSON High School Editor LANDON LAUB Sport Editor REPORTORIAL STAFF BUSINESS EDWIN ANELLI Business Manager RAT EYEHORN Circulation Manager JOB BISHOP Advertising JOB CHEF Advertising CARL PARKER Advertising CARL SAPPEN Advertising POKERCITY SAM DORNEY HENRY MALEY JAY GREENBERD CHARLES Gibson HENRICH CROWNER LUCIE HILMERGER RUCE CLAYER LAWRENCE SMITH WILLIAM S. CADY CLARETON GREG HENN CALVIN LAMBERT entered by second-class mail matter in reference to the above case. Reference, Kansas, under the list of March Published in the afternoon five times a week, by students of the University of Kanaas, from the press of the department of Journalism. Subscription price $2.50 per year, discount: 10% term, $1.90 Phone, Bell K. U. 25. Address all communications to UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Lawrence, Kans. The Daily Kansan aims to picture the undergraduate at work to go further. The nearly printing the news by standing up for the injustices; to be clean; to be cheerful; to be more serious problems to user heads; to be able to graduate; to the students of the University. All your strength is in your union. All your danger is in discord.—Long fellow. WHO GOES? TUESDAY, APRIL 7, 1914 The call for junior prom fees should make every loyal 1915 man dig for his check book and congratulate himself on his resolution to be a real sport for once, at least. For six years K. U. debaters have met Colorado representatives and been defeated each time. It has been monotonous, to suggest the more obvious comment. Wednesday night we meet them again and it is our guess that the worm is about due for that occasional lurp. The debate will be held in Fraser Hall, enterprise tickets will admit, and a goodly number of students will probably regret the fact that they stayed at home and thus missed seeing the usually victorious Colorado men defeated. ANOTHER WINNER COMING Wednesday will be a mighty good time to attend a real debate. THE OPENING of the baseball season was auspicious. With all the material developed by the various leagues last spring and with all the hard hitting Varsity men, the list of Kansas victories should lengthen rapidly. AN ACTUAL BEGINNING The permanent Union committee from the Council seems to acquire a notion from somewhere that it should really work out a plan to present to the incoming Council next month. All hall! Waiting another decade or so far a Union was never necessary and such an idea should not be tolerated. Work is the prerequisite for the big building, and the next Council should be as anxious to push the plans to completion as the present committee is to prepare the tentative scheme. K. U. PRESENTS TO K. U.— Speaking of memorials, the University authorities are planting one of the best remembrances possible along the walk to Marvin Hall. Along in 1956 when the engineers gather around the totem pole Commencement week, the classmates of 1914 will wonder why they didn't think of the shade tree plan first—and leave a little memorial of their own to the University. THE "BIG SISTER" MOVEMENT If there is any one time that a student feels in need of friends, advice, and companionship, it is during the first week of school in September. The "big sister" movement has a great work before it in trying to take away that homesick feeling. University women should be sure that they do not intend to shirk any responsibilities before they enroll in the "big sister" cause, but at that there should be no trouble in finding seventy-five women who are willing and anxious to make the freshman girls feel at home in Lawrence next fall. In join. It always make one feel good to do good. The word has a familiar sound but when and where was it last heard, and what does it mean, anyway? Ah yes, it was three months ago—three long and weary months. We packed our suit cases and started home for a two weeks session of mother's cooking, family reunions, skating, and sweet idleness. Since then we have lived through quiz week, enrollment day, College day (requests in pace!) an encounter with the Lawrence city government, the opening of a Student Union, spring fever, vindication of the week-night date rule, and goodness knows how many other exciting and exhausting events. And just when it seems as if we simply couldn't bear our manifold and increasing burdens another day, along comes a beneficient faculty at whose actions we are sometimes prone to tail in our peevish, ungrateful way, easing the strain with a little vacation by way of an Easter gift. VACATION It is not, to be sure, a magnificent half-month affair, such as is required to prepare for and recover from the merry Yule tide, but it is something, four days in all—a sort of augmented week-end, so to speak. It will give us time to get over the effects of the inevitable pre-vacation quizzes, without, however letting us forget everything we ever knew, so that it would take us a week to get started again. Spring has generally come to stay by this time (better knock wood when you read this) and all conditions are favorable for a pleasant time to be had by all, as the country correspondents puts it. In short, since we can't hope for anything better for some months, let us give thanks for Easter vacation. Why not a woman's contest? We have woman's athletics and woman's dramatics. Why not woman's oratorv? SPEECHES FOR WOMEN! A university oratorical contest for women would solve every real problem in the present difficulty situation. It would give university women a fair opportunity for platform success, an opportunity which they do not possess today in competition. It would place the present contests on a fair basis of judgment without impossible comparisons. Bottle green clothes is the doped color of style for this spring, but how in tarnation can a Kansan find out what that is? Among the names of couples licensed to wed in Joplin in a last week's paper are the appropriate ones, Manlove and Carassa. Every college in Michigan has a successful woman's oratorical contest. Why not the university?—Michigan Daily. One of the meantest persons in the world is the landlady who plays "Home Sweet Home" along about eight when a fellow has his bribe. Who cares about the Panama canal so long as the h. c. of l. is cutting capers with the alimentary canal? ENDS AND ODDLETS The time is at hand when Dandelion Greens bats for Hash in the "86" league. Champ Clark to President Wilson alluding to his antagonism for toll repeal: "Now there is nothing personal in this matter." "Mr. Mann continues to present a solid front to the enemy."—Headline. Stiff bosomed shirt probably. PESTHER M. CLARK, FORMER STUDENT Assistant in the Extension Department. WITH K. U. POETS 4 PRAYER With their poor toys; while I have some stepstall still. Lord God, use I shall cease to be of usc In this world, where the Fates play taste and loose To shield the weak, when men would do them ill: While still the blood within my veins runs red. And I can serve with hand, and heart, and head. While I have still my senses, and some tell To use for God and man, as I see fit— Then let it the Shadow fall upon So I may go in peace to mine owe Ice I grow, old and helpless, to depend Upon the charity of some good friend MEDALS FOR SCHOLARS the world forgetting, as the word forates. Leaving this life's joy with no vain re- sults. The ever greater recognition, that is accorded to those who engage in the so-called outside activities, is undoubtedly one of the strong factors attracting students to these in preference to their studies. In order to be effective for a man or woman to enter athletics, debating, dramatics, and most other activities, in the shape of W's, fobs, medals, prizes and the like; but attempts to stimulate scholarship in this fashion are few and far between. Without doubt, it is a sad commonality that such means should be necessary to secure interest in scholarship. But we must face conditions as they exist; we must acknowledge the fact that recognition is one of the strongest stimuli to effort on the part of the average American student, usually attracting men and women to outside activities to the detriment of their studies. In a certain sense Phi Beta Kappa, Tau Beta Pta, and other honorary societies recognize and reward excellence in intellectual pursuits, but they are private organizations by their elections official recognition of scholarship. What we then propose is that the University institute a number of medals and prizes of various kinds to be conferred upon those, who by their work in various fields of undergraduate scholarship have won. Were the elections to be made by the faculty and prominence given to the awards, we feel certain that a greater interest in scholarship would be reawakened. The English universities and some of our Eastern universities have long offered medals and awards to colleent results. Should our faculty understand this, it will achieve a double result the recognition of true scholarship and the stimulation of interest and enthusiasm in intellectual pursuits—Wisconsin Cardinal. THEY. Year after year the criticism has been made that too many News editorials and communications are destructive and not constructive—that faults existing here and there in the University are pointed out a damned, but not confused. A stir demanded, but not convinced of some error is met with praise, but not with results. A plea for an intellectual awakening brings much commendation, and as many empty concert and lecture seats as before. This state of affairs may be ascribed very largely to a certain peculiarity of human nature that makes every man deeply impressed with the value of criticisms or suggestions—to every one else except himself. What should be done such and through others reads or hears. Very true, he says earnestly to himself, and I hope They do it. He believes that it is the right thing to do, but feels somehow that it can be done without him. This is the trait that prompts a man to run an automobile recklessly, to drive an airplane with his hands off the control, to swim far out in a rough sea, with the absolute assurance that some miraculous power will preserve him in trouble throughout another danger, although they perish. He hears that the scholarship standard is low, and sincerely believes that. They should raise it. He learns that the attendance at the baseball games has been poor, and is indignant that They have not been more enthusiastic. He is told that a world-famous lecturer has received scant attention, and hopes that They will not behave so shabbiily in future. With the sublime egotism in their meers the college college, by the need of Their conversion. There are things to be done here at Yale. There are conditions to be improved, ideas to be spread abroad, ideals to be cherished. THEY cannot do it. "Thou are the man."-Yale News A married man and his money are soon parted.-Pennsylvania Punch Bowl. Applications for the scholarships open to women students for 1914-15 should be made to the committee before April 15. Scholarships for Women The Marecella Howland Memorial Scholarship, $87.50. Open to young women of the junior and senior classes of the College. The scholarships offered are: The Eliza Mathesson Innes Memorial Scholarship, $100. Open to women students of the College above and to students of the Graduate School. The Daughters of the American Revolution Scholarship, $110. Open to women students of the College above the freshman year and to women students of the Graduate School. The Association of Collegiate Alumnae Scholarship, $50.00. Open to women of the junior and senior years of the College. The Caroline Mumford Winston memorial scholarship of $35 is open to women students of the College of classes above the freshman. The Lucinda Smith Buchan Memorial Scholarship maintained by the alumnae of the Pi Beta Phi sorority is a loan scholarship of $200. It is open to women students of the College. Committee: E. Galloo. Ida H. Hyde. Hannah Oliver Limeade, 5c. at Barber & Son's fountain. We use Wiedemann's ice cream and serve every drink in a clean glass.—Ady Bert Wadham STANDISH INC. ARROW COLLAR 2 for 25¢ Cluett Peabody & Co. Inc. Makers THE COLLEGE BARBER On 14th Street You Can Earn a Good Living and lay up some money too, on graduation from the Lawrence Business College. Enrol at once: Employment Bureau; Employment Bureau at your service. Write for catalog to Karsen's oldest and best names. LAWRENCE Business College Lawrence, Kansas. PROTSCH The Tailor THEY ARE HERE WATKINS NATIONAL BANK Capital $100,000 Surplus and profits $100,000 The Student Depository ANDERSON'S OLD STAND A GOOD PLACE TO EAT AT JOHNSON & TUTTLE 715 PROPS. Mass. MAN IN A TUXEDO WASHING A WOMAN'S HAT. MAN IN A TOPHAT HOLDING A COAT. Copyright Hart Schaffner & Marx FOR evening wear you simply must see the new dinner and full dress suits received from Hart Schaffner & Marx There are some new features in designing these goods that make them especially attractive. New models for young men Suits silk lined $35, $40 Sack suits and Spring overcoats $18, $20, and $25 PECKHAMS Heid Caps This store is the home of Hart Schaffner & Marx Clothes Regal Shoes A. G. ALRICH Printing McCOLLOCH'S Drug Store THE REXALL STORE. SPRING SUITINGS FRANK KOCH TAILOR 727 Mass. Binding, Copper Plate Printing, Bubber Stamps, Engraving, Steal Die Embossing, Seals, Badges. 744 Mass. Change of Program AURORA A Vitagraph Featuring Today Dorothy Kelly and Willia Humphrey Also "In a Hoss Country" And "For the Sake of a Girl" A Ballicking Comedy Music Festival----Next Week Student Course Tickets $1.50 Four Great Concerts for the Price of One Get Tickets Now at The K. U. Post Office or from Fine Arts Students Student Tickets Exchanged at Woodward's, Tuesday, April 14th after 8 a. m. --- UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Social Notes Sigma Phi Sigma was pledged Robert L. Bear, of Ponca City, Okla. Alpha Tau Omega entertained with a dinner-dance at the chapter house Friday night. Martie Ketels and Clara Powell entertained the Mu Phi Epsilon musical sorcerity and a few guests with an afternoon party Friday at the ketels home on Kentucky street. Musk and thimbles took up the afternoon. Sigma Phi Sigma gave its annual saturday evening at Eke's Hall. Stigma Chi Initiated William Beall of Grantville Saturday morning. The Phi Delta Theta fraternity entertained with a victrola party Sunday evening. Pt Ulipaon entertained with it, fourth annual Stunt Night party at the chapter house Friday night. At six o'clock a five course dinner was served to two guests, and at six o'clock the freshmen put on a program of seven stunts. Dancing began at ten o'clock. Professor and Mrs. Bruckmiller and Mrs. Jennie Mitchell chaperoned the party. Out of town guests were Helen Ridway, Helen Turner, James Robertson, and Dr. and Mrs. Virgil McCarty. ANNOUNCEMENTS Seniors who did not get commencement invitations can get them from the committee up to the fifteenth. The committee is: Rose Dyer, Helen Alphin, Paul Serber, Floyd Devlin, Arthur Duston, and Sam Fairchild. Prof. P. F. Walker's class on first aid to injured, for campfire and eight weeks club classes, will meet Wednesday of Thursday at 4:30 in Myers Hall. WANT ADS LOST—Silver purse, Alpha Delta Pi seal on back, lost on 3rd floor Fraser Thursday. Call B. 1855. 129-3 Colorado-Kansas debate, tomorrow night, Fraser Hall, 8 o'clock—Adv. Saturday Evening Post—Tomorrow—Grigges—Adv. Saturday Evening Post—Tomorrow—Griggs—Adv. Colorado-Kansas debate, tomorrow night, Fraser Hall, 8 o'clock—Adv. PROFESSIONAL CARDS PROFESSIONAL W. C. M-COCL0, Physician and Gregorian B. B. M-191 Mass. St. Bell 399, U. 9342, Residence, 1346 Teen. St. Bell 1023, U. 936. Cottages in Estes Park for rent. Call Bell 1318 or address X, Care University Daily Kansan. 129-5 Saturday Evening Post—Tomorrow--Griggs--Adv. HARRY REDING. M, D. Eye. ear, nose. M. Kline. eye. ear, nose. Phones. Bell 813. Home 813. DR. H. W. HAYNE, Oculat, Lawrence, Kansas. © A. HAMMAN M. D. Eye, ear and balee face. Dick Building. Baltimore Guaranteed. Dick Building. J. W. ©'BRYON, Dentist. Over Wilson's Drug Store. Bell Phone 507. J. R. BECHETT, M. D, M. D. O. 833 Mass Academic Street. Both phones, office and phone numbers. (718) 240-6544. G. W. JONES, A. M. M. D., Diseases of the Ear T. R. B., A. A. B., Residence, 1205 N. 4th St. B. T. R. B., A. A. B., Residence, 1205 N. 4th St. DR. H. T. JONES, Room 12 F. A. A. BiLG. Residence 130th Tenn. Books. DR. H. L. CHAMBERS. Office over Source Studio. Both phones. DR. BURT R. WHITE Steepcase, Phone, Bell 938, Home 257, Office, 745 Mass. St. Ed. W. Parsons, Engraver, Watchmaker and Maker of Jewelry and Jewelry. Big Phone 1 Mass. S. T. GILLISEP M. D. Office corner sophomore St. Residences 728 Fifth House 500 CLASSIFIED Plumbers Phone Kenody Plumbing Co. for gas goods and lamps. lamps 1957. gas MRS. LILISON, Dressmaking and Ladies Venture. 1052 Vermont. Phone Bohl 2411 West. Ladies Tailors Queen City College. System and sewing Department. Mr. G. Mark Broom, 834 K. Hyal Mrs. M. Mark Kearns, 834 K. Hyal Hair Dressers hairdressing, shampooing, scalp and facial massage, shampooing, hair-fair-gifts, Martial arts apparel, swimwear, balloon crafts, ball Wear Dress Shop, 927 Mass St.; The Select Hair Dress Shop, 927 Mass St. Barber Shops Go where they all go J. C, HOUK 913 Mass. Student's Co-op Club. $2.50 to $3.00 per week 1840 KY. Geo, H. Vansell Stewart Around Mount Oread Four Johnson's were on the program at the sophomore smoker. If you want a Johnson any time while you are on the "Hill" just shake a bush and a half a doze will run out. "A man can get a reputation in several different ways," said Spud Fisher "sweet singer" of the senior play. "Since the play I have had to turn down many invitations to sing. Funny how people like my voice." Remarks from Chas. Gibson, while writing a head for a golf story: "Besides being a poor sport this here golf is hard to write heads for." "Red" Lupton, mascot of the K. U. football team, has originated the idea of spring basketball practice for his girls' team at the public school on Eleventh street. During the pleasant weather last week Red had his team on the court in South Park every day at noon and recess getting them ready for a hard season next winter. Prof. A. H. Sluss had finished the lecture in "Heat Engines" last Wednesday afternoon and said, "If there are no questions, the class will be dismissed." It happened that nobody except Harold Feitierband had a question. When he arose, eleven husky voices joined in on "Sit down, you're rocking the boat." The prof. didn't catch the drift, but Harold understood and seated himself quietly, with much haste. "Say, George," said Bogus Howel to George Smee, at the dinner table yesterday. "I see that Bell Brothers Music Co. is going to the wall." "They have been selling Too Much Mustard for a dime." Frank Kreasie, of Valencia, Kansas spent Sunday in Lawrence with Larnest Arnold. Prof. Elise NeuenSchwander, of therench department, delivered a sportut effective lecture on "Styles in Pedal Display" in her French 2 class Monday morning. The occasion was the presence in class of a student with his legs crossed. Miss Neuen-Schwander said, in part: "The display of feet upon railings of Lawrence boarding clubs about meal time is not tolerated in good society in Europe. Americans lounge around too much, and he does not display." NeuenSchwender, by the way, is a native of Switzerland, but spends her vacations at her home in the Short Grass country of Trego County, Kansas. The laws at 1155 Tennessee street are training "Colonel" (sometimes flippantly called Shorty) Pfouts for big league baseball. But owing to the fact that he can't jump but five feet straight up he spends most of his practice time apologizing to the neighbors for chasing the ball over their lawns. They throw 'em high on purpose, don't they, Shorty? Owing to a mistake in the Daily Kansan Friday as to the time of Doctor Naismith's return home, his eight e'clock class Monday was almost a case of the "preacher and janitor on prayer meeting night." Out of fifty enrolled in the class, but four answered to roll call. Charles S. Nelson, a freshman in the College, intends to spend the Easter vacation at his home in Westphalia. He purchased a "postage stamp" cap the other day, incidentally remarking, "I had rather take home a cap as a souvenir than a score of blisters." Vernor H. Holston, a freshman in the College, was glad that the grade that he received in a recent quiz was a I and he frankly said that he would not eat for a week if he got a I in the examination. Olin D. Collier of the sophomore class was called home the first of the week by the illness of his mother. When he left, he did not expect to return from Winfield before next week. SUNDAY AN Easter Sale of Blouses Opens Wednesday Worth $4.00, $4.50 and $5.00, at $3.48 There are 25 models in the collection, representing the very newest ideas - Crepe de Chines, Crinkled Crepe, Crepe Meteor, Fancy Nets, Shadow Lace. Every shade and size. Displayed in south front window. SILK DRESSES FOR EASTER WORTH $16.50 AND $18.00, AT $12.95 Our showing of Fancy Spring Suits ank Coats has been strengthened by several express shipments of the styles and shades demanded. Taffetas, Foulnards, Crepes, Frills, Tunics, Paneer, and three tier effects, in the wanted shades. Party dresses of Chiffon, Crepe and Messaline are included in this sale at $12.95. For your- Onnes, Bulline & Hackman EASTER SUIT Be sure and see our line at the one popular price of Our one price proposition gives you much better values than any other store in Lawrence can offer. We do not want you to take our word for it, but we do want you to try these on and compare them as to style, fit, tailoring, and material with any $20 suit in Lawrence. -Fischer's Shoes are Good Shoes $15 We are also the agents in Lawrence for— Kahn-Tailored-Clothes 120 / 6 145 M. J. Skofstad 829 Mass. St. Your Easter Footwear You ought to visit this store now for your Easter footwear. If you have not fully made up your mind what you want, your highest expectations will be realized when you see the large assortment of handsome Oxfords, Pumps and Colonials, in all the NEW STYLES for women, we have prepared for you. You certainly will appreciate our efforts to gratify your taste for Easter shoes. See some of them in our north window. Fischer's Saturday Evening Post—Tomor- row-Griggs. Adv. Colorado debate, Fraser, tomorrow. —Adv. - Saturday Evening Post—Tomorrow—Griggis—Adv. Colorado debate, Fraser, tomorrow. - Adv. 2 for 25c $-\frac{1}{4}$ and $ \frac{3}{4} $ sizes BARKER BRAND Barker Brand BARKER WILLIAM BARKER COMPANY, N.Y. SERVICES --Barker Collars-and have it delivered the rest of the school year, until June 5. THE ONLY ESTABLISHED BRAND of 2 for 25c Linen Collars Made in the United States IN LAWRENCE ONLY AT PECKHAM'S CITY CAFE 906 Mass. Strictly Home Cooking Ever try our Spaghetti Lunch? You'll like it. Bowersock Theater Monday, Easter, Apr. 13 A Company with Bayard Veiller's World Wide Success WITHIN the LAW A Real Melodrama with a Big Story Full of Merriment and Life. Two years at Eltinge Theatre, New York. Greatest success New York has ever known Prices: 50c, 75c, $1, $1.50 Seats at Woodward & Co., Saturday MAIL ORDERS NOW Address, Sherman Wiggins, Mgr. City 1. Mr. Baseball Fan Are you interested in the Varsity team,the fraternity leagues, and the inter-club league? If you are,you will want to get all the dope of the games. Mail fifty cents to the University Daily Kansan UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN WET GROUNDS MAY PREVENT BALL GAME Contest With William Jewel Hangs on Rapidity of Evaporation With McCook field soused with moisture, the chances for a baseball game tomorrow between the Varsity and William Jewell are poor. Manager Hamilton inspected the field today and said it would be played, but if another rain started, he would call off the game. Coach Hamilton will take another look at the grounds this evening and decide the fate of the game tonight. Notices will be posted on the Hill if the game is called off. The rain caused the Varsity squad to lose another day of practice yesterday and the players probably will have to resort to light practice this afternoon because of the wet grounds. The team showed its strength in C, A, C. game Saturday, but a lack of practice will handicap it tomorrow. The William Jewell team will open its season here. An exhibition game last week between the Blues and the Clubs was a walkaway for the professionals, 10 to 1. James Henshall and Guy R. Duen of Rosedale spent the week-end at the Nu SigmaNu house. For Ladies Only! For Ladies Only. There appears in this paper an ad relating to foreign travel. Be sure and see it if interested—Adv. Marwin Taylor, of Moran, Kans, has pledged Phi Kappa Psi. Saturday Evening Post--Tomor- row--Griggs--Adv. Colorado debate, Fraser, tomorrow. —Adv. Saturday Evening Post—Tomor- row—Griggs—Adv. Saturday Evening Post—Tomor row—Griggs.—Adv. Colorado debate, Fraser, tomorrow —Adv. Saturday Evening Post—Tomor row—Griggs—Adv. Baseballs, gloves, bats, etc. Keel er's Book Store, 939 Mass-Adv. PAN-HELLENIC PLANS FOR ANNUAL TRACK MEET Plans are under way for the annual track meet in May. The eight fraternities will compete on the McCook cinders under rules which will be adopted by the Pan-Hellenic Council next week. BELLEVILLE FINDS OUT ABOUT ITSELF Republic County Town Finishes Survey Under Direction K. U. Sociologists Belleville, Kans., April 7- The first thoroughly organized social survey of a Kansas community, or any community for that matter, was completed here today when 75 charts indicating the scope and character of the survey were placed on exhibition at the county fair. A Know-Your-City" celebration, Profs. F. W. Blackmar, Dr. S. J. Crumbine, and E. W. Burgess of the University of Kansas have directed the survey and they will lecture tonight on an explanation of the charts. Dr. Crumbine, secretary of the state board of health, of the State University of Community or Welfare." Professor Blackmar gave an address on "New Community Efficiency." Field workers from the University and the state board of health, assisted by local workers, did the work. Fifty different persons were engaged in the work since its beginning last spring. The 75 charts on exhibition set forth the conditions and needs of community life from the graphic presentation of low mortality rates on the charter to the partnership between church membership and attendance. The divisions of the survey were as follows: 1.—City planning, 2.—Municipal accounting, 3.—Business and industrial conditions, 4.—Education, 5.—Relocation, 6.—Churches, 7.—Pendency, 8.—Delinquency, Health and sanitation. Plans are being made to print the findings of the survey. In the meantime, the state board of health will extend the sanitary survey to Republic cities and officials of Y. M. C. A., are making arrangements with the University to direct a county community survey at the same time. STILL NO BASEBALL CAPTAIN IS ELECTED Only Three "K" Men Respond to Hamilton's Call for Meeting Meeting Baseball captainship is still in the air. There was to be an election this morning at Manager Hamilton's office at 11:00 by the baseball Kmen, the three men came, the two midfielists, Bishop and Sommers, and Coolidge. Three attempts have been made to elect a captain by the five K-men in school. The first two were made Saturday on the baseball grounds. Both ballottings resulted in a tie, Coolidge not voting. The candidates were unable to reach an agreement this morning as to what the procedure should be now for the election of captain. The methods under consideration are either to throw the election open to the baseball squad or to make another attempt to get the K-men to elect. If this method is again tried the vote may be taken by mail. Manager Hamilton stated this morning that unless the candidates were able to reach some agreement as to procedure by tomorrow night, he and Coach McCarty will try to do it. If they fail Manager Hamilton will present the matter to the Athletic Board for its consideration. BOWS AND ARROWS ARE DELAYED IN SHIPMENT The archery equipment which was ordered last month by the physical training department has been delayed. Dr. Naismith received word last week that part of the equipment could not be shipped for several weeks but the rest of the supplies will be shipped at once. No more word has been received from the arrow makers. Kappa Sig Master Here Mr. H. C. Hilmer of St. Louis pent the week-end and the Kappa Master of this district is District 3rd Master of this district and is on an inspection trip to the various hapters in his district. Colorite. 25c, colors old and new straw hats. Barber & Son, druggists.-Adv. Saturday Evening Post—Tomor- row--Griggis--Adv. HASH HOUSE LEAGUE SCHEDULE—First Division. The Ellis Gillespie Co-op Columbus Ko-op Martin Marks K K Ellis Daily Apr. 18 F 10:15 Apr. 24 F 4:30 May 2 F 8:30 May 9 F 8:30 May 16 F 1:30 May 23 F 8:30 May 30 F 1:30 Gillespie Kansas May 30 F 10:15 Apr. 24 W 4:30 May 16 F 10:15 May 9 W 10:15 May 2 F 10:15 May 23 F 1:30 Co-op Prints Apr. 18 W 10:15 May 23 W 8:30 May 9 F 10:15 May 15 W 4:30 Columbus May 2 F 8:30 Apr. 24 W 4:30 Apr. 18 W 10:15 May 30 W 10:15 May 23 F 8:30 May 16 W 8:30 May 9 F 1:30 Columbus May 9 F 8:30 May 16 F 10:15 May 25 W 8:30 May 30 W 10:15 Hash Apr. 18 F 10:15 Apr. 25 W 8:30 May 2 F 1:30 Ko-op All May 30 W 10:15 May 23 F 8:30 Apr. 18 F 10:15 House May 30 F 8:30 Apr. 24 F 4:30 Martin May 16 F 1:30 May 9 W 10:15 May 2 F 10:15 May 23 F 8:30 Apr. 18 F 10:15 House May 30 F 8:30 Apr. 18 F 1:30 Marks May 23 F 8:30 May 2 F 10:15 May 9 F 10:15 May 16 W 8:30 Apr. 25 W 8:30 League Apr. 18 F 1:30 K K May 30 F 1:30 May 23 F 1:30 May 15 W 4:30 May 9 F 1:30 May 2 F 1:30 Apr. 24 F 4:30 Apr. 18 F 1:30 News SECOND DIVISION The Babb Daniels Wouldst 1221 Hope Stevenson Nutting Midway Daily Apr. 18 W 1:30 Apr. 25 F 1:30 May 2 W 1:30 May 9 F 1:30 May 16 W 1:30 May 29 W 1:30 May 30 F 1:30 Daniels Apr. 18 W 1:30 Kansas May 29 W 4:30 Apr. 25 F 8:30 May 16 F 8:30 May 8 W 4:30 May 2 W 10:15 May 22 F 4:30 Wouldst Apr. 25 F 1:30 May 29 W 4:30 Apr. 18 W 8:30 May 22 F 4:30 May 2 W 8:30 May 9 W 8:30 May 16 F 8:30 Wouldst May 2 W 1:30 Apr. 25 F 8:30 Apr. 18 W 8:30 All May 29 F 4:30 May 22 W 4:30 May 16 W 10:15 May 9 F 8:30 Hope May 9 F 1:30 May 16 F 8:30 May 22 F 4:30 Hash Apr. 18 F 8:30 Apr. 25 F 10:15 May 2 F 8:30 Stevenson May 16 W 1:30 May 8 W 4:30 May 2 W 8:30 May 22 F 4:30 Apr. 18 F 8:30 House May 30 W 8:30 Apr. 25 F 8:30 Nutting May 23 W 1:30 May 2 W 10:15 May 9 W 8:30 May 16 W 10:15 Apr. 25 F 10:15 May 30 W 8:30 League Apr. 18 F 8:30 Midway May 30 F 1:30 May 22 F 4:30 May 16 F 8:30 May 9 F 8:30 May 2 F 8:30 Apr. 25 F 8:30 Apr. 18 F 8:30 News THE NEW YORK BANKER Copyright, 1914. A. B. Kirschbaum Co. Correct Dress for Easter Sunday Everything for Spring 1914 SUITS---English and semi English models in varied weaves--tailored by Sampeck and Benjamin. Distinctive, and yet not freakish $15 and up **HATS----the new shapes conceived and manufactured by **Stetson and Tomlinson**, the English importer; greys, blues, and greens; both fancy and plain bands $3.00 and $3.50 SHIRTS---in the new crepe and silk patterns which are to be so popular this season, $2.50 and up NECKWEAR---the kind that adds a finishing touch. A large assortment to select from. "The Young Man's Store" JOHNSON & CARL K. U. Calendar Wednesday Tuesday 4:30 Cercle Francais, (306 Fra.) 4:30 Geological Club, (201 Ha.) 4:30 Practice Teachers' Meeting, (Myers Hall.) 7:30 Glee Club practice. (Fra.) 7:30 Y. M. C. A. "Miracles." Prof. R. A. Schwegler, (Myers Hall.) 4:30 Vocations for College Women other than Teaching, first of series of talks by the Association of Collegiate Alumni. "Library Work," Miss Carrie M. Watson; "The Trained Nurse," Mrs. Mervin T. Sudler, (110 Fraser.) 7:30 Band practice, (Fraser) 7:45 Civil Engineering Society 7:50 8:00 K. U.-Colorado Debate, "immigration" (Fraser chapel). 11:00 Entomological club (Mu). 5:30 Easter vacation begins. School resumes Tuesday at 8:00 a. m. Athletics Apr. 17. Baseball, University of Hawaii, at Lawrence. Apr. 18. Baseball, University of Hawaii, at Lawrence. Apr. 18. Drake Relay Games at Des Moines. Apr. 25. Outdoor interclass meet, McCook. May 1-2 Seventh Intercollegiate tennis tournament, McCook. May 19. K. S. A. U. dual track meet, McCook. May 2. Eleventh annual intercollegiate track meet, McCook. May 5. K. S. A. C.-K. U. dual track meet at Manhattan. May 6-7. Baseball, M. U., at Lawrence. May 14-15. Baseball, M. U., at Columbia. May 16. M. U.-K. U. dual track meet at Columbia. Let me furnish that "Sachem" Pin Arrow Heads from 25c to $1 Gustafson The College Jeweler Gustafson The College Jeweler Oranges 1¢ - Oranges 1¢ Received a new shipment of extra large California naval oranges which we can sell at 1¢ each Sale starts WEDNESDAY MORNING Just think only 12e a dozen CALIFORNIA FRUIT STAND 1015 MASS. ST. "NEXT THE VAUDEVILLE" WILLIAM JEWELL vs K. U. Advertise in the Kansas McCOOK FIELD, TOMORROW, (WEDNESDAY), 3:45 p. m. BASEBALL Tickets 25 Cents. Grand Stand Cushion Seats,15 Cents Extra.Season Ticket 9 Home Games,$2.00 STATE HISTORICAL SOCIETY TOPEKA KAN. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN VOLUME XI. CHEMICALS TO CHICAGO ON INSPECTION TRIP Prof. W. A. Whitaker Lead Annual Party of Engineers Starting Saturday CHICAGO GRADS WELCOME 'EM NUMBER 131. Students From University of Illinois Will Accompany Them Under K. U. Man The Senior Chemical Engineers, accompanied by Prof. W. A. Whitaker of the department of chemistry, start to Chicago Saturday on a week's trip inspecting some of the largest manufacturing concern in the country. The party will leave Kansas City Saturday night at 6:20 on the Burlington. The first day will be spent in the Field Museum, the Art Institute and other places of interest about Chicago, Illinois. The Littlest Street Station and go to Buffington, Ind., where the plants of the Universal Portland Cement Co. will be inspected. Gary, Ind., is scheduled for Monday afternoon, where the Indiana Steel Co., plant By-Product Product Plant are located. Early Tuesday morning the engineers visit Whiting, where the Standard Oil refinery is located, going then to Grasselli, Ind., to study the Grasselli Chemical Co. and the United States Metal Refining Co. Wednesday, April 15 the Sherwin-Williams Paint house at Kensington, Ill., the Illinois Steel Company plant at Chicago, and the American Smelting and Refining Co., will be visited. All of Thursday morning will be given to the Armour & Co. Soap, Glue and Glycerine plant at 31st Place and Benson Street, Chicago. The afternoon will be spent at the plants of the People's Gas, Light, and Coke Co., the Government Food and Drug Laboratories and either the Oxwell Acteleyne Co., or the Mather Borax Co. The party will be joined in Chicago by chemical engineers from the University of Illinois, who will take the trip with them for the first four days under the guidance of Prof. David F. MacFarland, formerly assistant professor of chemistry at the University of Kansas. The Corn Products Refnning Co. at Argo, Ill. will be visited on Friday together with the Chicago Board of Trade and the American Linseed Oil Co. Saturday morning will be spent at the University of Chicago and a half holiday will be given on Saturday afternoon. The travellers will return to Lawrence Sunday, April 19. A smoker will be given in honor of the party from Kansas by the Jayhawker alumni in Chicago at The Academy Hotel on one of the evenings. "I hope this will be the most carefully conducted trip taken by a K. U. class," said Professor Whitaker this morning. "We will cover more ground than any class heretofore and will spend more time at work than we would at class and preparing lessons here in Chicago." A strip tour of the seniors two years ago, when a week was spent in St. Louis. It is our plan to alternate between Chicago and St. Louis every year from now on." JOURNALISM FRATERNITY INITIATES TEN PLEDGES Initiation was held by Sigma Delta Chi, national honorary newspaper fraternity, last night at the Phi Dhi house. Ten men, out of the department of journalism are the initiates; follows: Leon Harsh, Lawrence; Gilbert Clayton, Hill City; Ray Clapper, Kansas City; John Gleissner, Abilene; William Ferguson, Olathe; Guy Serriver, Kansas City; Charles Sweet, Burlington; Miles W. Vaughn, Winfield; Frank Henderson, Kansas City; Neil Cline, Kansas City. BEGINS EASTER VACATION WITH KAW CANOE TRIM Olin Deibert and George Rathert will not make us of the stuffy cars in their departure for the Easter vacation, but will go to Kansas City in a canoe. They expect to make the trip in about ten hours on Friday, which will leave them three days in which to seek adventure. Pinafore Rehearsal Pinafore rehearsal, entire cast including principals and chorus, will be held in Robinson gymnasium to night at 7:30. MERCHANTS' WEEK DRAWS STATE WIDE INTERES? Letters are coming in to the extension division from all over the state to the Merchants' Week on May 5. Many of the letters contain suggestions for the program or subjects for the men are particularly interested. UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON, APRIL 8, 1914. Mr. Schott of the Ferry-Harry-Schoot Advertising Company of Kansas has accepted an invitation to speak at the event. Mr. Schott is an old K, U, man. ENTERS RELAY TEAMS IN DES MOINES GAMES Manager Hamilton Sends the Names of K. U. Relay Men to Drake Both the one mile and the two mile relay teams were entered this morning by Manager W. O. Hamilton at Moines, Game 14. Games at Des Moines, April 18. Kansas has a number of swift quarter and half milers who ought to make a good showing for the Jay-hawkers. The probable lineup for the mile relay will be: Ellswick, Henderson, Cissna, or Edwards; or Edwards; for a mile relay, Edwards, Davison, Fiske, and Edwards. Kansas won the two mile rela- race in the Drake games last year. MARVIN BUST PROJECT SEEMS SURE OF SUCCESS Prominent Alumni and Faculty Interest Themselves in Helping Students Float Plan At the request of some of the K. U. alumni in Kansas City, Dean Henry E. Riggs, of the School of Engineering at the University of Michigan, and Prof. Erasmus Haworth will go to Kansas City this afternoon to address a meeting of the alumni at a conference ports on the progress of the project will be made and some enthusiasm aroused among the Kansas Citians. Professor Haworth received a telegram this morning from Mr. W. S. Kinnear, of New York City, stating that contributions to the amount of more than five hundred dollars had been received at the headquarters of the committee there. One hundred and fifty-two dollars has been collected by the committee on the hill. BOYNTON WILL TEACH AT UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO Prof. Arthur J. Boynton of the department of economics, has been made a member of the summer session faculty of the University of Oklahoma with instruct in two courses, Money and Banking, and Investments. The year at the University of Chicago, is divided into four quarters the summer session beginning June 15 and lasting until August 28. Delta Phi Delta Meets Schwegler Explains Miracles Prof. R. A. Schwegler gave an interesting lecture last night in Myers Hall on the subject of "Miracles." He gave a psychological explanation of hypnotism and clairvoyance and distinguished clearly between conscience and subconscience functions. The Delta Phi Delta art fraternity, met yesterday afternoon with Miss Powell, at 1131 Ohio street. Lydia Cook and Edith Cooper read papers favoring and opposing the new cubist movement. The fraternity announces the following new pledges: Dorothy Vant, St. Joseph Oslo; Louise Spalding, Kansas City, Mo.; and ThomasBoyd, Kansas City, Kans. Mrs. Thornborrow, of Wetmore, is the guest of her daughter, Isabel Thornborrow. Schwegler Explains Miracles A large brick drum for steam engine tests has just been completed at Fowler Shops. It weighs 650 pounds and is the greatest casting ever made at the shop. The Mott Campaign Meeting will be tonight at 9:00 o'clock in Myers Hall. Cast 650 Pound Drum We hardly find any persons of good sense save those who agree with us—La Rocefoucauld. Daily Kansas Board meeting tonight at 7:15. Send the Daily Kansan home. KANSAS VS.COLORADO ON THE STUMP TONIGHT Annual Debate in Fraser Hal Concerns One House Legislature Question The Kansas debate team will argue the affirmative of the question, "Resolved, that the several states should adopt a unicameral form of legislature" against Colorado tonight at 8 o'clock in Fraser Hall. Everything is ready for the contest except the choosing of one judge. Two of the judges are Professor Hardy, of the history department at Ottawa University, and Professor Leech, of the public speaking department at Baker University. Charles Sumner, manager of the museum, in Kansas City, has been asked to serve as the third judge but it will not be known until late today if he will be able to accept the invitation. NOW IS THE TIME TO PAY JUNIOR PROM FEES Admission to the debate is twenty five cents or by student ticket. Finance Committee Out for Money— Governor and Board of Administration to Attend "Preparations for the Junior Promire are being pushed as rapidly as possible," said Manager Bat Nelson this morning. "However, we need money more than any other thing else and we want them to expect to go to turn in their fees." Several out of town celebrities are expected at the Prom. Among those who will be on the line receive the Gov. and Mrs. George H. Hodges, Mr. and Mrs. Edward T. Hackney, Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Lewis, Mr. and Mrs. E.J. Woch, and Chancellor and Mrs. Frank Strong. Committees having charge of the various phases of the work in getting up the prom have perfected their plans. The farce cast is working hard and the committees are all busy. Haley's orchestra from Kansas City will play for the dance and another orchestra will play in the banquet orm down stairs in the gymnasium. The program will consist of twenty-four dances, with the intermission between the two groups. The fance will begin at 6 o'clock and the dancing will begin an hour later and last till two o'clock. TO MEASURE EARTH'S CURVE Class in Physiography Will Get Figures on Shape of Globe The physiography class under Prof. Erasmus Haworth is preparing to measure the curvature of the earth's surface between the Dakotas and Texas on a meridian passing passing through Lawrence. The class will write to one school in several of the towns on the same meridian as Lawrence and have the principal of the school or some responsible person send the measurements at his town. K. U. CHEMIST EXAMINES SALT E. E. Lyder, a graduate student, in the state chemical research work, is touring a number of towns in the western part of the state this week. He is examining the deposits and quality of salt in that part of the state and will visit Nose City, Ellsworth, Kampolis, and other points. E. E. Lydor, of State Research Department Goes to Western [ Prof. F, B. Dains, of the department of chemistry, will talk on "Chemistry of Bitumens" at the 101st meeting of the Kansas City Branch of the American Chemical Society at Kansas City Saturday. Prof. E. H. S. Bailey, of the department of chemistry, left Monday for Cincinnati. Ohio, where he will serve as acting chairman of the American Chemical Society. Prof. Dains to Lecture Kansas Prof. Bailey to Ohio William W. Ferguson, a junior in the College, was pledged to the Acacia fraternity Tuesday evening. The Daily Kansan will not be issued tomorrow. ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. TOO MANY FRESHMEN IN COUNCIL POLITICS? One Only Can be Elected- Yearling President May Call Class Primary One of the two freshman candidates for election to the Student Council has no chance for election. The constitution of the Student Council provides that "there shall not be more than one representative per student who has been in residence at the University at least two semesters." Sam H. Perguson and William Rockwell, both freshmen, have had their petitions out for ten days. It is impossible to tell which man announced first, as their petitions were circulated several days before public announcement was made in the Daily Kansan. It has been suggested that the freshmen hold primary election to choose their candidate. In this way they could concentrate all their voting strength on one man, and the president will be expected that President Donald Harrison will call a class meeting soon to make a nomination. HELENE THOMAS TO CARRY SOPHOMORE FARCE LEAD Will Play Miss Firefly In Comedy To Be Staged at Soph Hon The farce which the sophomores will give this year is "Miss Firefly," a three act comedy with eight characters. Helene Thomas carried the lead as Miss Firefly, a Mexican girl . The part of Hannah is taken by Nelle Huston; Hazel Williams is heapsiabah, and Ruth Lillis, Mrs. Breed. Melvin Evans has the comedy lead as Jo Gattski, the juvenile as Robin the director, who has the role of Mr. Breed and Cecil DeRoin plays the roll of Tinkle, Firefly's father. The farce is under the management and direction of Patti Hiatt and James McNaught. PROM BIDS FOR MRS., TOO Junior Dance Invitations Include Professors' Wives—Where Existing —Despite Address The junior prom invitations addressed to members of the faculty include "wife and wife" in case there is a committee going to the committee on invitations. "This ought to be generally understood," said one of the prom managers this morning. "we didn't know just which professors are married and which are not, and so their invitations were addressed to them, whom they been called up once or twice by professors asking how the invitation should be understood, and so we feel that this explanation is necessary." STRAYER OF COLUMBIA U. ADDRESSES K. U. TEACHERS Prof. George A.,Strayer of Teacher's College, Columbia University, lectured in Snow Hall last night to an audience of 200, mostly Lawrence teachers, faculty members, and students of the School of Education on "The Meaning of Education in a Democracy." Professor Strayer has been giving lectures throughout the state and will speak tonight in Kansas City, Missouri. The University Club at dinner last evening. BOTANISTS TO HEAR MORE ON LANDSCAPE GARDENING F. Herbert Hare, of Kansas City, will lecture before Prof. W. C. Steven's class in The Living Plant to tomorrow afternoon in the lecture room of Snow Hall at 4:30 on landscape gardening. Persons interested in the planting of home grounds, parks, and streets, W. A. Kingman will read a paper on "The Location of the Pueblo and Pacific Railway, State of Oaxaca, Mexico," and Prof. J. O. Jones will give an illustrated talk on "The Project of the Idaho Irrigation Co." at the Civil Engineering Society meeting tonight in Marvin Hall. Civils Meet Tonight Mrs. Mann, of Kansas City, visited her daughter Ellin Mann, last week. CHARLES COLEMAN AND FRANCES COLE MARRIED The friends of Frances Cole, a freshman in the College, may or may not be surprised to hear of her marriage to Charles C. Coleman, sophomore engineer, in January. It was kept secret until yesterday. The young couple went to Kansas City this morning to visit the bride's mother. In oneida, Kansas, where Mr. Coleman is in the automobile business. HAWK CLUB TO STAGE "THE FORTUNE HUNTER" Dramatic Society Selects Musical Comedy for Presentation This Spring "The Fortune Hunter," will be given by the Hawk Club this year, according to a decision reached at the meeting last night. Henry C. Anderson was elected manager of the club. It will be presented Friday, May 8. "In picking The Fortune Hunter we believe that we have secured a play worthy of the support and patronage promised," Manager Anderson said this morning. "The play is a recent comedy, full of action, with an excellent plot. The stage settings are somewhat intricate. The play was secured at a handsome royalty, on account of the fact of its recent appearance and successful run with John Barrymore playing the lead." On account of the cost of production, and preliminary expense connected with it, Manager Anderson and a number of ticket holders be distributed to members of the club for sale next week. "We must sell enough tickets in the next two weeks to guarantee expenses." Anderson said this morning. "We have acceded to the numerous demands for a play by the audience and we feel justified in putting out the tickets at an early date to protect the club in its efforts." Tryouts will be held in Room 110, Fraser Hall, Tuesday evening, April 14th, at 7 o'clock. These will be the only tryouts and as the play demands for a large number in the catit it is hosed that all members will attend. CROISSANT TO DECIDE HIGH SCHOOL DEBATE WINNERS Prof. D, C. Croissant will go to Solomon Saturday to judge a high school debate between the Solomon and El Dorado high schools. The debate is to decide the championship of the western half of the state. Conductor of St. Paul Symphony Orchestra BURTON ARTHUR ROTHWELL Conductor of St. Paul Symphony Orchestra, to be here in April French Club Meets French Club Meets Mrs. L. B. Watson will discuss the founding of a museum at Paris in honor of one of the great French sculptors at the meeting of the French Club this afternoon. The testing of Kansas brick, cement, and concrete is a part of the daily work of the engineering test station to the stated for service to the state. The members of the Daily Kansan Board challenge the Men's Student Council to a baseball game, to be played over their court. The Student Council may designate. FROSH SOUNDLY SPANK SQUIRREL PRINT SOPHS By Night "Sixteen" Sows Windy Posters and Reaps Whirlwindy Paddling SOPH MIXER PLANS GO AWRY Laird, Evans, and Randolph Made to Remove "Statutes" and Paddled for Good Measure. "Many go out for wool and come home shorn themselves."—Don Quixote. Three sophomores, Landon Laired, Melvin Evans, and Albert Randolph, were compelled to submit to a sound paddling shortly after midnight last night at the hands of thirty freshmen, and were made to scratch out posters which they had pasted over the campus bearing "sixteen statutes for fifty frosh." Ewing Scott helped post the bills, but got cold and went home before the freshman appeared. The sophomores were carrying into effect a plan adopted at the sophomore mime recently. The posters about the size of a newspaper page, are printed in red and black ink, and tell various things freshmen may and may not do. A picture of a brawny arm wielding a heavy paddle, with "16" on it, is printed in red across the page. In some manner, the freshmen learned of the sophomores' plan. A crowd of thirty collected downtown, caught the sophomores, spanked them, and made them go all over the campus scratching out the signs. Then the freshmen led their prisoners to the Santa Fe depot, and prepared to ship them out of town. They removed their prisoners' shoes, hid them in the caboose of a freight train, and had the first-year men been able to scrape up enough money in the crowd to pay fares, the sophs would have been deported to Holiday. Here is a sample of the rules on the poster, which the sophomores say will yet be enforced: "Seventeen! Stand in mute awe before the sophomore," Sturt stands. Sturt Surdges Sovereigns of '16. Secure yourselves, speak no sound, but atop in subordinate submission to your superiors." COLD WON'T PREVENT FIRST BASEBALL GAME Chill Breezes Cause No Postponement of Varsity-Wm. Jewell Contest The William Jewell baseball team arrived in Lawrence at noon today and will meet the Jayhawk Varsity for the first collegiate game of the season on McCook field this afternoon. The wind dried McCook field yesterday afternoon and Manager Hamilton said this morning the field is in better shape than it was Saturday. Couch McCarty will send Smee to the slab this afternoon. The team has not had a practice since the K. C. A. C. game and the cold weather may retard the players. The Kansas team will bat in the following order: Sommers, c.; Van der Vries ssn; Smee, p.; DeLongyx, b.; Chinnery, cf.; Painter, 3b.; Sproull, lb.; Wielbel, rf; Bishop, lf. U. S. CUSTOMS INSPECTOR MAKES K. U. OFFICIAL VISIT U. S. Federal Customs Inspector Martin was at the University Saturday conferring with members of the department of entomology relative to foreign importations of agricultural and horticultural products now being received at various points in the state. ROF, HAWWORTH TO SPEAK BEFORE GEOLOGISTS TODAY The Geology Club will meet this afternoon at 4:30 in the Geology Building. The tail of the meeting was made of a foam ball and the "Detailed Geology of Kansas." Inspects Nursery Stock George H. Vansell, of the department of entomology, went to Baldwin yesterday to inspect a shipment of nursery stock at that point. Send the Daily Kansan home UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN omical student paper of the University of Kansas EDITORIAL STAFF JOHN C. MADENN, Editor-in-Chief JOHN HARBRE, Associate Editor JOHN GRIESNER, Manager JOHN GRIESNER, High School Editor LANDON LATRID, Sport Editor BJSINESS STALE B INFINITES EBUIN ABELE Business Manager RAT EUDROGRE Circulation Manager JOE BIMBO Advertising Manager CHARLISE MAYER Advertising CARL S. STURMSTER Advertising REPORTORIAL STAFF LUCY BARBER LIVEN RADDER JON M. GREESFELD J A GREESFELD HARBERT FLINT RICK CLAPER RAY CLAPER WILLIAM S, CADY JOHN HOWARD JOHN HOWARD SAM DEGEN BROOKLYN ALLENE GALLENBURY RICHBURN BURKEWARD LUCILE HIDDINGER LAWRENCE SMITH GLUENTY CULATON JOHNSON Entered as second-class mail matter lawyer, in the Supreme Court, Lawrence, Kansas, under the act of March Subscription price $2.50 per year, advance; one term, $1.50. Published in the afternoon five times a week. Published by Kanna. From the press of the department of Military Education. Phone, Bell K. U. 25. Address all communications to UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Lawrence, Rans. The Daily Kansan aims to picture the undergraduate students further in their ability to clearly print the news by standing for the class, being present at meetings; to be clean; to be cheerful; to be patient; to be more serious problems to uder heads; to be able to ability the students of the University. WEDNESDAY, APRIL 8, 1914 In spring a livelier iris changes or the burnished dove; In the spring a young man's fancy lightly turns to thoughts of love.— Tennyson. SECRECY The sub-committee of the College faculty which has reported some sort of a change in the present major work regulations and group system requirements to the heads of the College departments, will not make its recommendations public. Neither will the heads of the departments say what action they took on the matter until the entire faculty has accepted or rejected the suggestions. Some day, perhaps, the students—who are more vitally interested in the matter than any other group on Mount Oread—will be granted the 'blessed privilege of finding out what has been done, but not until everything is cut and dried. Why shouldn't the students know before the matter is finally settled if the group system scheme is going to be changed? Why keep the student in ignorance of new major work requirements, faculty advisor methods or hour limitations in the various departments? Did a member of the faculty ever stop to consider that some one or two overly brilliant upperclassmen might possibly have intelligence enough to offer a constructive suggestion or two which would be valuable? And even if the faculty doesn't accept suggestions, wouldn't it be better—just for the looks of the thing—to take the students into its confidence sometimes when it is changing regulations which affect the student first of all? The Student Council has recently thrown its meetings open to the public. It seems that some of these Star Chamber methods of the faculty might be revised with an equally healthy effect. A GOOD SHOW Besides a chance to yell for Kansas, and besides an opportunity to learn something about an up-to-date public question, the debate tonight will furnish excellent amusement for the crowd—provided Colorado sends another "Daniel Webster" type of orator like one of the men who came two years ago. Student tickets admit. UNCLE JIMMY Seventy-two years young and getting less old every year, that's Uncle Jimmy. The best thing about the most popular professor on the hill is the fact that he has the love and respect of so many students and alumni. Any man on Mount Oread is lucky who can count his friends by the score as rapidly as Uncle Jimmy can by the thousand. Uncle Jimmy is not only Dean of the School of Law and patron saint of University football, he is the venerated godfather of every University student, past or present. May Uncle Jimmy Days continue to mark his birthdays for decades to come! RELIGION BY COMPULSION There is an eternal and irrepressible conflict between those who would compel others to be good in their way and those who believe that goodness of any kind never comes by compulsion. The latest skirmish in the battle is now on at the University of Pennsylvania over the question of obligatory attendance at chapel. A petition is in circulation among the students who wish to oblige the others to attend the University religious exercises every day. The benefit of the chapel exercises, reverently participated in is admitted by every one. Many a youth with no pretensions in religion has admitted in after life that he got something in college that he would have missed if it had not been before he must be in his seat in chapel every morning. There is a contagion in goodness that spreads to all who come in proximity to it, and a righteous man bowing before the Almighty and confessing his dependence on the Unseen teaches a lesson that will profit even the most thoughtless. But earnest and righteous that the youth should be compelled to learn this lesson. They used to believe in compulsion, and Yale still practice it. The students must attend chapel services six days a week, and on Sunday morning they must go to the University church unless they have been there and are not elsewhere. At Portsmouth, where greater rigor might be expected than at Yale, attendance is required only twice a week, and if the boys go to church on one-half of the Sunday mornings of the term they have done all that is obligatory. But if they fall behind the limit thus set they are liable to expulsion. At Portsmouth, when the conservatively until 1886, when the voluntary rule was adopted and they say that the religious life of the college has been more active under the voluntary rule than formerly. If all the students who sign the petition asking for a change of the rule here will attend chapel, however, as though it were compulsory, those who do not sign it may attend also. The students who sign the good example, and no change in the rule would then have to be made.—Philadelphia Inquirer. ENDS AND ODDLETS "Horse Killed Absent Boy," says a good-head. Good thing he was absent for had he been there something might have happened. "Kansas to Compete in Pool" brazenly announces a headline. The team will have to hurry, since the defense allows advance goes in effect next January. Certainly, Freshmen are required to wear caps to keep from getting tanned. You can't accuse the University authorities of trying to make light of the matter when they decided not to attend at the foot of the library cut-off. Sir Edward Grey's plan for setting the Home Rule difficulty, if successful, will entitle him to the House and may be a question that almost invariably has to be settled by everybody shortly before or shortly after marriage. Guns are being shipped into Ulster in tea chests and some say that "tea" is being shipped into Kansas in gun cases. Emerson says, "Common sense is genius dressed in its working clothes," but the college student's version is this: "Common sense is a Freshman with a blue cap on his head." As a rule it's the web-footed player who makes good in April. The School for the Education of Frogs continues to hold forth in the basement of the Main Administration Building. Good afternoon, have you announced your candidacy for the Student Council? Billy Sunday, the evangelist, will give a sermon to Connie Mack's World Champions at the University of Pennsylvania. He will probably put the whole bunch in the error column. Let proud Ambition pause And sicken at the vanity that prompts His little deeds - Mallett Let proud Ambition pause prompts His little deeds.—Mallett. WITH K. U. POETS ESTHER M. C. CLARK, FORMER STUDENT Assistant Professor Mission Department. Violet window. The blissful night I danced with Jennie? I begged a flower, to keep, I score, Forever. Could she spare me any? TO A VIOLET the. When, of the modest bunch she But, violet. The arch coquette. But, violet, My modest boon denied; but, finally, she stood up to my coat label. Sweet violet, Can I forget She pointed you to my tear pail. And whispered love, "Now, please, don't tell. I pinned this here," and blushed, divinely. And, violet, Her eyes were wet; stopped and kissed her—no resist- "we" And told her—well, no matter what. I think you heard it, like as not; The deed was done with your assist- So, violet, I have you yet, Your blue is now a faded yellow; and she's a trifle stout and gray. I love her just the other day;— THE SONG BEHIND THE SHUTTER By WILLIAM HERRERT CARBURT, 'So Formerly Vice-Chancellor of the Umi I save her just the other way— She's married to another fellow. To the song behind the shutter. I trust the white lights store and sputter. My feet keep time on the pavement. I walk the streets at night alone, like I have the street and shade. Behind the shatter the good folk sit; By the mird that follows after I note the burst of each sally of wet, I hear their eagle and laughter. Their plee and laughter flow unchecked By any haunting pity try any adverbial pry for the坚硬 bark that is *drifting* WHERE On the joyous shores of their city. on the joyous shores of their city. The white lights store and sputter. For hours my bicycle's recharge repeats. It doesn't stop. K. U. DICTIONARY X. Y. Z. A: unknown quantity; ten-dollar B: unknown quantity; Oread, except in algebraic form; Xecution; only adequate treatment for spring "poets," puncturs etc. Xeption; prof who doesn't give pre-holiday quizzes. Xenison Department; a lean-to built, fraser Hall. Xcuse; something not accepted from freshmen wearing hats. Year; period of time yet to elapse between sow and Easter vacation. Y. M. C. A.; perpetrators of male quartets, stag parties and other bar- Y. W. C. A.; Dispersens of tea and chocolate, sweetness and light. Zest; what the eligibility committee feels while pursuing a victim, or an upperclassman while paddling a freshman. Zephyr; M. Ordeal terminology for he called a howling blast in whose whistle Zoo; that part of Ad building devoted to Suait, Spot the Rot, and other specimens of animal psychology. Zora, amount of profit derived from studying the K. U. dictionary (to saw nothing of writing the same) "Icompatibility, want a partner and my Irishian doesn't." Punch Bowl. Punch Bowl. "On what grounds will you sue for divorce?" CLEVER THINGS THE OTHER FELLOW SAYS WE DIDN'T DO IT "There's something in that," he cried as he spied the safe. "I'm all in," said the burglar, as he vigged through the window. he reached for his nitropropylene. "I feel blue," he explained as a "I could stay here in a pinch," he said as they took him to a cell. "That lets me out," he said when he found a file in his mille piece .—Harris "Man at the front door to see you, pop." "Stockings," said the clerk, "yes, 'ma'am—what number do you wear?" "Great Guns. Has he a blue bill?" "Noppe! He has a red nose." Red. "What number!?" snapped Venus, "why, two, of course. What do you think I am—a centipede?""Nebraska Awgwan. 7 A What your Tales? TO be a bit personalMr. College Man,would you not consider it false economy to buy shoes at a dollar a pair or clothing at ten dollars a suit? S. G. CLARKE 707 Mass. St. Eldridge Hotel Bldg. Our exclusive local dealer in your city, would like to emphasize the fact that economy lies not in initial cost, but in the final accumulation of results. See our styles and woolens and get measured today. Prices reasonable. EM. GRIECE Largest tailors in the world of GOOD made-to-order clothes Price Building, Chicago, U. S. A. Bowersock Theater Monday, Easter, Apr. 13 Selvyn and Company with Bayard Veiller's World Wide Success WITHIN the LAW A Real Melodrama with a Big Story Full of Merriment and Life. Two years at Eltinge Theatre, New York. Greatest success New York has ever known Prices: 50c, 75c, $1, $1.50 Seats at Woodward & Co., Saturday MAIL ORDERS NOW Address, Sherman Wiggins, Mgr., City Music Festival---Next Week Student Course Tickets $1.50 Four Great Concerts for the Price of One Get Tickets Now at The K. U. Post Office or from Fine Arts Students Student Tickets Exchanged at Woodward's, Tuesday, April 14th after 8 a.m. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Around Mount Oread Pai Dyer, a sophomore engineer, will leave Thursday for his home in Winfield where he will spend the Easter holidays. Paul for two weeks has been preparing to depart, and is now only waiting the call of that "midnight choo-choo." Dyer states that he wants to see how Southwestern, his old Alma Mater, is progressing, but a reporter with a nose for news believes that Southwestern will be a second interest with Paul. The genial ticket agent at the Union Pacific station can tell merely by looking at a student whether or not he wants to go home and just where that home is located. That is, there are six or seven students who make trips home over this road quite regularly, and they pay with their ticket window their ticket is stamped and ready for them. The ticket agent is one"who members" and his kindly little attention is appreciated by the students. Marie Nelson, one of the senior girls of the College, is ill at her home in Greenleaf Kansas. But she hopes to be back in school soon. The Kansan wishes to correct a misquotation that appeared in this column last night and at the same time apologize to Chas. Gibson, who was misquoted. Gibson says he did not say, "Besides being a poor sport this HERE golf is hard to write heads for." What he said is as follows. "Besides being a poor sport this golf is hard to place a head over when it appears in a story." If you don't believe it, ask him. Word from Bob Sellers, '13, says that he will be in Lawrence in a few days to look over the Hill again and to visit with friends. Bob has been doing newspaper work in Texas until just recently. He is now in Paola in the tombstone business. His many friends will be glad to note whether or not the business is making a "dead one" out of him. ANNOUNCEMENTS Professor Thorpe at the freshman smoker the other night was offering consolation to the first year men who had felt the rigors of prison life and been "old," according to the journalism professor "had been spanked by his father, when between WANT ADS Seniors who did not get commencement invitations can get them from the committee up to the fifteenth. The committee is: Rose Dyer, Helen Alphin, Paul Serber, Floyd Devil, Arthur Duston, and Sam Fainchild. LOST-Silver purse, Alpha Delta Pi seal on back, lost on 3rd floor Fraser Thursday. Call B. 1835. 129-8 Cottages in Estes Park for rent. Call Bell 1318 or address X, Care University Daily Kansan. 129-5 PROFESSIONAL CARDS W. C. M.CONNELLI, Physician and Assistant Professor of Medicine, Residence, 1346 Temp. Hall, 803 Bed, Monmouth. J. F. BROCK, Optomist and Specialist in Office 802 Mass Phone phones 605. HARRY REDING. M. D. Eyes, ear, nose, mouth. Phone 513. Home 512. Phones,耳语 513, Home 512. $\textcircled{6}$ A. HAMMAN M. D. Ege. ear, and B. BIRCHER M. D. Ege. Building guaranteed. Dick Building. DR. H. W. HAYNE, Oculist, Lawrence, Kansas. J. W. O'BRYON, Deudt. Over Wilson's Drug Store. Belfl. Phone 507. J. R. BECHTEL, M. D. D. O. 833 Mass Abbottts Street. Both phones, office and phone numbers. G. W. JONES, A. M. M., M. D., Diseases of the stomach, surgery, and gynecology suite 1, F. A. B. Aldg. Residence, 1201 Ohile St. Both phones, 35. DR. H, T. JONES, Room 12 F. A, Hall Bldg. Residence 1130 Tenn. Phones 211 1147 DR. H. L. CHAMBERS. Office over Squires' Studio. Both phones. DR. BURT R. WHITE oppose. Phones, Bell 938, Home 257, Office, 745 Mass. St. W. D. Parsons, Engraver, Watchmaker an Jeweler. W. D. Parsons and Jewelry. Blion Plorn Mass. Mass. s. T. GILLISPIE, M. D. O. Office柜 partment St. Residence 728 Bison 500. Lions House 600. CLASSIFIED Plumbers Phone Kennedy Plumbing Co. for gas Phone Kennedy Mazda lamps. 657 Majna Mazda 658 MRS ELLISON. Dressmaking and Ladies Vernon. Phone Bell 2411 West. 105 Vermont. Phone Bell 2411 West. Ladies Tailors Queen Olive Colony. System and sewing. Bryce Campbell. System and sewing. Mrs. G. Mark Brown. 834 Kyl. Hail hairdressing, shampooing, scalp and facial massage, shampooing, hair-gifts, "Mariello to the Ball," hairdressing, hair-styling,毛发造型,头饰 Hair Dress Shop, 927 Mass Rm. 51, Indirect Hair Dressning, 927 Mass Rm. 51 Earnest R. Smith, of Kansas City, Mo., a graduate of the School of Pharmacy, spent Saturday, Sunday, and Monday in Lawrence visiting friends and going through the chemistry building. his sobs he exclaimed, 'All right, you just wait till I grow up. "What do you mean?" inquired his father, 'Do you mean that when you grow up I will get to know you better.' No, replied the boy, 'but I'm going to give his grandson the dickens.' Hair Dressers Dr. C. B. Francisco, of Kansas City, Mo., a graduate of the School of Medicine, '05, was on the hill Monday, looking over the School of Medicine and the School of Pharmacy. Sam Ferguson has discovered that even freshmen candidates for the Men's Student Council are not exempt from wearing the official badge until he is in school yesterday morning minus his distinguishing "lid" trusting that he might expect leniency from the sophis on account of the cold weather. The upperclassmen were not very lenient and in fact had no patience as he going to sleep in that cap and put a string under his chin so that it may never escape him. Miss Olive Sherrard, a former student in the School of Pharmacy, now owning a drug store in Kansas City. She is helping finish up some work in chemistry. Barber Shops Go where they all go J. C. HOUK 913 Mass. Editor-to-be Alfred Waddell, of Ottawa, our popular librarian has decided to go as missionary and instructor in English and Rhetoric to a college in Syria, Asia Minor. When Alfred announced this, he smiled. "Yes," said Professor Dykstra in his American Government class, "when a Mexican in Mexico City demands of an American a million persons, the American should be able to defend against them most of a warship in the bay and demand respect for his rights." Question: What bay adjoins Mexico City? Student's Co-op Club. $2.50 to $3.00 per week 1340 KY Geo. H, Vansell Seward Arthur W. Ericson expects to stay in Lawrence over the Easter vacation. He says he will spend his summer preparing for the sophomore hop. John M. Johnson advocated government owned pickle factories with much fervor in the ten o'clock public speaking section Tuesday. Even in these days of woman's suffrage, women cannot be entirely independent. Three girls coming out of the Geology building yesterday tried to open the door in the face of the heavy north wind but their combined efforts were to no effect, and they were forced to remain inside until one of the sterner sex came along to help them out of their difficulty. Has anybody seen Leon Harsh's knife? He lent it to someone but he doesn't remember to whom. It was a new knife, it hung on his shoulder twenty-five cents. Harsh is making a personal canvass of every man on the hill. At a certain fraternity house in Lawrence, some of the men have been making slighting remarks about the food. One night this week several of them were invited out to dinner. When they returned the fraternity steward noticeying they had little to say about the dinner, asked them what kind of food. So one answered for several minutes and then of them casually remarked that he "guessed they could stand their own board for awhile." SOLOMON WINS DEBATE ON MINIMUM WAGE LAW (By Algo D. Henderson) (By Algo D. Henderson) Solomon, April 2.-The Solomon high school successfully defended the championship of the Fifth and Sixth Congressional district of Kansas in the Kansas High School Debating League on Friday night. The debate game with Norton county highlighted the question: "Resolved that Kansas should enact minimum wage legislation." Solomon won with the negative side of the question. The judges for the debate were Producers Ostrum, Kammenmeyer and Winship of the Kansas State Agricultural College. The Solomon team was composed of Amy Bailey, Edith Lank, and Glen Ramsey. RENO CO. LOSES 5 GAMES IN 3 YEARS OF PLAYING Nickerson, April 1—The Reno County high school has closed a successful basketball season and although it failed to capture the state championship played all the stronger teams in the state; 29 games in all and 27 of these have been victorious. This makes 'a total of 80 games played in the last three years out of which Reno has had 75 victories. Chocolate, strawberry, vanilla, caramel nut, peach, banana nut cream and orange ice. Reynolds Bros. Bell 645; Home 558.-Adv. Unicameral Legislature, Colorado vs. Kansas tonight; Fraser Hall. 8 o'clock—Adv. For your Easter greeting take a box of Wiedemann's chocolates.—Adv. "They Lace in Front" Wear Your Easter Suit Over a Gossard Corset It will be sure to fit and be the most comfortable of all corsets. It gives a slender, fashionable figure line without any discomfort. Let us fit you in one of these. Prices from $2.00 to $12.50. Weaver's Oranges 1¢ - Oranges 1¢ Received a new shipment of extra large California naval oranges which we can sell at 1¢ each Sale starts WEDNESDAY MORNING Just think—only 12¢ a dozen 1¢ each CALIFORNIA FRUIT STAND 1015 MASS. ST. "NEXT THE VAUDEVILLE" AURORA GRAND TODAY - ROSEMARY THEABY and HARRY MEYERS in "HIS WIFE" - 2 Reels FRIDAY—EARL WILLIAMS in Vitagraph's '2 Reel Domestic Drama, "THE MISCHIEF MAKERS" MONDAY—MRS. FISKE, America's Most Distinguished Artist in Her Foremost Success Distinguished Artist in Her Foremost Success "TESS of the D'URBERVILLES" Special Arranged Music by Mr. Childs AT THE AURORA-MONDAY ONLY Remember the folks at home with a box of Wiedemann's chocolates.—Adv. BARKER BRAND BARKER WILLIAM BARKER CORP. MISS BARKER --Barker Collars-and have it delivered the rest of the school year, until June 5. Unicameral Legislature, Colorado vs. Kansas tonight; Fraser Hall, 8 o'clock.—Adv. 2 for 25c $ - \frac{1}{4} $ and $ \frac{3}{4} $ sizes THE ONLY ESTABLISHED BRAND of 2 for 25c Linen Collars Made in the United States IN LAWRENCE ONLY AT PECKHAM'S CITY CAFE 906 Mass. Strictly Home Cooking Ever try our Special 15c Lunch? You'll like it. Typewriting Done By Alvin L. Babb STANDISH J.K. ARROW COLLAR 2for25¢ Cluett Peabody & Co. Inc. Makers 1334 Ohio St. Bell 'Phone 1574 W SAM S. SHUBERT SAM S. SHUBERT Mat. Wed. and Sat. THE ARGYLE CASE Next—PEG O' MY HEART Drink Coca-Cola 5¢ Drink Coca-Cola Drink Coca-Cola Training Time means deepening yourself many pleasant things. It never bars out Coca-Cola. The leading athletes and ball- players in the country endorse it. In training quarters or on the field they drink it for the refreshment and benefit they have found it contains. Dellicious—Refreshing Thirst Quencher THE COCA-COLA CO. Atlanta, Ga. you thin WATKINS NATIONAL BANK Capital $100,000 744 Mass. Whenever you see a Coca-Cola think of Coca-Cola. Surplus and profits $100,000 The Student Depository A GOOD PLACE TO EAT AT SPRING SUITINGS FRANK KOCH TAILOR 727 Mass. ANDERSON'S OLD STAND JOHNSON & TUTTLE 715 PROPS. Mass. Unicameral Legislature, Colorado vs. Kansas tonight; Fraser Hall. 8 o'clock.—Adv. McCOLLOCH'S Drug Store THE REXALL STORE. Binding, Copper Plate Printing, Bubber Stamps, Engraving. Steel Die Embossing, Seals, Badges. A. G. ALRICH Printing On 14th Street THE COLLEGE BARBER Bert Wadham Business College Lawrence, Kansas. THEY ARE HERE You Can Earn a Good Living and lay up your money too, on graduation four years after you graduate. You can receive at once get the job you will secure a good position. Free Employment Bureau at your service. Free Business College. Free best Business College. No vacations. PROTSCH The Tailor Mr. Baseball Fan Are you interested in the Varsity team,the fraternity leagues, and the inter-club league? If you are,you will want to get all the dope of the games. Mail fifty cents to the University Daily Kansan UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN J. Easter Sunday you'll be glad if you are fitted in an Ober suit. There's a marked individuality in the suits that bear our label. "Society Brand "Hirsh-Wickwire" "Society Brand" Products of the world's foremost designers and makers. Priced at $15-$17-$20-$22.50-$25-$30. "Garson-Meyer' "Styleplus" Hats-Shoes-Shirts-Neckwear and all the various accessories you'll need to complete your Easter costume. Your inspection is invited. Ober's HEAD TO FOOT OUT FITTERS A FORMER PHILLIE AMONG US Hugo Wedell. of Freshman Team Warmed National League Benches Last Year If baseball experience counts for anything, Hugo Wedell, a member of the freshman squad and ampire for the Pan-Hellenic league, will have no trouble making the team. Wedell signed up with the Philadelphia Nation team in the last year and number the first squad for two months. He was farmed out to the New York state league, where he finished the season. Send the Daily Kansan home. The Crowd Reads THE DAILY KANSAN If you want a crowd at your Play Dance Mixer Advertise it in the Daily Kansan Kansan Ads Pay MOVE PULMOTOR TO GYM Life-Saver Placed Under East Steps Where It Is Easily Accessible Accessible The pulmotor has been moved from the registrar's office to the new quarters under the east steps of the gymnasium. The instrument is contained in a box with a glass door which can be broken. The entire door of the cabinet is not intended to be broken but only a small pane through which the hand can be reached to turn the lock. There was some objection to putting the machine in such an accessible place on account of vandals, but the authorities decided that one must be by the palmiter woman, many times the risk of leaving it exposed. The pulmotor can be quite easily gotten out of order and rigid rules will be enforced against any tinkering with it. FIFTY DOLLARS FOR FRESHMAN College Man Money From Griffin Scholarship Goes to Most Worthy First-year College Man A free gift of $50 to the freshman in the College deemed most needs and worthy by the committee in charge is the opportunity presented to the first year men by the Griffin scholarship fund. This scholarship was established by Mrs. A. J. Griffin of Lawrence in memory of her son Charles, who was graduated from the University in 1894. He later met his death in Japan while a professor at the University of Tokyo. Every freshman in the committee thinks promise and the stipulated amount turned over to him at the end of his first year. The present holder is Jonathon M.Dow, of Lawrence. The year before Ernest Blincoe was the beneficiary and his predecessor was E. L. Ben- Chocolate, strawberry, vanilla, caramel nut, peach, banana nut cream and orange ice. Reynolds Bros. Bell 645; Home 358.-Adv. THE FLOWER SHOP EASTER FLOWERS, OF COURSE The committee which has charge of this scholarship include Professors E. F. Engel, W. J. Baugartner, and G. E. Putnam. Applications may be made to Professor Engel and all further information obtained from him. Individual moulds, especially for Easter. Reynolds Bros. Bell 645.— Adv. Individual moulds, especially for Easter. Reynolds Bros. Bell 645.- Adv. Unicameral Legislature, Colorado vs. Kansas tonight; Fraser Hall, 8 o'clock—Adv. K. U. Calendar (Marvin.) K. V. Colorado Debate Film Wednesday Thursday 7:30 Band practice, (Prasef), Civil Engineering Society 11:00 Entomological club (am.) 5:30 Easter vacation begins. School resumes Tuesday at 8:00 a. m. 8:00 K. U.-Colorado Debate, "Immigration," (Fraser chapel). 7:30 Band practice, (Fraser.) Athletics Apr. 17. Baseball, University of Apr. 18. Baseball, University Hawaii, at Lawrence. Apr. 18. Drake Relay Games at Des Moines. Apr. 25. Outdoor interclass meet, McCook May 1-2 Seventh Interscolastic ten- tle tournament. McCook fay 1 N. U.-K. U. dual track meet, McCook. day 2. Eleventh annual interscholastic track mee. McCook. May 5. K, S. A, C.-K, U. dual track meet at Manhattan. May 6-7, Baseball, M. U., at Law. rense. May 14-15. Baseball, M, U., at Columbia WHAT KANSAS BIRDS CAN YOU RECOGNIZE? fay 16. M. U.-K. U. dual track meet at Columbia. May 23. Annual invitation H. S track meet at Lawrence. May 30. meet I treat St. Louis Jun 5. Western Conference track meet at Chicago Mar. 31. Piano Recital, Alice Eldridge. Apr. 15, 29-30 Eleventh Annual Music Festival. Future Events Apr. 22 8:15 Annual spring con- cert of the University band May 1. Sophomore June. May 5-7. Merchants' week day 11-14. Kansas Newspaper Week—National and State News paper Conference. K. U. Ornithologists Classify 379 Species, 157 You Ought To Know Applications for the scholarships open to women students for 1914-15 should be made to the committee before April 15. Scholarships for Women The scholarships offered are: The Marcella Howland Memorial Scholarship, open to young women of the junior and senior classes of the College. The Daughters of the American Revolution Scholarship, $100. Open to women students of the College above the freshman year and to women students of the Graduate School. The Eliza Matheson Innes Memorial Scholarship, $100. Open to women students of the College above or female students of the Graduate School. The Caroline Mumford Winston memorial scholarship of $35 is open to women students of the College of classes above the freshman. The Lucinda Smith Buchan Memorial Scholarship maintained by the alumnae of the Pi Beta Phi sorority is a loan scholarship of $200. It is open to women students of the College. The Association of Collegei Mmaae Scholarship, $50.00. Open o women of the junior and senior years of the College. E. Galloo. Ida H. Hyde. Hannah Oliver Committee: Brown bread ice cream at Wiedemann's. How many birds do you know? The average person probably can name a dozen or two off hand while a sharp eyed country boy ought to recognize a hundred species. The University of Kansas says there are 379 species of birds in the state and 1586 nationally identified 7,500 species and preserved them in the museum, ought to know. There are 722 recognized sub-species. Kansas is an interesting field for the bird lover, as it is in the geographical center of the continent, where several bird-zones overlap. Being in proximity to these zones also in the path of the greatest bird migration in the world, and each spring and fall the state is crossed by flocks of practically every migratory land bird on the American continent. Here is a sample of Kansas birds, recently listed by the University Science Bulletin as common or abundant: Pied-bilg grebe, ring-billed gull Foster's tern, double-crested cor-morant, white pelican, merganer, mallard, gadwell, bald-pate, green-winged teal, blue-winged teal, shoveler, wood-duck, red-head, canvas-back, buffle-head, lesser snow goose, white-fronted goose. Canada goose, Dutchin's goose, red-headed goose, blue heron, egret, green heron, little brown crane, sandhill crane, king rail, coot, Wilson's phalarope, Wilson's snipe, stilt-sandpiper, pectoral sandpiper, white-rump sandpiper, least sandpiper, greater yellowlegs, yellowlegs, solitary sandpiper, long-billed curlew, golden plover, kilderer, mountain chick, mourning dove, turkey buzzard, black vulture Mississippi kite, marsh hawk, shark-shinned hawk, Cooper's hawk, red-tailed hawk, Western red-tail, red-shouldered hawk, Swainson's hawk, long-legged hawk, barn owl, horned owl, short-eared owl, barred owl, screech owl, great horned owl, burrow owl, yellow owl, woodpecker downward lark, hairy woodpecker downward lark, red-headed woodpecker red-bellied (woodpecker) nighthawk, whippoirowm, poorwish nighthawk, whippoirowm, poorwish ruby-throated hummingbird, bird, scissor crested flycatcher, phoebe, Sawyer creebed flycatcher, phoebe, Sayler creebed flycatcher, phoebe, Taylor creebed flycatcher, red-hooded woodpecker, red-hooded woodpecker red-bellied (woodpecker) nighthawk, whippoirowm, poorwish ruby-throated hummingbird, bird, scissor crested flycatcher, phoebe, Sayler creebed flycatcher, phoebe, Taylor creebed flycatcher, red-hooded woodpecker, red-hooded woodpecker red-bellied (woodpecker) nighthawk, whippoirowm, poorwish ruby-throated hummingbird, bird, scissor crested flycatcher, phoebe, Sayler creebed flycatcher, phoebe, Taylor creebed flycatcher, red-hooded woodpecker, red-hooded woodpecker red-bellied (woodpecker) nighthawk, whippoirowm, poorwish ruby-throated hummingbird, bird, scissor crested flycatcher, phoebe, Sayler creebed flycatcher, phoebe, Taylor creebed flycatcher, red-hooded woodpecker, red-hooded woodpecker red-bellied (woodpecker) nighthawk, whippoirowm, poorwish ruby-throated hummingbird, bird, scissor crested flycatcher, phoebe, Sayler creebed flycatcher, phoebe, Taylor creebed flycatcher, red-hooded woodpecker, red-hooded woodpecker red-bellied (woodpecker) nighthawk, whippoirowm, poorwish Chi Omega entertained with the annual founder's day banquet Saturday night at the chapter house. The decorations were carried out in the sorority colors. The following out of town guests were present: Hazel Burges, Kathleen Cunningham, Katzman, Hilda Mess, Bess Wance, Helen Degen, Esther Deger, Kansas City, Mo., and Ethel Lord, Kansas City, Kan. LOST-By sophomore class: Posters; $15; one can, paste 5, cents; shoes; $2.50; sophomore pride $5,000. Total, $5017.65—Adv. (Paid.) Special brick designs for Easter. Reynolds Bros. Bros. 645..Adv. Unicameral Legislature, Colorado Unicameral Legislature, Fraser Hall, 8 'clock—Adv.' Colorite, 25c, colors old and new straw hats. Barber & Son, druggists.-Adv. Limeade, 5c. at Barber & Son's fountain. We use Wiedemann's ice cream and serve every drink in a clean glass.—Adv. Your Easter Suit-should bear the "Benjamin" or "Sampeck" label, which insures you perfect fit, distinctiveness, and style. We are showing them at all prices. $18 upward Johnson & Carl STUDENT LOAN FUND HAS $1300 FOR USE Money Can Be Borrowed at a Low Rate of Interest Thirteen hundred dollars is now available in the Student Loan Fund, according to a statement made today by Prof. E. F. Engle, custodian. No more than $100 is loaned to any student. The rate of interest is 4 per cent for a period of two or three years. This fund was started by the class of 1894 with a fund of $342, the profits of the senior play augmented by some individual gifts. Succeeding classes and various private parties have given money to this fund until at the present time $1300 is the total amount. The class of 1900 was the last class to complete the succeeding classes having forgotten the existence of the fund. The last gift $125, was from the alumni association. Prof. E, F. Engel is the custodian of the money and a printed report of the fund since its beginning will be published soon. The names of many who have benefitted by this aid are known over the state and nation. Applications for aid may be made to Professor Engel. FACULTY TO CONSIDER CHANGES IN MAJORING Will Meet in Body to Decide On Changes Suggested by Committee The first committee composed of a member of the faculty of each department has adopted the report to the faculty to take definite action. The faculty, meeting in a body will decide whether or not the recommendations for a major system be replaced by a different system to replace the present group system. The recommendations made by the committee are not yet ready for publication; it is by no means certain that they will be adopted and in case that they are not, the plan will not be given to the press. "A meeting of the faculty is called for Tuesday, April 21," said Dean Olin Templin this morning, "for the consideration of this report of the faculty." Templin said that a special meeting will be called earlier to decide the question. For your Easter greeting remember your mother, brother, sister, or some one else's sister with a box of Wiedemann's Chocolates—Adv. Special brick designs for Easter. Reynolds Bros. Bell 645.-Adv. EASTER,with its turnout of well groomed-men and their fair ladies, is just around the corner! Men whom you'll find at the head of the procession are coming to this Live Store to be fitted out for the occasion with their new Spring Kuppenheimer Clothes Weaves and color shades, all in keeping with the season, are a delightful contrast to those that have gone before; styles are the kind others are made after. Prices range from $18 to $28. Easter Haberdashery J. House & Son A Little Farther Up the Street, a Little Less to Pay STATE HISTORICAL SOCIETY UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN VOLUME XI. NUMBER 132 COLORADO FINALLY LOSES K. U. DEBATE Goes Down to Defeat for First Time in Six Years DECISION WAS UNANIMOUS But the Team at Oklahoma Lost Arguing Against the Unicameral System The debating team which went to Oklahoma to tangle with the Sooners did not fare so well. The judges of the game were the Oklahomaians with a 2 to score, 1. The team arrayed against Colorado was composed of Avery F. Olney, Harold M. Mattoon, and Hermy A. Shinn, arguing on the affirmative side for the unicameral form of legislature. The judges were Prof. Alfred Leash of Baker University, Prof. Charles A. Hardy, of Ottawa University, and Charles A. Summer, of Kansas City. For the first time in six years, a debating team representing the University of Kansas defeated the University of Colorado trio Wednesday night in the annual forensic encounter. The decision of the judges was unanimous in favor of the Kansas speakers. UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS TUESDAY AFTERNOON, APRIL 14, 1914. Arvid Frank, Oliver Athetion, and Donald Joseph represented the University of Kansas in the Oklahoma debate. They had the negative side of the same question. Prof. H. T. Hill, of the department of public speaking, accompanied the team to Oklahoma. WHY NOT A TUG - OF - WAR? That Is The Plan Suggested For The Two Lower Classes—Dodd Approves Why not a tug-of-war between the freshmen and sophomores? That is the plan suggested by several students. "A big rope could be stretched across Potter Lake and chosen teams representing each class, could be put at each end," said a prominent student this morning. "The plan is to try to keep the ropes certainly be a whole lot of fun." CHECKS IT UP TO OLNEY Freshman President Says Head of College Should Look After Superfluous Candidates Leslie Dodd, president of the Student Council, thinks the plan a good one. Don Harrison, president of the freshman class said this morning that he would not call a meeting of the first year men to eliminate any of the yearlings who would be members of the Student Council. WOULD HAVE SENIORS AND FACULTY TURN IN DATES Senior men and women are requested to turn in their dates for the junior prom by Wednesday noon to either of the managers, Bat Nelson or Kit Carson, or Harry Wilson of the invitation committee. This will require a commitment to show how many to prepare for and will be a great convenience. All of the candidates are from the College and he thinks that it is a College affair and if there is to be a primary it should be at the blinding cost. The students. Student Council rules forbid the election of more than one freshman. Faculty members who are planning to attend the function are requested to notify the same men by Wednesday noon also. KANSAS CITY BANKER TO SPEAK ON "INVESTMENTS" H. P. Wright, an investment banker of Kansas City, Mo., will speak to the students of the economic department Thursday afternoon at 4 o'clock in Snow Hall on "Investments." Mr. Wright was engaged to be here two weeks ago but could not come. C. M. Sawyer's lecture, scheduled for this afternoon, was not given. The Journal club of the English department will meet Thursday, April 18, at 4:30, in Room 211 Fraser Hall. Send the Daily Kansan home ALICE NIELSEN TO APPEAR IN CONCERT Prima Donna Soprano to Sing in Robinson Gym Tomorrow Night SHE GOES DIRECT TO LONDON Will Leave Lawrence For Spring Opera Season in Royal Company —To Give 18 Selections Madam Alice Nielsen, prima dona soprano of the Metropolitan and Boston Opera company and of the Royal Opera Company, of Convent Garden, London, will give the first concert of the Eleventh Annual SHEWAN ALICE NIELSEN Musical Festival of the School of Fine Arts in Robinson Gymnasium at 8:15 tomorrow night. Madam Nielsen goes direct form (Continued on page 4) RAIL ON CUT-OFF STEPS "Safety First" Device Northwest of Library This Will Be Completed Four and one-half times as many inquiries were answered by the Municipal Reference bureau in March 1914 as in the same month last year. For March the total number of inquiries was 45; last year it was ten. Thirty of the questions came from Kansas towns and the remaining fifteen came from states in all parts of the country. Hawks Will Try Out MANY KANSAS TOWNS ASK K. U. QUESTIONS E. F. Crocker, superintendent of buildings and grounds, said this morning that the new railings on the steps on the library cut-off, leading to the campus would be completed by the end of this week at the latest. The steps leading to the street car station in the rear of the Law Building have already been improved and made safer by the addition of steel nine railings. The number of subjects of the impurities was nearly as large as the ist. Municipal ownership of electric lighting plants received the argest attention with three questions. The Hawk Club will hold tryouts for the play, "The Fortune Hunter," to be produced May 8th, in Room 143. All members are urged to be present. This Check Made Possible the Men's Student Union The Alumni Association VOUCHER-CHECK No. 1977 THE ATMINE ASSOCIATION OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS LAWRENCE, KANSAS March 18, 1914 PAY TO THE ORDER OF The Men's Student Council $500.00 Five Hundred 0070 DOLLARS TO Peoples State Bank LAWRENCE, KANSAS GENERAL SECRETARY AND TREASURER Kinder McCall CHAIRMAN EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE The Weather Temperature readings: WILL ELECT W. S. G. A. OFFICERS TOMORROW 4. p. m. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 55 7. a. m. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 45 2. p. m. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 48 The Alumni Association lent the Student Union $500 to secure and equip temporary quarters. Plans are under way for the erection of a permanent Student Union Building on the University campus. Women Will Choose President, Two Vice-Presidents, Sec'y and Treasurer "We want all the county clubs and student organizations to discuss the permanent Student Union in their meetings," said Larry Kilmear, president of this organization this morning. "The big question at present is whether the money for the building should be raised by contribution or by a state appropriation. We would like to have the of the students in this matter." The election of officers for the W. S. G. A. will be held tomorrow from 9 to 4:30 in the Museum. The officers to be elected are: president, faculty member at College and one from the School of Fine Arts, secretary, and treasurer. KINNEAR WOULD HAVE CLUBS DISCUSS UNION An injured leg an operation, a kick by a mule on the same leg and an attack of yellow jaundice are trying to keep Captain John E. Detwiler from leading the football squad next fall. Detwiler's latest malady is yellow jaundice whichICKs his halfback for the past week his home in Smith Center. He is improving rapidly and expects to be up this week. The candidates are: for president, Doris Hackbush; vice-president, College, Virginia Goff and Naomi Simpson; vice-president, Fine Arts, Nina Kanaga; secretary, Eunice Pleasant and Genevieve Herrick; treasurer, Helen Trent and Stella Stubbs. Leen M. Bocker, junior electrical; and Floyd L. Nutting, junior mechanical, have announced their candidacies for membership of the Men's Student Council from the School of Engineering. DETWILER NOW SICK IN BED Detwiler's injured leg is better and the stiffness about gone. "I expect to be on McCook field when the first practice is called," Captain Detwiler told a friend Sunday. Tells of "Plastic Surgery" Dr. W. S. Sutton, of Kansas City, talked to the Phi Delta Phi fraternity, on "Plastic Surgery" Wednesday evening. His talk was given with lantern slides. Football Captain is Confined by an Attack of Yellow Jaundice— Is Improving. Edgar W. Campbell, '12 and Mrs. Campbell, who was Miss Sylvia Achten, of Wetmore, visited friends at the university yesterday. Since being graduated from the law school Mr. Campbell has been associated with his father at Seneca, but recently opened an office at Wetmore. The committee has written to a number of universities which have Unions inquiring as to the way they raised the money for their buildings. The committee will all these letters some definite plan of campaign here will be decided on. Visits K. U. Friends Weather Forecast: Fair and warmer. Engineers For Councilmen CHEMICAL ENGINEERS HAD BUSY DAY IN INDIA The Chemical Engineers, now on an inspection trip to Chicago and vicinity, spent a busy day around Gary, Ind, the home of the U. S. Steel Company's largest plant. After breakfast at Gary they left for Whiting at 8:05 to inspect the company after lunch. After lunch they went to Grasselli, Ind, where they visited the Grasselli Chemical Company's plant and the U. S. Metal Refining Co. They will return to Chicago this evening and will reach Lawrence shortly before noon tomorrow. AMATEUR SOCIOLOGISTS VISIT WAKARUSA SCHOOLS Students Under Professors Burgess and Naismith Inspect Pupils' Health and Condition The students who are working on the social survey of Wakarusa township visited six schools in the district yesterday. They gathered data covering the eye, ear, and throat conditions of the children as well as general information concerning height, weight and general physical measurements. Many of the parents, W.W. Bhusua, so interested in the work which the students are doing that they have asked the sociologists to send reports of the facts gathered in their district. The students who made the canvass are: Leila Nein, Verbert Mix, Ralph Wiley, members of Dr. James Naismith's class in Anthropometry; Mary Bossi, Remington Kellogg, and Clarence Smith and members of Professor Burgess's class in rural sociology. WILL DISCUSS BUTTE MINES Prof. Winchell, of Wisconsin, to Give Illustrated Lectures in Geology Building Prof. A. U. Winchell, of the geology department of the University of Wisconsin, will deliver two illustrated lectures in Haworth Hall next Thursday. His subjects will be "Mining Geology of Butte" and "The Origin of Butte Deposits." The lectures will be given at 10 a.m. and 4:30 p. m. Butte is one of the most important mining districts in the world and Professor Winchell is thoroughly familiar with it. PLEDGES MUST BE PAID BY WEEK FROM FRIDAY About $200 is still unpaid and the money is needed badly. There are a number of debts on the furnishings which must be settled immediately and Kennedy desires that the students settle up at once. Union pledges must be paid to Randolph Kennedy by a week from Friday or the names of those who lost in the war and failed to do so will be published. Miss Lucy Y. Riggs, Y. W. C. A. territorial secretary for this district, and a K. U. graduate, will address the Y. W. C. A. meeting this after- LUCY Y. RIGGS, SECRETARY OF Y. W., TO GIVE ADDRESS Prof. Raymond A. Schwegler will give a lecture tonight at 7:30 in Myer's Hall on the subject of "Immortality." The Y. W. C. A. employment bureau still has several positions for girls and positions are being offered for next year. Miss Carroll requests the girls desiring work for next year to leave their applications with her now so that as much may be done before next fall as possible. Clark Takes Long Trip Russell Clark spent the Easter recess in Minnesota, Minn., where he inspected the engraving work for the 1914 Jayhawker. SOPHS FACE DAMAGES AND ALSO BANKRUTTCY Mrs. Willis Asks $25 to Repair House After "Assault on Torreon" To broken* window lights... $4.00 To broken* window frames... 5.00 To one broken door... 3.00 To damaged rugs, etc... 5.00 To trampled yard and garden... 5.00 To wounded feelings... 3.00 Grand Total. . . $25.00 That is what the assault and paddling of Torreon that took place in the 1300 block on Tennessee and Vermont streets last Wednesday night April 8, between the freshmen and the sophomores aided by federal reinforcements of upperclassmen led by "Tony" James and "Willie" Weidlein, is going to cost the sophomore class. Mrs. G. W. Willis, of 1312 Vermont street, is asking that much in damages from the sophomore class as the result of a raid on her home made to capture Dobar, Darby, and Allen, three freshman leaders. "I consider $25 a low estimate of the damage done my home," said Mrs. Willis this morning, "and I feel that the sophomore class will immediately see fit to reimburse me to that extent. I haven't yet taken my office up with the Board of Administration, but shall await the action of the class. I saw one member of the class the time who was in the crowd that stormed my house and he admitted that he thought the class should reimburse me." According to Mr. Willis, the door bell rang late in the evening, but before anyone could answer it the house was full of sophomores who swept to every part of the house after the freshmen who had been leaders of the first-year crowd that spanked and almost deported the past week. In the "rough park" that followed window lights, doors, garden and lawn came out a poor second. "It will bankrupt the class to pay that," remarked a prominent sophomore this morning. "It was worth it, however." OPHOMORES AND FRESHMEN HOLD OPEN AIR MEETING The sophomore and freshmen classes met in mass meeting Wednesday night. The session was held at 11:59 in the open air at the corner of Thirteenth and Tennessee streets. The crowd flowed into the arena from all the cardinal points. Various football stars presided. The minutes of the previous meeting of the club were filled with and the immediate business was taken up. The business was soon transacted and the sophomores returned gleefully and uproarously "to their respective homes, voting the evening a success". The freshmen felt a little earlier and voted to eat off the mantlepiece over the vacation. Gospel Team to Blue Rapids The University Y. M. C. A. gospea team Hal Coffman, Leland Jenks, and McKinley Warren, will go to the summer camp. They will be there the remainder of the week working in connection with A. H Holloway, County Work Secretary for Marshall County. Their purpose is to interest the high school boys in Y. M. C. A. work. ... The members of the Daily Kansan Board challenge the Men's Student Council to a baseball game, to be played over time or place the Student Club may designate. ... WHO WILL LOOK OVER BOOKS OF STUDENTS? Absence of Secretary Brown Raises Question About Council Custom OFFICIALS LIKE THE PLAN Welcome Rule Because An Outside O. K. Relieved Them of All Suspicion of Graft. When the Student Council was first organized it evolved a plan to have the secretary of the University audit the books of the officers of all student organizations. The object was to abolish any "graft" which may have existed, as well as to have cash balances in certain organizations turned over to the Student Union fund. The absence of E. E. Brown, former secretary and purchasing agent, from the University this year, raises a question of interest to the Student Council, as well as the student body. To audit a audit, the year's student accounts? The Student Council has consistently supported its original position and the plan is mentioned in the Student Directory under the heading, "Rules Passed by the Men's Student Council." But this year there is no secretary and purchasing agent and none of the University officials seem to know of anyone who is supposed to audit the accounts. The Board of Administration has the power, of course, to appoint any other University official as the auditor with or without the request of the Student Council. The plan has worked very successfully in other years. Student officials have usually been insistent on the audit since an O.K. from an outfit was submitted, and the suspicion of "graft" which is so often rumored without foundation. K.U.MAN STARS ON BROADWAY Hale Hamilton Carries Lead in the Play "A Pair of Sixes" at a Broadway Theater Hale Hamilton, K. U's most famous actor, has recently returned returned from London, where he delighted English theater-goers in "The Fortune Hunter" and "Sealed Orders." On returning to this continent Hamilton immediately adoptead with him work for the play and in the lead in this play has started on a successful run at the Longueville Theatre on Broadway. Hamilton has become as much of a hit abroad as at home, and his long run at the Queen's Theater in London was due in no small sense to his personal charm. As the star in "The Fortune Hunter," and even as Wallingford in "Get-Rich-Quick-Wallingford" he made an instantaneous hit with the British audiences, and compelled the dramatic critics abroad to give him nothing but favorable notices. Hamilton was graduated from the Law School here ten years ago. He is a member of the Phi Kappa Psi fraternity. He expects to come to Topeka this summer to see his father J. D. M. Hamilton, and from there will visit Lawrence and thank Uncle Jimmy Green for the lectures on law which he used to attend occasionally, though Hamilton isn't sorry that he decided to direct his own eloquence toward the theatre box instead of the jury box. PROF, BECKER REFUSES EASTERN COLLEGE'S OFFER Prof. Carl L. Becker, of the Department of history, has just refused an offer to teach in an eastern college at a raise in salary. The Board of Education raised Professor Becker's salary in order to induce him to stay. Win Golf Tournament. Dr. H. T. Jones and C. A. Altman won the first four-ball tournament of the Oread Golf Club completed Saturday. They won the event by defeating M. W. Sterling and A. Sterling in the final by a score of 8 up points for the No. 10 points counted for each hole low score and low total. A. K. U. "English Eddie" William Powell who played "Eddie Griggs" at the Bowersock last night in "Within the Law" and whose home is in Kansas City, was a student at the University some years ago. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Official student paper of the University of Kagawa EDITORIAL STAFF EDITORIAL STYLE JOHN C. MIDDER. Editor-in-Chief LEON HARBERT. Associate Editor JOHN GLETISNER. Manager, Instructional Editor BILLY SMITH. Instructional Editor LANDON LATRID. Sport Editor BUSINESS STAHL REPORTORIAL STAFF UNIVERSITY EDWIN ABBEL. RAY ELDHORDE. JOS BISHOP. CHAR. S. STUARTVEN. Business Manager Circulation Manager Advertising Manag- er Advertising Advertising Advertising SAM DROEN BRIAN GILBERT GLENDON ALLYNE GRAHAM MARTIN BURBENAREL LUCILE HILDINGER LAWRENCE SMITH GILBERT AVANTON GILBERT SMITH IAL STAFF BATH FIRM W. PERCUSSION W. PERCUSSION HEMBERT PLANT RAY COPPER RAY COPPER WILLIAM S. CABY WILLIAM S. CABY JOHNSON HOWARD- CLARK Entered M second-class mail matter lawrence Kansas, under the set of March Published in the afternoon two times a week. Kansas. From the press of the department of Administration. Subscription price $2.50 per year, in advance; one term, $1.50 Phone, Bell K. U. 25. Address all communications to UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Lawrence, Kans. The Daily Kansan aims to picture the undergraduate news by going further "to more clearly transmit the news by standing up and presenting it to students; to be clean; to be cheerful; to be positive; to be more serious problems in user heads; to be more serious problems in faculty; to be more serious problems in the students of the University." TUESDAY, APRIL 14, 1914. 'Tis the taught already that profits by teaching—Robert Browning. THE LAST STRETCH It has been mighty easy to post- pone that necessary hard intensive study until "next week" or "next month" all semester, but the limit in postponement has 'about been reached. GET THEIR FEET WET Easter vacation is over and the monotonous grind to the end has begun, with only a slight ripple of joy at the vacation on the first day of next month. It may be too late now to dig in and make up all that back work but it is absolutely certain that one cannot wait much longer and have any success avoiding that long red line of Flunks. So students who have studied too sparingly up to this time must surprise the professors, satisfy themselves, and get started on real business. The freshmen and sophomores could easily settle their traditional difficulties in a harmless manner by inaugurating a tug-of-war across one end of Potter lake. This custom is used at Ohio State University and has been suggested freely on the hill since the big paddling last week. Clashes in the student district at night are too dangerous to be continued. The Student Council should adopt the tug-of-war or some other substitute which will be just as much fun and entirely unobjectionable. THE PROM The junior prom is one of the big social functions of the year. It is one of those events which lasts in a graduate's mind. Every junior should go. He owes it to himself, to his class, and to the seniors. Only once in a lifetime does he have the chance under these circumstances. The money spent now will be forgotten in a month's time but the Prom will never be. THE PLAY THIS YEAR The renaissance in dramatics came sooner than it was expected, in fact the University will not be allowed to witness the flight of two successive semesters without an amateur production. The "dark ages" in this popular branch of student activity will be few—and the University is to be congratulated because of this fact. The union of all dramatic organizations was the proper thing to do in order to make student plays more worthy of the University. For this reason "The Fortune Hunter" should be better staged and the parts better acted than ever before in the history of K. U. productions at the Bowersock. The frequenters of Mount Oread will expect something well worthy of enthusiastic support from the Hawk club this spring and may the one-club, one-play-a-year idea live long and prosperously! WHEN SUPPORT IS FUTILE "I supported the Union, I paid my dollar the first night—and I haven't been near the place since." This remark is typical of a type of students whose influence is baneful at the University, although, luckily, the class is not in the ascendant The man has paid his dollar, but the Union idea would fail tomorrow if he had many followers. Money will NOT make the Union go—highly desirable though financial assistance may be. The advantage which will make the permanent Union succeed eventually, and the reason that the temporary Union is already succeeding so well in its modest way, is that the men of the University there have a place to mingle with other students at any time on a democratic plane. Students who drop a dollar in the Union slot and then withdraw to more exclusive haunts are but one notch better than those who withhold their money, as well as their personality. ENDS AND ODDLETS University investigation proves that Lawrence water is good, bacteriologically, which simply accelerates its content that nothing can save it. Reading that line "books in the running brooks" on a sunny lazy day, makes one wish that text books were there. "What is that heavy automobile truck loaded with?" "Millinery bills." Is it a coincidence that along with the announcement that titled English women are commencing to loop the loop in aeroplanes a large London firm lays in an extensive supply of telescopes? And now arises many protests from the home districts over the Easter toll bills. Thomas Edison complains that his wife will not let him go back to work, and every married man in the country is using her as an example. The annual pilgrimage of grand- nothers to the land of the departed s due with the opening of the base- ball season. AN ENGINEERS BANQUET The accompanying "specifications together with a blueprint plan showing the seating arrangement, punch table and cabinet in the folder like real specifications, formed the menu and souvenir of a farewell dinner given to a member of city engineer's work of Waste burger firm, by his engineering associates. Body—The main portion of the work shall consist of Chicken Crocodile and other Meat, Peas, Potatoes and Jelly being used sparingly which, at the direction of the engineer, shall be subject to rigorous tests and inspection. Foundation. The foundation shall be of Oysters on Half Shell laid in a bed of mortal composed of one part tobacco to three parts ketchup the whole covered with cheese and shall be placed before the shell has been obtained its initial set, to the end that it may, with the litter, form a compact and homogeneous mass. Crackers may be used as "plums" and wherever, in case of large amounts, necessary, reinforcement of one half inch round celery shall be used. Coping—In placing the Walderof Salad, the coarse aggregate of which shall be not larger than one-half inch in diameter, than the proper care shall be used that the proper depth be obtained so that the Cheese, Crackers, Ice Cream and Cake may be worked into the mussel and the solid or monolithic structure. **rmish- At the completion of each section, it shall immediately be given a coat of heavy dark Coffee, and as soon as this has dried, the whole shall be gone out. The latter to be subject at all times to the inspection and control of the engineer—Purdue Exponent.** WITH K. U. POETS The sun awns down in the west. To the land where the evening star Hang bright on the evening's breast. To the land where my loved ones By WILLIAM HEREBERT CARRHUT, 'So Formerly Vice-Chancellor of the Unit SONG AT SUNSET But the sun, when the night is done, Comes up over the bitter matter. Ah, if I were the setting sun I never should rise again! The Daily Kansan will not print communications where the authorship is not known. The editor is in charge and the editorial board concerning the Junior Prom which cannot be printed until the communicant discloses his identity. "Names are not required" for communication and not evidence that the "Campus Opinions" are written in good faith. CAMPUS OPINION WANTS K. U. CONGRESS The changing of the name of the University Council to that of the University Senate to some extinct caribbean tribe was a custom that the mere altering of a title. A new light has been thrown upon the unnatural relation between the Council of the faculty members and the Men's Student Council. That there is great dissatisfaction over the position of the Student Council is acknowledged by all. It seems to be a very general opinion among the students that the powers of this body are more important than a figurehead in any important matter should the faculty disapprove of its action. The faculty has taken the first step and become the University Senate. The title of our upper house in state and federal government, has been adopted. Will the students take advantage of this opening? Should not she be allowed to represent the Representatives and make the unique government of the United States a reality at the University of Kansas. Matters of concern to our University should be of as much concern to the student body as to the faculty. The student body is really represented in the government of the institution and their representatives pass on the various acts of legislation, the present feeling of unrest and distrust will vanish. At the present time the students are being governed by a system which long ago ceased to exist in democratic countries. The appointment of the members of the faculty is entirely outside of student control. Still these self same appointed professors organize themselves into a body which as we have seen, is similar in its structure to a similar body world, in a strong oligarchy. We have government. Why not have representation? That is the nucleus of the American idea of liberty. Kansas is a progressive state as to its government, but its state university should not be represented by representative government recognized by this state and nation. THE STORY OF MY LIFE By C. L. Edson, Former Student. There was another chap named Edson in the University when I entered. He was a bad actor and was finally expelled. I inherited his bad reputation although I "never done nothin'"! When I was a freshman I started a magazine and called it the K. U. Automobile. That was a new word then not found in any dictionary, but I grew to have a name no other paper ever had. So you see, I'm an original cuss. I never got a degree from K U. One credit I earned from K U. One university group took from the records, so I was April foiled on my degree. I worked for the Kansas City Star as long as they would let me then became a farmer in North Arkansas. My job was working at leading U. nearly starved to the highest salary I ever drew is too small to be mentioned—until last week when my luck turned. I am now writing the book. I will kill and am known on Broadway as "the man from Arkansas." I am drawing a bigger salary than you would believe, but I don't advise any student to follow the poetry of my teacher as I should. I tough road, and if it had been three feet longer, I know I never would have lasted till I got there. n many ways doth the full heart re- veal The presence of the love it would conceal.—Coleridge. Seest thou a man wise in his own conceal? There is more hope in a conceal than a mere concealment. Alice Nielsen Concert FREE TO Holders of Course Tickets FOR THE Music Festival Student Tickets Exchanged for Coupon Tickets at Woodward's TODAY DIVINITY SCHOOL THE HARVARD UNIVERSITY UNSECTARIAN UNIVERSITY PRIVILEGES Elective courses leading to the University degrees of S. T. B., A. M., and Ph. D. Students paying the full fee may take without extra charge appropriate courses offered in the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences in Andover Theological Seminary. For particular addresses The Dean of the Harvard Divinity School 4 Divinity Library, Cambridge, Mass. Full Dress Suits For the Prom We have them both for sale and for rent. Also carry all the necessary accessories M. J. Skofstad 829 Mass. Send the Daily Kansan home. THE LINE DANCE Regal A Shoe For a Purpose AN important feature of Regal Oxfords is that they are built over special Oxford lasts which are thinned below the ankle bone and provide a sort of "pocket" for the heel which prevents gaping sides and slipping. "CRISPIN" Walking Oxford $4.50 Round toe; broad flat tread; wide shank; low-to-the-ground heel; extension sole. Provided in Russet or Black King Calf. PECKHAM'S FOR SALE: Eight room house on Ohio St.; strictly modern; suitable for boarding club; steam heat; sleeping porch. Excellent reason for selling. Price reasonable. Inquire or write to Abels, Kansan Office A young woman of education and experience in foreign travel will take a small party through Europe this summer on an extensive but comparatively inexpensive tour, leaving Kansas City June first. MISS ALLYS, Care "Daily Kansan" WATKINS NATIONAL BANK Capital $100,000 Surplus and profits $100,000 The Student Depository A. G. ALRICH Printing Binding, Copper Plate Printing, Bubber Stamps, Carving, Steel Die Embossing, Seals, Badges. 744 Mass. One Want Ad in the Daily Kansan last week brought eleven replies to the advertiser Kansan Want Ads always bring good results UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN ANNOUNCEMENTS Seniors who did not get commencement invitations can get them from the committee up to the fifteenth. The committee is: Rose Dyer, Helen Alphin, Paul Serber, Floyd Devlin, Arthur Duston, and Sam Fairchild. The Mott Campaign Committee will meet tomorrow at 5 p. m. in stead of 9 o'clock the usual hour. Hawk club will hold tryouts tonight at 7, in Room 101, Fraser. Sigma Delta Chi will hold a business meeting tonight at 7 o'clock at the Pi Upsilon house. WANT ADS All those interested in forming a Bristow-for-Senior club will meet Wednesday, at 4:30 in Room 110, Fraser. FOR RENT—Two dress suits, Clark, 730 Mass. 132-3 FOUND—Watch, Thursday night. Owner call 2626 B. 1339 Ohio and identify property. LOST—A golf club called a mid-iron on the golf links Saturday. Bell phone 1926. 132*3". LOST -Silver purse, Alpha Delta Pi seal on back, lost on 3rd floor Fraser Thursday. Call B. 1835. WANTED—At once; a student to carry the K. C. Times. Must have the 9 and 10 o'clock hours vacant College. In 1214 Kentucky students 322-8. Cottages in Estes Park for rent. Call Bell 1318 or address X, Care University Daily Kansan. 129-5 Wanted—Salesmen $10 to $100 each. Big demand! Send twenty-five cents for alphabetically arranged list of names and addresses of prominent film producing companies. The Aytunez Producers' List, Box 347, Pueblo, Colorado— Profitable vacation employment for Students selling guaranteed household articles. Last season students made from $27.00 to $40.00 and Ensure your territory National Co., Bd St. Newark, N.Y.-Adv. 132-8 Colorite. 25c, colors old and new straw hats. Barber & Son, druggists.—Adv. Limeade, 5c, at Barber & Son's fountain. We use Wiedemann's ice cream and serve every drink in a clean glass.—Adv. PROTSCH The Tailor THEY ARE HERE PROFESSIONAL CARDS W. G. MCCONNELL, Physician and surgeon. Office 819 Mass. Bell 399. Office 819 Mass. Tenn. Bell 399. Bell 1023, House 936. J. F. BROCK, Optometrist and Specialist in Sensitive Glass Fitting. Office 892 Mass. St. bell phone 693. HARRY EREY, M.D., D. Eye, ear, nose and throat. Glasses fitted. Office F.A. A. Blvd. Phones. Bell 513, Home 512. G. A HAMMAN, M.D. D. Eye, ear, nose and throat. Glasses fitted. Office F.A. A. Blvd. Phones. Bell 513, Home 512. G. A HAMMAN, M.D. D. Eye, ear, nose and throat. Glasses fitted. Office F.A. A. Blvd. Phones. Bell 513, Home 512. G. A HAMMAN, M.D. D. Eye, ear, nose and throat. Glasses fitted. Office F.A. A. Blvd. Phones. Bell 513, Home 512. D. W. O'BRYAN, Dentist. Over Wilson's Drug Store. Bell Phone 507. J. B.RECHETH, M.D. D. O. 833 Mass. Street. Both phones, office and residence. D. R.H. J. TONES, Room 12 F. A. Bldg. Residence 935. Ireland. St. both phones. D. R.H. J. TONES, Room 12 F. A. Bldg. Residence 935. Ireland. St. both phones. D. R.H. J. TONES, Room 12 F. A. Bldg. Residence 935. Ireland. St. both phones. D. R.URT B.R. WHITE Osteopathe. Phones. Office 257. Office, 745 Mass. St. Ed. W. Parsons, Engraver, Watchmaker and Diamonds and Jewelry. Bell Phone S. T. GILLISPELL, M.D. Office corner Vermont and Warren St. Residence 738 Ind. Phones 596. CLASSIFIED Plumbers Phone Kennedy Plumbing Co. for gas goods and Mazda lamps. 937 Mass. Phones 885. LADIES Tailors MRS ELLISON, Dressmaking and Ladies Vermont. Phone Bell 2411 West. Queen City College. System and sewing taught. Dressmaking in connection with school. Mrs G. Mark Brown. 849 Ky. Bell 1744. Hair Dressers Hairdressing, shampooing, scalp and facial massage, shampooing, hair-fools. "Marilyn" cell phones call Bell 1572. Home 51. The Select Hair Dressing Shop. 297 Mass. St. Barber Shops Go where they all go. V.K. JOHN 913 Mass. Student's Co-op Club. $2.50 to $3.00 per year 1340 Ky. Geo. H.Vansel Stewart. Around Mount Oread Walter A. Butler, who was graduated last year from the University and who has a position in the N. W. State Bank of Commerce in Kansas listed as registered "Tub" successfully resisted the temptation to decamp with any of the bank funds since the only "bullion" he handles is cancelled checks. Arthur Erieson must be mighty hard to please for she wrote to Washington, D. C., to get his date for the Soph Hop. Allie Carroll offered a prize of a twenty-five dollar silver set to the person guessing the nearest time it would take a top-shaped flask filled with water to empty drop by drop. The exact time was 331 hours, 25 minutes, and 55 seconds and H. R. Wade, a junior engineer, was third nearest, guessing within an hour of the exact time. King Adams, janitor of Fraser Hall, while mopping the sophomore poster off the walk last week, was asked if he approved of such doings. "Why, boys, there ain't nothing wrong in such things," he said. Why, ten years on, they should cover words with the awfulest cwords on 'em. What's the use of the students sitting 'round with their rhands folded?" Upon the wall of the office in Fraser occupied by Prof. C. H. Talbott, of the extension department, there hangs a framed copy of the lines from the "Invitus" by William Ernest Henley; It matters not how strait the gate How charged with punishment the I am the master of my fate, I am the captain of my soul. "I saw those words framed on the wall of the office of a United States Senator with whom I am acquainted and they struck me so forcibly that I looked them up," says Professor Talbot. BURLINGAME HIGHS HOLD FIRST INSTR-CLASS MEET (By Marshall Harkness) Burlingame, April 14—The junior-sophomore class track team took the inter-class track meet, the first of the season Friday afternoon on the local training track. The school uses this as a tryout for the school track team which will compete April 18 for the county cup. A wet track kept the contestants from smashing any former records but the meet on the whole was a success. Junior Laws! Damages and domestic relations—Prices right--second hand and new books. F. D. R. Miller, 1041 Vt. St.-Adv. THE DAILY KANSAN The Crowd Reads ORIGIN OF NATURAL GAS YET A MYSTERY If you want a crowd at your Play Dance Mixer Prof. Haworth of K.U. Discusses Genesis of Kansas Petroleum Products Advertise it in the Daily Kansan The origin of Kansas gas and oil though having been discussed for forty years is no nearer a definite solution than at first, according to Professor Erasmus Haworth, state Geologist, who is at the head of the department of economic geology at the University of Kansas. Professor Haworth, in form of these vast petroleum stores, thinks Professor Haworth be of great benefit in locating new pools. Kansan Ads Pay Two theories as to the origin of oil and gas are accepted by different bodies of scientists. They are the chemical and organic theories. Upholders of the organic theory believe that oil and gas were generated from great vegetable and animal deposits, in the same manner that coal was formed. The other theorists think that oil and gas was and is being formed in the interior of the earth by the decomposition of water acting on hot metals. The organic matter produced in the sea, and buried in the sands of its bottom is said to be more than sufficient to account for all the oil and gas ever prospected. Other experiments in higher chemistry show that the hydrocarbons petroleum and gas and oil have the same relation in regard to their refraction of light. This is taken to indicate their common origin. The organic theory is well known in connection with the origin of coal beds. The assumption is that the accumulated vegetable matter of luxuriant prehistoric swamps buried under water and mud, gradually was changed into coal, gas or oil. Decomposition of vegetable matter in the mud of stagnant pools causes gas to arise in bubbles. In the winter this gas collects beneath the ice, and will burn if lighted. It is called marsh gas, and is of practically the same composition as methane of natural gas. Gas found in shallow wells in glacial drift, whence no exhalations from the earth's interior could have penetrated, is advanced as supporting the organic theory. Modern research, according to Professor Haworth, seems to indicate that the organic theory is the correct one, but scientists do not, as formerly, hold that the formation of the hydrocarbons has ended. In the sands of the oceans' bottom today, and in the ooze in the great fresh water lakes, organic matter, animal and vegetable, is accumulating. By the process of decay, these forms, must be broken up into natural gas and petroleum, for the benefit of the earth-dwellers a million years hence. Scholarships for Women KING Applications for the scholarships open to women students for 1914-15 should be made to the committee before April 15. The scholarships offered are: The Marcella Howland Memorial Scholarship $87.50. Open to young women and senior classes of the College. The Eliza Matheson Innes Memorial Scholarship, $100. Open to women students of the College above the freshman year, or to women students of the Graduate School. The Daughters of the American Revolution Scholarship, $100. Open to women students of the College above the freshman year and to women students of the Graduate School. The Association of Collegiate Alumnae Scholarship, $50.00. Open to women of the junior and senior years of the College. The Caroline Mumford Winston memorial scholarship of $35 is open to women students of the College of classes above the freshman. The Buchen Memorial Scholarship maintained by the alumnae of the Pi Beta Phi sorority is a loan scholarship of $200. It is open to women students of the College. Committee: E. Galloo. Ida H. Hyde. Hannah Oliver Testing Township Wells The department of state water analysis will make examinations of water from wells in Wakarua township. Wednesday with the sociological survey which is being carried out by the Rural Sociology class. Chocolate, strawberry, vanilla, caramel nut, peach, banana nut cream and orange ice. Reynolds Bros. Bell 645; Home 358.—Adv. Brown bread ice cream at Wiedemark. FRONT 3% IN. BACK 2 IN. Wm. Barnett MARTINS TROY N.Y. 2 for 25c 1/4 SIZES at Peckhams All the principal cities and places of interest in Europe will be visited in Europe will be visited by the party Allys, care of Daily Kansas—Adv. CITY CAFE 906 Mass. Strictly Home Cooking Ever try our Special 15c Lunch? You'll like it. Typewriting Done By Alvin L. Babb 1334 Ohio St. Bell 'Phone 1574 W GOOD PLACE TO EAT A ANDERSON'S OLD STAND JOHNSON & TUTTLE 715 PROPS. Mass. SPRING SUITINGS FRANK KOCH TAILOR 727 Mass. Sam S. Shubert MAT. WED. and SAT. PEG O' MY HEART Next: PASSING SHOW OF 1913 Initial Box Paper McCOLLOCH'S Drug Store. Bert Wadham THE COLLEGE BARBER On 14th Street You Can Earn a Good Living and lay up some money too, on graduating from the Law school. Encourage your students to work hard and you'll secure a good position. Free Employment Bureau at your service. Free College Education and best Business College. No Vacations. BUSINESS COLLEGE Lawrence, Kansas. Three months in Europe for $600 is what the foreign travel ad in this issue of the paper offers.—Adv. NEW VAUDEVILLE THEATRE TONIGHT MATINEES WED. and SAT. The Accidental Sheriff Dubinsky Bros. Present America's Johnsky Bros. Present America's Foremost Stock Organization THE FRANKLIN STOCK CO., including that dandy pair, Miss Sylvia Summers and Mr. Alfred Pierce, in a magnificent production of the latest comedy success A Mere Veneer for a Union Suit A Laughing Contest in Four Acts 3 Big Vaudeville Specialties Prices 10 and 20 Cents T There veneer for a crafter Did you ever see a Union suit that was Coal Cut, with actual closed crotch and a closed back? Well, here's one, and the only one— PAT. JAN. 5TH 1909 COAT CUT UNION SUITS OLUS OLUS Union Suits open all the way down — have no flaps, no bunching and only one thickness of material anywhere—no opening in back, fit perfectly from shoulder to crutch—all fabrics, including knitted. Price from $1.00 to $1.00. At your dealer. Important Booklet on request. OLUS one-piece PAJAMAS for lounging, resting and comfortable sleep. Made on the same principle as OLUS Union Suits. No strings to tighten or come loose. $1.50 to $8.50. Or OLUS Wheel Distribution. OLUS. 948 BARRARD CIRCLE. Appt N. 948 BARRARD CIRCLE. 348 Broadway, New York Mr. Baseball Fan Are you interested in the Varsity team,the fraternity leagues,and the inter-club league? If you are,you will want to get all the dope of the games. Mail fifty cents to the University Daily Kansan and have it delivered the rest of the school year, until June 5. . UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN VALL "It's Green" The Edict Has Gone Forth! The illustration shows the ultra-Fashionable "Tango" model-One of those stylish " Society Brand" suits. One of the very prominent colors for the good dresser is green. See it in our window. It's of imported flannel Natural shoulders Athletic vest straight trousers Priced at $25. Ober's HEAD-TO-FOOT OUTFITTERS HERE IS THE OFFICIAL LIST OF H. H. LEAGUERS Managers Turn in Names of Men on the Various Teams Teams In accordance with the rule passed at a recent meeting of the Hash House League, managers of the various teams have prepared official lists of players and turned them in to the D.K. Kassan publication. They are printed below. Ko-op: J, Hunt J, Kliewer, E, Coffey, C Dimither L, L Osborn, C C, Ober A, M Durbon, H, M Tompkins, J Hostinsky, J. Me Loughlin (captain), E. Lindaner Meissner, F. O. Flaylock, R, W MacGregor, Moore, Ute Smith, A. H Wallack (manager). Columbus: Joe Lynch, Hainbach, Fierabend. Schnepfer, Watkins, Wallingsdorf, Smart, Devlin, Earley, H. Fitzgerald, J. Fitzgerald, Crowley, Bodie, Kitchener, Gulloff, Chinery (captain), McMeel (manager), Bryant, Boyett, Parker, Knoedl, Milton, Hunsinger, McKenney, Pattison, Outside players: Holsen, Buster, Brown, Grey, Cooper, Jones. Midway: Fisk (manager), Travis (captain), Barnard, Crow, Paul, Daub, Arnold, Williams, McCaffery, Apple, Wedell, Potwin, Apple, Yoakum. K. K.; George Humes (captain), H. H, Wentworth, A. T, Cowan, H. Ruppenthal, H. H, Richter, R, Roy Kent, H. N, Then, J. P, Caffery, Robt Brooks, E. L, Treece, M. K, Beverid Bliss, Bighal, G, W, Coffelt, Jack Greenstreet, Harry Henderson ,Hanson, W. P, P. Barcas (manager). Stevenson: S. M. Haa (ma- ager), G. Q. Grady (captain), C. W. Galdwin, F. B. Campbell, C. S. De- Roin, H. P. Evans, E. E. Gates, W. V. Hatcher, G. P. Hinshaw, C. A. Huffman, T. L. Howden, W. E. Janes, J. W. Messick, H. Morgan, M. McLaren, H. Dickerson, D. Teasley, E. L. Vermillion, B. P. Bixby, E. L. Halvern, E. C. Mowry. Babb House: Be D. Berwick (manager), Ray Batt, Carlton (captain), Roy Norrick, Will F. Rau, B. L. McKenzie, Matt Guliffeley, James Nelson, Otto Fair, O. A. Dingman, Leo Lepis, A. M. McCullough, Fred Raemer, H. E. Day, Martin Taylor, W. I. Crowley Wouldst: E. Blinco (captain) F, E. Bill, W. Blair (manager), L. A. Curry, J. A. Elliott, I. R. Elswick, D. S. Miles, H. E. Nottingham, C. F. Sloan, C. Yager. Outside players. L. Weibel, Benson, Trimmer. 1221: Harry Willson, Paul Dyer, Nutting: Andy Groft (captain) C. Conkey, R. Weaver, E. Keraus, L. Harsha, L. Harsh, J. P. Buckhenn- c, Cory, A. Boman, F. Nutting. Outside players: Orin Ruth, C. Baer, and H. King. Miles Vaughan, William W. Ferguson, Landon Laired, Sam H. Ferguson. Outside players: Clarence Williamson, Herbert Flint, C. August Ritter, C. S. Sturtevant, C. L. Gibbs, Ross Bornbakern, J. A. Greenes. Daniels: O. M. Larimore, V. J. Bowersock, H. N. Haucher, George Smee (captain), S. E. Campbell, Herbert Howland, E. C. Arnold (manager), Milton Baker, E. J. Elleson, Russell躲 Steel, William, Harvey Daniels, Glen Gamber, Arnold Nordstrom, and William Cady. Gillespie: Arlin, A. Johnson, X. X. Johnson, Poirier (manager), McLure, Dykte, McGinnis, Yust (captain), Warren, Emery, Fitzsimmons, Truessell, Gardner, Frank, Fooe, Campbell, Wood, Bearg, Coffman, C. Jones, Rummel, Clark, Edwards, Dubach, Hartashough, F. E. Jones. Marks; H. P. McFadden (manager), Hall, Wickert, Hughes Lambert, Allen, Henderson, Bond, PedroJ Parker, Parker, Bughy, Willett. Co-op: Harold Miller (manager and captain), Parker, Long, Russ, Gamber, Keefe, Allen, Malia Mallau, Spurrier, Scripps, Cherry, Riggs, Oyster, Scripps, Cherry, Terry, Riggs, Ducommen. Darby. Martin, Nordstrom, Jally, and Vansell K. U. Calendar Athletics Apr. 17. Baseball, University of Hawaii at Lawrence. Apr. 18. Baseball. University o Hawaii, at Lawrence. Apr. 18. Drake Relay Games at Des Moines. Apr. 25. Outdoor interclass meet. McCook. May 1-2 Seventh Interscholastic tennis tournament, McCook. May 1 N. U.-K. U. dual track meet. McCook. May 2. Eleventh annual interschool astic track mee. McCook. May 6-7. Baseball, M. U., at Law- rence. May 14-15. Baseball, M. U., at Columbia. May 5. K, 5. S, A. C.K. U. dual track meet at Manhattan. May 16. M. U.-K. U. dual track meet at Columbia. Future Events May 30. M. V. track meet. St. Louis. June at McGraw-Hill Conference track meet. May 23. Annual invitation H, S track meet at Lawrence. Mar. 31. Piano Recital, Alice Eldridge. Apr. 22 8:15 Annual spring con cert of the University band. Apr. 15, 29-30 Eleventh Annual Music Festival. May 31. Merchants Week. May 11-14. Kansas newspaper Week —National and State Newspaper Conference. Apr. 20. Spanish play. May 1. Sophomore hop. WILLIAM JEWELL TAKES FIRST BASEBALL GAME Visitors Win Ten Inning Battle by Steady Pitching of Masters The steady pitching of Masters enabled William Jewell to defeat the Varsity baseball team on McCook field Wednesday afternoon, 6 to 5. The game was a ten inning contest and was featured by the team's rosters. The day was raw and cold and neither team could play up to its standard. Masters was the whole show for the visitors. He held the Kansans to two hits in eight innings and struck out fourteen hawkeyes. Lance relieved him on the ninth twirl for the home team with Sommers behind the hat. William Jewell opened up with a tally in the third with two singles and an error. Kansas came right back in its part of the inning when Delongey brought in two runs with a two sacker and scored on Chinney's single. Three singles in the eight, William, william obliterate but K. U. scored twice in the eight on errors by the Missourians. The ninth inning came up with Kansas leading, 5 to 2. Hale singled for the visitors, a pass, a fielder's throw, and an intercept of the sacks. Carbaugh then smashed out a double, scoring three men and evening up the score. William frium doubled and scored on Jeffries Jewell won in the tenth when God Concordia, April 13.—The "Mikado," the Japanese play in two acts, was given by the members of the high school chorus on March 27 at the Brown Grand Theater. The cast and chorus was directed by Prof. Oscar B. Seyster and Mrs. Mabel Wilcox-Ewing. CHINAMEN TO INVADE K. U. BASEBALL CAMP The score: R. H. E. Wm. Jewell 000 001 003 004 000 001 003 -5 3 2 Batteries, Masters, Lance and Hill and Tommy and Sons and Sommers, impire, Wedell. the principals of the play were Roscoe Tasker, the Mikado; Lawrence Dutton, Nanki Poo; Kingdom Burroughs, Ko-Ko; William Cook, Pooh-Bah; Marguerite Ferguson, Katina Winona Noe, Gladys Johnson, and Della Marcy, the three little maids. The proceeds of the play, which amounted to $170, will go to the School Enterprise Fund. PRESENTS "MIKADO" FOR HIGH SCHOOL BENEFIT Orientalists from College of Ha waii Will Play Here Thursday and Friday The tuberculosis exhibit sent out through the state by the University in connection with the state board of health had an incalculable influence in stimulating intelligent measures to stamp out this disease. Captain Ken Yin and his speedy Chinese baseball players will come to Lawrence Thursday to play the Jayhawker baseball team on McCook field. The Laundryymen are on their annual tour of the United States representing the College of Hawaii. The Orientals struck Kansas Sunday and lost to the Wichita Western League but defeated Emporia, yesterday, 4 to 0. The Hawaiians play St. Marys today and Manhattan tomorrow. They will play K. U. Thursday and Friday. The Chinamen are in a crippled condition but at their worst they can show any college team in the state a close game. Pung, the star outfielder, hurt his shoulder and several other Moroccan nurses are nursing in injuries. The Chinese won both games from Kelvin's opening and Captain Ken Yin, expects to score. "We are not in very good condition," the yellow skinned captain said to a Kansan reporter in Emerson, Illinois, all him best at Lawrence Thursday. McCook field is in fine shape and weather indications are favorable for two days of good practice for the Jayhawkers. Coach McCarty probably will turn his regulars on the freshman squad and the Varsity men will have a chance to get in good condition. HIGH SCHOOL TRACK BOYS AT K. U., MAY 2 Fifty Teams Expected to Compete in Eleventh Annual Interscholastic Fifty track teams from all over the state are expected to compete in the Eleventh Annual High School track meet, on McCook field, University of Kansas, Saturday, May 2. Thirty-seven teams participated in the meet last year, and invitations will be sent to every high school in the state this week. In connection with the track meet will be held the Seventh Annual Intercollsastic Tennis Tournament, May 1 and 2. A feature of the Interscholastic Meet at K. U. is the classification of the schools into three divisions according to their enrollment. By this means the small school does not have to compete with schools clearly out of its class, and has an opportunity to win a trophy for first place. Schools with an enrollment of less than 100 are in class C, schools between 100 and 250 are in Class B, and larger institutions are in Class A. The University Athletic Association will give a handsome trophy cup to the team winning in each class. Winners of first four places in any event will be given gold, silver and bronze medals. The individual scoring the highest number of points in each class will be given a cup. Each contestant gets a souvenir badge, and will be admitted free to the Kansas-Nebraska dual track meet which will be held May 1. Lawrence won first in Class A, last year, Pratt in Class B, and Onaga in Class C. Emporia, Kans., April 13—The Chinese baseball team from the College of Hawaii defeated the Normal here this afternoon 4 to 0. The Hawaiians won the game but the first Miller from the mound. Esu Sue's home run in the first inning was the feature. Chinese Defeat Emporia Numbers err in this— Ten censure wrong for one who has been busted, fugue. The foundation as of character, is at last moral sentiment - Emerson. He that is choice of his time will also be choice of his company.—Jeremy Taylor. Read your own KANSAN. Send the Daily Kansan home. ALICE NIELSEN TO APPEAR IN CONCERT (Continued from page 1) Lawrence to London for the spring opera season at Convent Garden. The program will consist of the following numbers: Down in the Forest . . . Landon Ronald Will o' the Wisp . . . Srosss But lately in Dance . . . Arensky Serenade . . . Strauss Aria "Wissi darte" from "La Tosea" . . . Puccini Du bist die Ruh' . . . Schubert Die Lorelei . . . Laset Wiegenlied . . . Brahms Bothschaft . . . Brahms Si mes vers avaient des ailes . . . Hahn Mandolin . . . Debussy Ouvre tes yeux blenes . . Massenet A toi . . . Bemberg The Lark Now Leaves its Watery Nest . . Parker The Leaves and the Wind . . . Leoni When Love is Kind (Arranged by A. L.) . Old English The Fairy Pipers . . Brewer Aria "I'm hel'd" from "Madam Butterfly" . . . Puccini Aria "Un bel di" from "Madam Butterfly" At The Piano—EDWIN SCHNEIDER TRANSLATIONS OF SONGS No. 2. Arta. Vissi d'arte from "Tosca" d atrue from Jos. I loved to paint, I have lived for love; I have done no wrong to living souls; I have known that I know. That one I know. That one I knew the wretched; Always, with faith sincere, My prayers have gone to Three Hearts; My prayers have gone to three hearts; With faith sincere, Flowers I have brought to you; Flowers I have brought to you; Now in the hour of my need, oh Lord W dost How replay me so? I have given jewels; Of adam's cloak; I have given my songs; To the stars of Heaven; To the stars more fair; In no hour of my need, oh Lord, Where I am lost, Puccini 3. a) Du Bist Die Ruh. (My Sweet Repose.) "Thou art, sweet peace and tranquil rest! I long for thee to soothe my breast; I wish you to quiet night's skids. The dwelling in my heart and eyes. Come then to me, and close the door, And never, never leave me more: Chase yourple step out this breast, Put his heart to joyful rest. Let thy pure light, My glace lights; Let thy pure light, My glance control; With faster bright fill thou my soul! b) The Lorelet. I know not where comes the feeling, That I to sadness am so inclined; A legend of days departed I cannot Chase from my mind. The breeze comes soft, the day is falling. The hills roll and rise, their silhouettes all brightly gleaming. The hiltops of all iridescent gleaming. And yonder sits a maiden, Of wond ross beauty rare; With gold and jewels sparkling, She rombs her golden hair. With comb of bright gold she combs it, And sings with mournful sigh; A song of enchanting power, A magic melody. A boatman in frail bark gliding. Boulderd by love's sweet pain. He sees not the rocky ledges. His eyes on the height remain. The bells surrounding engulf him. Both bark and boatman are gone. This sorrow by her charmed singing The Lorelei hdme done. c) Wiegenlied. (Cradle Song. So good-highlight now once more, with Rows roof of oer. With rows roof of low roof. Slip under the clothes. When the morning shall break, w Good night; then once more, By angels watch d'oer. A fair Christmas tree, A fair Christmas tree, That shall be Paradise! d) Botschaft. (The Message.) The message: Fan, ye breezes, fair and softly, fan the check of my sweet Fan, ye breezes, fair and softly, fan the etiches, lady. Gently touch her with her tresses. Hasten not to speed away. If she then perchance should query, Say, poor, poor I, was lairing. Say, poor, poor I, was past all searing. Very sad his lot. Now his hopes one more reviving. Have restored the loy of living, Have restored the joy of living. 4. b) Mandolin Gallants, who go serendaging And fair dames, who to them listen. To each other softly murmur Underneath the sighing branches. Thyrsis *and* its ‘the Aminta,* Cristian ‘the Damon,’ and for many maids, ‘the Dannon,’ who for many maids, ‘the Dannon.’ Their broidered doublets of silk, Their trailing rustling dresses. Their elegance, their joy And their soft, faint shadows. Whirl together in the radiance of a rose and silver moonlight, and mandolin is thinking Through the dirt truffle or the breezes. c) Ouvre Tes Yeux Bleus. (Open thou my love, thy blue Eyes.) Open tous my love, blue eyes, For it is day. Joyons la vie, in the skies Carols his lay. Aurora wows the blushing rose; Come bide with me To where the dawn daisys' glows: Awaken thee! Awaken thue! Open tous my love, the blue eyes, For it is day. Why should we look on all around In bright array? For love's myrst my profound Than summer day. To my pipe, tender dreams of love In rapture start, And the sun that's glowing above It in my heart. UNIVERSITY OF HAWAII CHINESE TEAM vs K. U. THURSDAY and FRIDAY, 3:45 p.m. Admission 50c. Student tickets admit --- STATE HISTORICAL SOCIETY TOPEKA KAN UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN VOLUME XI. NO CABS OR FLOWERS AT THE JUNIOR PROM NUMBER 133. Managers of Big Social Event Rule That All Must Walk to Formal 150 TICKETS ARE NOW SOLD Record-Breaking Crowd Expected if Sale Keep Up—Gov. and Mrs. Hodges to Receive "Cabs and flowers will be absolutely taboo at the Junior Prom Friday night unless it rains or snows," announced Stanley Nelson, one of the managers, this morning. "For the last few years this has been handled. It is not supposed that it will work any undue hardship on any one." Over one hundred and fifty tickets have already been sold and if they keep going as they have since Easter a record breaking crunch with the manager's wishes many dates are being turned in today. Elaborate preparations are being made in the gym and the banquet room down stairs is being prepared. The crowd will be divided into four groups for the banquet tables. The first group will dine during the third, fourth and fifth dances; the second, during the seventh, eighth, and ninth; the third, during the twelfth and intermission; and the fourth, during the fifteenth, sixteenth, and seventeenth. Swede Wilson's oratory will keep the appetites whetted in the banquet room, while Haley and his eight piece orchestra will hold forth up stairs. The program will contain twenty-four dances in all. W. S. G. A. ELECTS OFFICERS The following will receive: Chancellor and Mrs. Strong, Governor and Mrs. George H. Hodges, Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Lewis, Mr. and Mrs. Ed. T. Hackney, Mr. and Mrs. E. W. Hoch, Professor and Mrs. Arthur T. Walker, Dean and Mrs. Peply T. Walker, Mrs. and Mrs. W. Green, Mrs. Eustace Brown, Fred Blachley, Edith Case, Herbert Coleman, Russell Geard, Edith Uhlrich, Cale Carson, Ida Perry, Stanley Nelson, Trine Latta. University Women Balloting on Gov erning Association in Museum Today From 9 to 4:30 Elections to the W. S. G. A. are being held in the Museum today, from 9 to 4:30. The officers to be elected are: president, two vice-presidents, one each from the College and the School of Arts, a secretary and a treasurer. The candidates are: for president, Doris Hackbush; vice-president, College, Virginia Goff and Naomi Simpson; vice-president, Eunice Pleasant; Eunice Pleasant and Genevieve Herick; treasurer, Helen Trent and Stella Stubbs. DEBATE M. U. ON APRIL 28 Smith and Wilson for Kansas Wil Argue With Tigers on Immigration Question. The second intercollegiate debate of the year will be held with a team from the University of Missouri on Tuesday, April 28. Harry M. Smith and J. Chirty will represent Kansas in this contest. The question will be: "Resolved that immigration into the United States should be further restricted by applying to all immigrants a literate education and ability to ordinary prose in at least one language or dialect." Meet at 7 Prompt Kansan Board meeting tonight at 7 o'clock prompt. The advanced hour is caused by the Nielsen concert. Dean L. E. Sayre and Prof. L. D. Havenhill, of the School of Pharmacy, attended a banquet last evening at Kansas City, given by the Kansas City Drug Club. As a part of their regular laboratory work Prof. S. J. Hunter's class in entomology 1 will visit the Aurora from time to time and see special films on insect life, the department paying the bill. BURLINGTON TO MEET EL DORADO ON CAMPUS UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON. APRIL 15, 1914. The fight for the championship of the high school debating league was narrowed down to the finals last Friday and Saturday when Burlington defeated Caney and El Dorado defeated Solomon. The winners are the same teams who contested here last year, Burlington winning. They will debate in Fraser Hall the night of May 1. The first two days of May will bring the high school track athletes as well as the debaters and the Ukiwara preparing to show them a good time. EUROPE WOULD LEARN KANSAS LIQUOR LAW Older Nations Will Use Jay hawker Prohibitory Law as a Model The Kansas prohibitory law may seal a model for European legislation. Dr. R. Herod, Secretary of the International Temperature Bureau, which has headquarters at Lausanne, Switzerland, has written to Chancellor Strong, asking for full information regarding the law and its operation. He desires the opinion of scientific men, unbiased, and expects to use the material in preparing laws for the European nations, where a powerful temperance crudse is being launched. The departments of sociology and education, the information for Charles Sturgeon UNIVERSITY REQUIRMENTS O.K.'ED BY STATE BOARD Standards for Teachers Diploma in School of Education Protected by Recent Action The following statement was made at a meeting the State Board of Education held at Topeka recently: "The State Board of Education willed certificates to students of approved colleges only when such graduates shall have met the professional diploma requirements of their respective institutions provided that these local regulations prevent the bearer equal to the minimum requirement of the State Board of Education for state certificates." This means that the State Board of Education will protect the present standards of the University teachers' diploma and that candidates for rst estate teachers' certificates who are graduates of the University of Kansas must have met the requirements for the University teachers' diploma as given on page 14 of the 1913-14 announcements of the School of Education, which are as follows: 1. Candidates for both the teachers' diploma and the bachelor's degree must offer 125 hours of undergraduate work including fifteen hours in the School of Education (at least twelve in the department of Education). At that time a change was made, in which grades 9 to 12 were accepted and only fifteen hours of undergraduate work required instead of one hundred and twenty-five. This arrangement caused so much inconvenience that the School of Education requested the State Board of Education to again change the requirement for students to meet the action will become effective September 15, 1914. 2. Candidates for the teachers' diploma shall be required to offer a teacher's course in some academic subject. The pre-requisite for a teacher's course shall be not less than twenty nor more than twenty-five hours in the subject in which the teachers' course is given or in closely allied subjects, whether education, and three hours in educational psychology. All teachers' courses, not including credits for practice, shall be not less than two nor more than four hours for one semester in length, and shall be open to students of senior and graduate standing. By permission of the Dean a portion of the work described above as pre-requisite may be taken at the same time as the teachers' course and special mature students under certain conditions, with the approval of the Dean, may specialize in education course in lieu of a teachers' course. 3. The record of scholarship required for the teachers' diploma PADDLERS WILL PAY FOR DAMAGED HOUSE Men Who Broke Windows Will Make Good the The damage done in the class fight last Wednesday to the property of Mrs. G. W. Willis, of 1312 Vermont street, will be paid for by those who J. M. Johnson, president of the sophomore class, has talked with Mrs. Willis and she is willing to let the boys pay her for the expense of repairs without any further trouble. So the sophomore president has appointed a committee to collect the money to pay the damage. "I think all those who were there and want to be square about the matter will be willing to give the committee a small sum to pay the damage and it will not be very hard on anybody," said Johnson today. "We have always been aware that she has to be fair with the boys but she thinks she should be paid for all the damage done. There is no doubt that there was damage so there is nothing for those who were there to do but settle it." COUNCIL GRABS A GAUNTLET Stude Solons Accept Challenge and Name Hank Maloy as Master of Ceremonies The Men's Student Council and the Kansan Board will play ball. The Council voted last night to accept the Kansan's challenge for a game at whatever time or place the Council should see fit. Hank Maloy was elected manager of the Council team, and John Madden was recommended for ampuple, for whom he is included when the game shall be played. TO ANNOUNCE CAST SOON Manager Sowers Will Give Out Results of Hawk Club Trylouts Next Week The tryouts for "The Fortune Hunter," the play which the Hawk club will give on May 8, were held last night. Manager Clarence Sowers said this morning that the cast would be announced in the next three weeks; there may have to be another tryout to pick the different parts. Tickets for the production went on sale this morning. Manager Anderson says that this was done to give the students the opportunity to miss whether or not they参加了 the university again. Enough tickets must be sold in the next two weeks to cover the expenses incidental to the play. What are the old songs that Kansans will sing when they get together at their community centers for the old song exercises on the first of May? Professors and students of the University of Kansas have been asked to give their selections in order to determine what shall be sung that day on Mt. Tabor, where all of the leaders all over the state it may be possible to compile a list of songs that Kansans sing when they wish to recall 'aul lang syne. WHAT'S YOUR FAVORITE AIR FOR THAT OLD SONG DAY? "Annie Laurie" was the favorite and "Susanne River," was a close second. Other tunes named in most of the compilations were: "Aud L阳 Lang Syne," "America," "Old Kentucky Home," "Nearer My God to Thee," "Rock of Ages," "Onward Christian Soldiers," "Aunt Dishin' Quilty Party," "I've Been Working on the Railroad," "My Bonnies Lives Over the Ocean," "Solomon Levi" "And Kindly Light," "On the Banks of the Wabash," "Nellie Gray," "Down Went McGinty to the Bottom of the Sea," "By Cool Sloam's Shady Rill," "Beulah Land," "After the Ball," "Old Oaken Bucket," "Two Little Girls in Blue," "Gathering Up the Shells from the Sea Seashore," "Molly Maguire," "Captain Jinks of the Horse Marines," "St Starpainted Banner," "Scotland's Burning," "Silver Threads Among the Gold," "Bleest Be the Tie that Binds." must average not lower than grade II in all undergraduate work. Until two years ago the requirements for the state certificate were the same as the requirements for aoma from the School of Education. COUNCIL FAVORS AUDIT OF STUDENT ACCOUNTS Appoints Committee to Confer With the Board of Administration The Student Council thinks that he books of student organizations should be audited this year the ame as in previous years. A committee, L. W. Kninare, Webster Holloway, and Frank Miller, was appointed to present the matter to the Board of Administration at the meeting, and to endeavor to secure some arrangement for auditing. Heretofore E. E. Brown, former secretary and purchasing agent, audited all student books. Since he left, no one knows upon whom this duty devolves. Treasurers of student organizations approve the plan. INSTIGATES WATERY STRIFE Council Names Committee to Investigate Soph-Freshie Tug-of-War Across Potter The Student Council will investigate the chances of putting on a tug-of war across Potter Lake be fore the freshmen and sephomores. A committee composed of Harry McCulloch and Dutch Hansen was appointed last night to look into the matters and detests of the clause. They will report to the Council at its next meeting. SENIOR MEMORIAL UP FRIDAY Fourth-year Students Will Meet in Snow Hall to Look at Suggested Mementos Steroptic views of proposed senior memorials will be shown to the members of the class at a meeting in Snow Hall at chapel time FRI Slides showing various suggestion will be thrown on the screen, and members may observe definite decision. Several members of the class will talk. MANY STUDENTS HELP TO EQUIP STUDENT UNION Edwin F. Abels, Elmer R. Arndt, Alvin L. Bbock, Howard W. Baugher, Edward E. Bennett, Ilewelly J. Bond, Earl D. Boyington, Carl A. Brand, Loren E. Brown, Marley R. Brown, Joseph P. Bucknanan, Chester S. Cassingham, Arthur R. Challot, Gola W. Coffelt, K. Kubbilson, Claire L. Dietrich, Alvan N. Dilley, Otto J. Dixon, Charles O. Doub, Harry P. Evans, J. Melvin Evans, The following, in addition to those whose names have been printed, have paid their Union dues up to the first of the week: Ross C. Keeling, S. E. Kent, Daniel B. Kleihege, S. Thomas G. McLaughlin, Wm. H. M. McLaughlin, Wm. H Stephen M. Fahringer, Wilbur A. Fisher, Miles W. Gates, Charles T. Geiger, John Gleissner, Archie V. Gradey, Alfray Gray, Charles Greenees, John C. Greenstreet, Theodore S. Griesa, Chesab Hagenbach, Luman M. Harsha, Fletcher Haskin, Clarence J. Hill, Charles Hobart, A. Oamar Hodges, Howard E. Hoffman, Merle V. Holmes, Winn J. Howden, Winn M. Howden, Earl W. Hunter, Fred Hunter, Wm. E. Jones, Edward M. Johnson, Frederick P. Johnson, Forrest Jones, Mckinley P. Lones. Glenn A. Rishel, Walter L. Rockwell, Ames P. Rogers, Henry E. Samson, V. Guy Scriffer, Ivan Siegrist, George Smee, Hyles C. Smith, Joseph P. Smith, Leo F. Smith, Herbert C. Sommers, Ralph H. Spotts, Ralph D. Sproull, Bert Steer, Frank K. George B. D. Sunseri, D. Sunseri Tait, Elliott S. Taylor, Earnest A.达顿, Talmid G. Walters, Arthur B. Weaver, Roland S. Weaver, Merle H. Weible, Wm. D. Widelein, J. Christy Wilson, Everett W, Wren Edwin W, Wuthnow, Frederick M. Ziegler. The Journal Club of the English department will meet on Thursday, April 16, instead of 18, as announced yesterday. ENGINEERS WILL NOT ISSUE SPRING JOURNAL The proposed engineering journal will not be published this spring. The organization of an association of all the engineering societies, however, will be perfected, so that next year it will publish a publication of a periodical review of the work in the School of Engineering. The constitution providing for the association of the societies is being presented to each society for ratification. LITERARY MAGAZINE OF KANSAS IS AT K. U. Oread Magazine, Published by Students, the Only One of Letters in the State The only regular monthly magazine in the state of Kansas devoted entirely to literature, or attempts at literature is the Oread, published by the students of the University of Kansas at Lawrence. The February number of this magazine will be contributed to the Oread Magazine are mostly students or instructors in the department of English. at Wichita the Kansas magazine died at Wichita a few years ago, there has been no publication except the Oread that was essentially of Kansas. And now this University activity, supported and maintained by students, and printed on the press of the department of journalism, is the only magazine in the state devoted solely to literature. The magazine is about the size of Collier's Weekly, and contains material from about twenty student contributors a month. In its past incarnations, the Oread has borne the name "Idler." It was founded and many prominent Kansans and ex-Kansans have been among its contributors. Miss Helen Rhoda Hoopes is the editor of the Oread Magazine. It is issued under the auspices of the Quill Club, the K. U. organization of budding authors. Work done for it is purely for the love of art, no spare rates are paid. The Orcad has the distinction among college magazines of being the only one regularly illustrated by students. ADVANCED REQUIREMENTS CAUSE MEDIC DECREASE Dean Crumbine Thinks Raised Standards is Reason for Falling Off of Physicians That the raising of entrance requirements and the raising of the standards for graduation are the chief causes for the decreases in the number of medical schools and students, is the opinion of S. J. Crumbine, dean of the School of Medicine, of the University. "The raising of the standards of the medical schools has forced those schools which were unable to comply with the requirements- out of business," he said today. "Again the requirements of two years college work before beginning the study of medicine has kept out many of the students who have attended one or more medical students at the University is increasing. There is no profession, not even the clergy, that is doing more work for the benefit of humanity than the profession of medicine. "How many times does the doctor get up in the middle of the night, whether it be stony or not, and travel for miles without any clothes? How often do those fessions are there that are attempting to prevent the work on which their business must depend? If we were not working for the welfare of mankind we would not be doing all the work that we are doing for the prevention of disease. The prevention of medicine has always been so." Doctor Crumbine believes that those who are all the time trying to run down some profession have nothing to look after on their own part. To Talk on Patents No French Club Meeting Dr. W. L. Hardick will speak on "The Law of Regulating Patents" before the American Society of Mechanical Engineers at the home of Prof. P. F. Walker, 1301 Ohio St., at 7 o'clock tomorrow evening. The French Club will not hold its regular meeting tonight on account of the Easter vacation. The meeting will be held next week as usual. NIELSEN WILL SING FOR K. U. TONIGHT Famous Soprano to Give Concert That's Free With Season Ticket A SPECIAL STUDENT RATE Undergraduates Can Buy Course Passes for $1.50 the Price of a Single Attraction Sh-h!h. Don't breathe it to Miss Nielsen, but her concert tonight, her perfectly $1.50 concert, is being thrown in as lagnipappe, so to speak, to purchasers of season tickets to the Annual University Music Festival. And this is the last day on which ticket to the festival can be obtained. The price of a season pass may be $10. U.S. students, who may buy one for $1.50. Usually but three concerts are offered at the regular festival price. This year there are four, Neilson's concert tonight, being the extra P. A. C. B. ALICE NIELSEN one, just for good measure. As has been intimated, the teacher administers the price $10.00. The prima donna will arrive in Lawrence from the west this afternoon. She sings at the Newton music festival Monday, and will go to England to perform in England, to open a spring engagement in grand opera. "More tickets have been sold this year than at any previous music festival," said Dean Charles Skilton this morning. "A full auditorium will goat Miss Nielsen tonight in The Rocky Mountain Promptly at 8:15. Late comers will be kept in the hall until the first intermission." There are eighteen numbers on Miss Nelson's program, two of them beginning with 1. Daddy Haworth's Back Prof. Erasmus Haworth returned yesterday morning from a trip to Arkansas City, Harper, and other towns in the southern part of the state. Leaving Lawrence last Thursday evening, Professor Haworth spent the Easter vacation investigating the oil and gas industry and deposits in that section of the state. Will Give Topeka Concert The University Glee Club will give a concert in Topeka on Friday night May 8th. The club will meet for practice about two weeks before they make the trip. Would be Vice-President Charles G. Bayles, a junior electrical in the School of Engineering, announced his candidacy for vice-president of the Men's Student Council this morning. They're Fixing Up the Room The paper hangers are working on the new office rooms for the women's adviser. The north room which will be occupied by the Y. M. C. A. is nearly completed. Send the Daily Kansan home. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Official student paper of the University EDITORIAL STAFF TORNAL SCHOOL 14 JON C. MADDER JOHN HAUBER JOHN HAMBRIDEN JOHN HUMMERMAN MANAGING EDITOR HIGH SCHOOL LANDON LATURB. Sport Editors BUSINESS STAFF UNIVERSITY BENEDA AWLES Business Manager RAT EIDHOROW Circulation Manager JOP BISHOP Advertising Manager ADVANTAGE Advertiser C. S. STURTYWELL Advertising REPORTORIAL STAFF W W E. FERGUSON J. A. GREENPERSEN M H. MORRIS GUY SCHVINER RAY CLAPPER JOHN WILLIAM S. CADY WILLIAM S. CADY CALVIN LAMBER' CALVIN LAMBER' SAD DENN MARIO ALLENY GLENDON ALLENY GRANDSON ALLENY ROSS BURNBERK BUTLER HILDNERK LAWRENCE SMITH LAWRENCE CRAYTON TAYLOR Subscription price $2.50 per year. advance; one term, $1.50 Entered as second-class mail matter Lawrence, Kansas, under the act of March Bubbled in the afternoon five times at Kansas. From the press of the department of The Daily Kansan aims to picture the student in a way that would make Kansasan to go further than merely printing the news by standing up for their own favorites; to be clean; to be cheerful; to be more serious; to solve more serious problems to wiser heads; and to ensure the ability of the students at the University. WEDNESDAY, APRIL 15, 1914. The wicked flee when no man per-sueth but the righteous are as bold as a lion.—Proverbs 28:1. MISS NIELSEN, TONIGHT Take a flyer in music. Alice Nielsen, prima donna of three large opera companies will give the first concert in the annual music festival. Tonight is the time and Robinson Gymnasium is the place. The old question as to whether University students appreciate their advantages in the field of music and art will not be settled but Kansas has a good chance to pile up some affirmative evidence. Speculate on a little real music, it will do you good. CONTINUE THE PLAN Few students have objected to the audit of student organization accounts by a bookkeeper from the University business department in past years, and there seems to be little legitimate cause for anything but praise of the plan. Of all the reforms which the Student Council has advocated in past years, none are more logical than the audit system. The Board of Administration should continue the custom by appointing the auditor for this year at its next meeting. The officials are relieved thereby of any suspicion of graft and the students who contribute money to the cause in question have assurance that business-like methods have been employed by the officers responsible for the cash. PREVENTION. A student's death wasn't necessary to convince University authorities that the pulmotor should be placed in a position where it would be obtained at all hours of the day or night. A fatal accident on the cement steps at the foot of the library cutoff or below Green Hall wasn't necessary to point out the need of some safety device at these points. An ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure and the ideal way is to lock the garage door when no one is out joyriding in the automobile. MISSOURI AGAIN After Colorado, Missouri. The victory over the hardy debaters from the mountain state last week will put additional confidence into the Kansas men who are about ready to invade the Tiger's hair. Oklahoma? Oh, that defeat was a mere incident, an accident perhaps. It is only the victories that are heralded abroad, and the Daily Kansan is waiting patiently to "herald" the Missouri result. WHAT IS SELF-GOVERNMENT WHAT IS SEEDED? There has been much discussion of late upon the subject of the honor system and student self-government at the university in Minnesota. We have the twoorg inseparable, but for the present that is beside the point. The question naturally arises—just what is student self-government? There seems to prevail a certain haziness, an unsettled opinion as to just what constitutes government by the students themselves. By the very nature of the university educational system, the students cannot have the final decision on certain matters. It must be admitted that a group of students, for instance, cannot require that another student leave the university on account of leaving the school. It can merely recommend—but it must be borne in mind that such recommendations are, in the absence of extenating circumstances universally accepted. The faculty and the administration must necessarily be the final appeal in such matters. Yet on the other hand there are certain matters which lie wholly within the jurisdiction of the students. Matters of conduct, of tradition, of practice, of intrinsic matters of crystallizing student sentiment and opinion should be within the power of the students to regulate. The honor system, which is no more than one phase of student self-government, would almost intuitively follow despite the recent assertion of one that the honor system has not a leg to stand on. The institution must necessarily be made a larger and more powerful body. It should be made the student senate, the congress and supreme court of the campus in one; for obviously student self-government would demand a governing body to which legislation could be brought. Student self-government, then, like governmental power, will have a changing power, hardly to be defined, yet necessary withal. We believe thoroughly in it. We believe that it must come at Minnesota—Minnesota Daily. CAMPUS OPINION To the Editor of the Daily Kansas: I am growing tired of having classes every day in the "Ad. Building." Not that the classes are uninteresting; nor that I should prefer to have them there on alternate days—it is the name I object to, not the circumstance. "Ad. Building" is a meaningless name and insipid, as compared with the names of our other buildings, or with what we might name it. We have Snow Hall, and Green Hall, and Blake Hall, and Fowler Shops, and Spooner. Each of these names means something, has some color to it. "Administration" may mean any one of a dozen co-existent or consequent administrations. This building should be used as a classroom for a name of a man among our campus associates. And now is the time to start it. We have been for some years very carefully nursing up all the youthful and promising traditions we could find about the campus. The idea of naming buildings for them is better school to go to seems to me a good one. Let's foster it by rechristening "Ad." STRONG HALL. Ipso Facto. ENDS AND ODDLETS "Will Dispose of my Domestic Relations Cheap," says an ad. So say we all of us. "Roosevelt Kills a Curucu," reads a headline and we solemnly wonder whether he happened to bite on it or shot it with a Gatling gun. A scientist claims that cancer is traceable to food but we persist in taking the risk rather than getting nourishment from Lawrence water. Still one should not wonder at Oklahoma for lynching a woman; look what they did to our football team last fall. What joy 'twould be to blithely row Athwart the gleaming tide. Last spring I had a little boat, And oftimes in its prow, THE BOATMAN'S LAMENT. Behold the placid flumen flow Along our northen side; There many gentle janes have sat In blissful days long flown; I'd take some fairy queen to float; But I cannot do that now. In biflush days long flown; Now powers that be say "Nix on Oh must I float alone? —C. Bvron. Flowers For The Prom for those who care for the finishing of a full dress affair THE FLOWER SHOP ANNOUNCEMENTS M Company guardsmil ushering at the concert tonight will report at the Gymnasium at 7 o'clock. Seargeant Bennett. The Mott Campaign Committee will meet tomorrow at 5 p. m. instead of 9 o'clock the usual hour. WANT ADS FOR RENT—Two dress suits, Clark, 730 Mass. 132-3 LOST—A golf club called a mid-iron golf links Saturday phone 1292. 132-3* Phones 621 Cottages in Estes Park for rent. Call Bell 1318 or address X, Care University Daily Kansan. 129-5 A. D. S. Peroxide Cream at Barber's Drug Store.-Adv. Positively the greatest value and the largest selling golf ball in the United States is our red-dot, at 50c each. Carroll's."-Adv. Damages and domestic relations—Prices right—second hand and new books. F. D. R. Miller, 1041 Vt. St. Ady. Scholarships for Women Applications for the scholarships open to women students for 1914-15 should be made to the committee before April 15. The scholarships offered are: Junior Laws! The Eliza Matheson Innes Memorial Scholarship, $100. Open to women students of the College above the Graduate School. Open to students of the Graduate School. The scholarships offered are: The Marcella Lowland Memorial School for Open to young women of the junior and senior classes of the College. The Caroline Mumford Winston memorial scholarship of $35 is open to women students of the College of classes above the freshman. The Daughters of the American Revolution Scholarship, $100. Open to women students of the College above the freshman year and to women students of the Graduate School. The Lucinda Smith Buchan Memorial Scholarship maintained by the alumnae of the Pi Beta Phi sorority is a loan scholarship of $200. It is open to women students of the College. The Association of Collegiate Alumnae Scholarship, $50.00. Open to women of the junior and senior years of the College. 825 1-2 Mass. St. Committee: E. Galloo. Ida H. Hyde. Hannah Oliver Sam S. Shubert PEG O' MY HEART Next: PASSING SHOW OF 1913 Bert Wadham all at law.** and lay up your hands on graduation from the Lawrence Business College. Earn once it gets ready and you'll secure a good position in the job market. Write for catalog or Kansas' oldest and best college publications. THE COLLEGE BARBER On 14th Street LAWRENCE Business College Lawrence, Kansas. WATKINS You Can Earn a Good Living A. G. ALRICH Surplus and profits $100,000 The Student Depository WATKINS NATIONAL BANK Capital $100,000 Die Embossing, Seals, Badges. 744 Mass. Printing Binding, Copper Plate Printing, Bubber Stamps, Engraving, Steel Die Embossing, Seals, Badges. 744 Mass. KING KING FRONT 3% IN. BACK 2 IN. Wm Barker Co. MAKERS ROY N.Y. 2 for 25c 1/4 SIZES Peckhams at CITY CAFE 906 Mass. Strictly Home Cooking Ever try our Special 15c Lunch? You'll like it. A GOOD PLACE TO EAT AT ANDERSON'S OLD STAND JOHNSON & TUTTLE 715 PROPS. Mass. SPRING SUITINGS FRANK KOCH TAILOR 727 Mass. PROTSCH The Tailor THEY ARE HERE PROFESSIONAL CARDS W. C. M-CONNELLY, PhyDian and Associate. U.S. Dept of Education, Boston, deidence, 1304. Temp. 78. 1034. Haskell, 1035. J. F. BROCK, Optometrist and Specialist S. J. F. BROCK, Office 802 Mass. B. Phone 606-5345 C. Phone 606-5345 HARRY REDING. M. D. Eyes ear, nose Bloody. Phone 513. Home 512. Bloody. Phone 513. Home 512. G. A. HAMMAN M. D. E. ear, ear, B. C. DICK Building Guaranteed. Dick Building Satisfaction. DR. H. W. HAYNE, Oculist, Lawrence, Kansas. J. W. O'BRYON. Dentat, Over Wilson's Drug Store. Belfort Phone 507. J. R. BECHTEL, M. D. D. O. 833 Mass Street. Both phones, office and address. G. W. FONES, A. M. M. D. Dissases of Butea rufra. Rutte, 260. Both phone numbers. Resid. 130 DR. H. T. JONES, Room 12 F. A. H. Bldg. Residence 1300 Tenn. Phones 211. 192.846.1700.5000 DR. H. L. CHAMBERS. Office _over Bases' Studio. Both phones. DR. BURT R. WHITE Phones, Bell 838, Home 257 Office, 745 Mass. St. Ed. W. Parsons, Engraver, Watchmaker and Jeweler, ammo and Jewelry. Bell Phone 8. T. GILLISPIE M. D. Office corner 81 Street 81. Residence 728 Phone 596 Website www.gillispie.com CLASSIFIED Phone Kennedy Plumbing Co. for gas Mada Maida lamps. 937 Mass. phones 685. Plumbers Ladles Tailors MRS. MELLISON, Dressmaking and Ladies Vermont. Phone Bell 241 536-1022 Vermont. Phone Bell 241 536-1022 Queen City College. System and sewing. Queen City College. System and sewing. Mrs. G. Mark Hood. 884 Ky., Bali. Mrs. G. Mark Hood. 884 Ky., Bali. Hair Dressers hairdressing, shampooing, scalp and facial massage, shampooing, hair-fi-glued. Mats for hairdressers. Appliances call Ball 1372, Home 51. The Select Hair Dressing Shop, 927 Mass. 85. Barber Shops Go where they all go J. C. HOUK 913 Mass. **Student's Co-op Club** $2.50 to $3.00 per week 1849 KY, Geo. H.Vanell Steward The "BEE" Electric Suction Sweeper Price We are exclusive Selling $25.^{00}$ Let us show you this sweeper WEAVER'S Agents. COWBOY MOWER The AURORA-GRAND The largest collection of wild animals in captivity and the best one reel subject ever exhibited at the Aurora New Yorks' Zoological Park "Comedy and Tragedy" A revival of the celebrated Edison drama in two parts Friday-One Day Only-Blanche Sweet In the greatest Biograph ever produced "JUDITH OF BETHULIA" Four Reel Spectacula Film D'Art OLUS SHIRTS CONT CUT TURN YOUR SHIRT-TAILS INTO DRAWERS What good is a Shirt-tail anyway? IN OLUS the outside shirt and underdrawers are one garment. This means that the shirt can't work out of the trousers, that there are no shirt tails to bunch in seat, that the dressers "stay put," to say nothing of the comfort and economy of sitting. The trousers can be slipped on the way down—close it, closed back. See illustration. For golf, tennis and field wear, we recommend the special attached collared OLUS with regular or short sleeves. Extra sizes for very tall or stout men. All shirt fabrics, in smart designs, including silks—$1.50 to $10.00. GLU3 one-piece PAJAMAS for bracing, resting and comfort keeps you warm. These one-piece pajamas are durable and cool, bring you to lighten or come down, $1.50 to $4.50. Ask your deadline for CUSS on request. PHILLIPS-JONES COMPANY, Makers Dept. N. 1199 Broadway, N. Y. POLICE FOR SALE: Eight room house on Ohio St.; stricly modern; suitable for boarding club; steam heat; sleeping porch. Excellent reason for selling. Price reasonable. Inquire or write to Abels, Kansan Office A young woman of education and experience in foreign travel will take a small party through Europe this summer on an extensive but comparatively inexpensive tour, leaving Kansas City June first. References exchanged. Address MISS ALLYS, Care "Daily Kansan" UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Four Great Concerts for the Price of One A single admission to the brilliant Nielsen concert tonight, and to any other in the Musical Festival, costs $1.00 and $1.50 A special bargain price admits K.U. students only to the entire course of four concerts for $1.50 Buy your course ticket at the door tonight. For your $1.50 ticket you hear: The Famous Prima Donna Soprano, ALICE NIELSEN, Tonight Elsie Baker, the contralto, April 29 Albert Boroff, Baritone, April 29 Madam Rothwell-Wolff, the original American "Madam Butterfly," April 30 The St. Paul Symphony Orchestra of 50 players, April 30, and other noted artists Kansas City pays $1.12 for each of these same concerts. K.U. Students pay thirty-seven cents. SCHNEIDER ALBERT LINDQUEST, TENOR Though only 22 years old Mr. Lindquist is one of the great tenors of America, as those who heard him at the Festival last year will agree. Last summer he was leading tenor in the great pageant "Darkness and Light" at the Chicago Auditorium which was visited by 500,000 people. Cherance Whitehill, the leading Wagnerian interpreter at the Chicago Company, said he knew Wagner's deeply beautiful voice, and he can be America's greatest tenor." Titto Ruffo, the world's greatest baritone, has offered to instruct him for grand orchestra next summer, and it is probable Mr. Lindquist will go after completing his engagement with the St. Paul Orchestra. MARIE C. MAYER MISS ELSIE BAKER Miss Baker is one of the most widely known contralto in America from the fact that she has made a large number of the favorite Victor Gramophone records. Especially is that true of the songs of Carrie Jacobs Bönch which she had recorded. While in Lawrence she will sing Miss Bond's favorite song "A Perfect Day." Some Stars That K. U. Will Hear THE SOPRANO'S SOPRANO'S MADAM ALICE NIELSEN Prima Donna Soprano of the Metropolitan Opera Company Madam Nielsen is one of the famous American singers, having been born in Tennessee. While yet in her teens she was leading soprano of the famous Bostonians, and in a short time was touring the country at the head of her own opera company, so great was her popularity. In 1904 she appeared in London at the Covent Garden Theatre, singing with Caruso and Melba. She leaves for the London season next year and later at La Renaissance, her last American appearance this season. She is a regular member of the N. Y. Metropolitan and the Boston opera companies and her name is a household word in musical circles. BARNES FREDERICK WHEELER, BARITONE Mr. Wheeler is another artist who is known to the whole country by the records he has made for the Victor Gramophone Co. Miss Baker has done for contrattoro songs he has done for bassist John Ransom and in a kindness shown in this way he has never been heard in person in Lawrence. JESSICA FARRINGTON MADAM ROTHWELL-WOLFF When Henry W. Savage brought "Madam Butterfly" to America and took the opera from coast to coast in 500 performances, the leading soprano in the title role was Elizabeth Wolff, who was the first to sing the part in English. Since becoming Madan Rothwell-Wolff she has devoted herself to concert singing, both as a soloist and as a member of her work, and though she then an offer last summer from the Paris Opera House at the suggestion of Jean de Reszkle, her teacher. She has never before been heard in Lawrence. Tickets for the Course: To K. U. Students $1.50 To Others $2. Single Admission $1. and $1.50 Alice Nielsen at Robinson Gymnasium Tonight UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN MAKE DATES NOW. MAY 8th. ONE NIGHT ONLY. The Hawk Club in "THE FORTUNE HUNTER" Secure Tickets Now From "Easy" Anderson or at Rowland's Book Store and Lee's College Inn $1.00, 75c, and 50c Prices ARE YOU COMING TO THE JUNIOR PROM? SURE! Pay Your Dues Now. Turn in Your Dates. It's Day After Tomorrow. OLATHE HIGH INTO NEW ARTS BUILDING Domestic Science and Manual Training to Be Housed in $1,000 Structure (By Harold Hallett) (By Hugh Haney) Olathe, April 7.—The new Industrial Arts building of the Olathe high school is nearing completion, and is expected to be ready for occupation about May 1. This building when completed will be one of the finest of its kind in the country and will be for domestic science and manual training work. Its cost was $10,000. Schwegler of K. U. Spoke Dr. R. A. Schwegler, of the University of Kansas, spoke at Olathe Friday night on the subject of "Heredity and Environment." His lecture was well attended and very instructive. OTTWAW SENIORS PLAN CLASS DAY EXERCISES (By Ellen Tepper) Ottawa, April 14—Due to the fact that the Merchants' Association would not advertise in an annual, the seniors of Ottawa high school have announced a play to be given commencement week. It will combine the class day exercises with the play. The entire class will have some part in the performance. Mildred Shughart is to write the class will and Ellen Tepper the class proheybe. (By Angie Sturgeon) STERLING HIGH RAISED $3U FOR TRACK AT BOX SUPPER Sterling, April 7 - The Sterling high school athletic association last night gave a box supper in order to obtain funds to carry on the track work. A force was given to furnish the entertainment. Also in connection was a "popular girl" and "lazy boy" contest, each class having elected a candidate. The votes were one cent each. A junior girl and a freshman boy were favorites. About $63 were taken in. FRESHMEN FLY COLORS AT ALTA VISTA; SOPHIS GET 'EM (By Harry Morgan) Aulta Vista, April 7—Some ambitious freshmen held a mass meeting at the home of one of their classmates last Wednesday evening. As a result there was floating defiantly from the high school flag staff the next morning the freshman "green and white." in accordance with theaint was unmo-lested during the day and freshman spirit ran high. A day later, the freshies looked in vain for their pennant. The flag staff stood bare. Each class plead "not guilty" but the triumphant smile of the sophs was very much in evidence. SENIOR BOYS ENTERTAIN CHAPEL AT WASHINGTON (By Leotta Hoerman) Washington, April 7. —The plan recently adopted here of turning the chapel period over to the different classes on Thursday is a success. The programs are entertaining and original. The junior and senior boys entertained her, boys entertained her, boys did so tailored themselves, "The Harmony Six" sang several selections, one of which was composed by one of their number. Baseball at Dodge. (By Alberta Stimson) Dodge City, April 7. —The local baseball season opened April 1 with a game between Kinsley and Dodge City. The game was the 9th in 9 to 0 in favor of Dodge City. The high school has five games scheduled to be played before school is out, the next being April 10 with Pratt high school. Burlingame Takes Last Burlingame, Kans., April 5—The final game for the championship of Osage county was played at Burlingame April 3, between Lyndon and Burlingame girls. Burlingame won by a count of 10 to 4. New shipment of Red-dot golf balls just received. 50c each. Carroll's.-Adv. Razors, blades, and stroppers of all kinds at Barber's Drug Store.—Adv. Three months in Europe for $600 is what the foreign travel ad in this issue of the paper offers.—Adv. See our tennis hats, shoes, three different kind, all reasonable in price. Carroll's.'-Adv. Limeade 5e, every drink in a clean glass at Barber's Drug Store--Ady. Send the Daily Kansan home. Send the Daily Kansan home. Send the Daily Kansan home. ALTER BASKETBALL RULES BUT LITTLE Goodknit Umpired Croatish Committee in N. Y.Meeting Make But Few Changes in Regulations Only a few changes will be made in the basketball rules when the collegiate teams get into the fray next year. Dr. James Naismith, who is a member of the rules committee which met recently in New York City, has outlined the few changes which have been adopted. The committee sent out 300 questionnaires to colleges and received 160 answers suggesting changes in the basketball rules. Without exception, the colleges favored the present rules and the suggestions were for minor rules only. The sentiment of the committee was that the rules are satisfactory as they stand and the following were the only important alterations made by the committee of seven. "Good Knit" Closed Crotch The Hereafter any player who fails to keep his arm behind his back in jumping makes a foul. No warning will be given by the referee next year, as was the custom this season. The ruling in regard to blocking was discussed at length by the rule makers. To make the game clearer and free from rough work, an attempt was made to more clearly dissect the constitutes blocking. It shall be unlawful for a player to step in front of an opponent if he is facing him or if he makes bodily contact. "This rule will help keep the game clean and open," Dr. Naismith said today. "The committee had no intention to retract rough game, and emphasized strong-playing of the ball, not the man." Another ruling provides for two timekeepers and relieved the umpire of that responsibility. A new rule which will tend to make the game faster was passed regulating playing the ball when it goes out of bounds. Hereafter when the ball goes out of the field the blonde must play the ball. This will eliminate unnecessary inaction in putting the ball back into play. This morning's express brought us some new ball caps; all you ball players like notice. Carroll's. -Advo Read your own KANSAN. the only athletic union suit on the market today with the guaranteed closed croch. This garment positively will not gap. Made of a very fine quality of nainsook and we retail it at ONE DOLLAR Johnson & Carl It's worth two. H.H. LEAGUE OPENS SATURDAY Eight Games Are Scheduled For Opening Day of Boarding House Club Schedule Play in the Hash House League will begin Saturday. Eight games are scheduled, as follows: At 8:30. Stevenson vs. Hope, freshman field; Wouldst vs. 1221, at Woodland; Nutting vs. Midway, freshman field. At 10.15, Co-Op vs. Columbus, Woodland; Ellis v. Gillespie, freshman; Ko-op vs. Martin, freshman field. At 1:30, Babb vs. Daniels, Woodland; K. K. vs. Marks, freshman field. HIGH SCHOOLS FORM A NEW ATHLETIC LEAGUE K. C.K., Argentine and Rosedale Are Members of Association Kansas City, April 6-Three Kansas high schools, Kansas City, Kan, Argentine, and Rosedale, are included in the membership of the new athletic league organized among the colleges and high schools of Greater Kansas City, last Saturday night. The object of the new organization will be the promotion of clean amateur athletics. At the four Kansas City, Mo, high schools baseball will not be a recognized sport. Although all of the schools will have teams they will not play under the school name and will be private enterprises. For the baseball season, the new assiination has been divided into two leagues of four teams each. Kansas City, Kan., high and Argentine high are included in league No. 2. The schedule will consist of eight games and will start the latter part of this week. TENNIS COURTS SOUTH OF GYM FOR WOMEN PLAYERS Dr. James Naismith will put the tennis courts south of Robinson Gymnasium in shape this spring. These courts are to be reserved for women. The spring rains have washed away part of the grading. Dr. Naismith says the courts will be ready this summer. Prof. P. F. Walker will give the third lecture in his series on "First Aid to the Injured" tomorrow at Myers Hall at 4:30. The Mott Campaign committee will meet this afternoon in Myers Hall at 4:30. LOST-A Kappa Kappa Gamma key and notewed, not jeweled and with Nellie Misch Schall engraved on back. Return to Kansan Office. We feature our Geneva racket at $1.50 for women; it's a Spalding, Carroll's.—Adv. Allegretti's original chocolate creams 65c the pound. Carroll's.- Adv. New tennis balls at Carroll's.- Adv. JAYHAWKERS PLAY CHINESE TOMORROW Kansas Baseball Men Will Meet Hawaiian Stars on McCook Nine Chinese baseball players from the University of Hawaii will come to Lawrence from Manhattan tomorrow and play the University team on McCook field. The Mongolians will be here Thursday and Friday for two games. Captain Ken Gweng will be playing third American trip and have lost but three games to University teams since they left the coast. Owing to the fact that the Junior Prom comes on Friday night, Manager Hamilton has changed the time of the game's play to 2:30. The game Thursday will be called at 3:45. Baseball fans will see real baseball tomorrow. The Chinks are speedy ball players, field like big leaguers and can hit the ball to the fences. The team this year is not playing a game but the foreigners play baseball the year around and always put out a winning nine. Every member of the squad is a full blood Chinaman and a student of the Hawaiian school. They wear attractive blue suits with the words Chinese on them. They clean baseball and never "rug" the umpire, when he favors their opponents. Coach McCarty and his team spent their Easter vacation, preparing for the Chinese invasion. The coach has kept his men batting the ball to improve their hitting. Ako, who probably will pitch for the visitors, held the Normals to a single hit Monday, while his counterpart Coach McCarty expects to make several shifts in his line-up but has not announced the changes. The Chinese will line-up is follows: En Sue, cf.; Ayan, ss; Kan Yim, 2h; Tan Lo, f.; Ake, p.; Pung, I. 2h; Tan Lo, f.; Ake, p.; Pung, I. ARCHERY EQUIPMENT TO BE HERE NEXT WEEK Change Lecture Date The archery equipment which was ordered a month ago by the physical training department has not arrived. A misunderstanding arising after delay and arrows caused another delay but they should arrive next week. The time of the lecture on "Investments" which H. P. Wright will give to the economics students, has been changed to H. P. Wright in H. It will be given in Room 201 Administration Building instead of in Snow Hall. Tennis Attracts Many Every court on the McCook tennis grounds was occupied by recquet wielders yesterday afternoon. The nine courts are in good shape except the two south courts, which have not drained properly. Foster's Away Registrar Geo. E. Foster is in Manhattan today on a business trip. Line markers for tennis courts, $1.00 at Carroll's—Adv. Around Mount Oread Who is Psi? Why Phi Psi, as healthy a sixty pound pocker as ever graced a back yard of all the fraternity house. He traveled all the way to Lawrence from his home on the Howard W. Strickland farm at Humnewell, Kansas. He is enjoying his visit at the Phi Psi house where he is being chaperoned by Henry "Sooy" Pegues. Alfred Wadel, Arthur Chalfour and Elmer Wible have made all preparations to leave 'this summer for Beiruth, Syria, where they will undertake the arduous task of teaching the English language in all its mysteries to the dark-skinned Orientals. Although misery loves company, we will bet that about the first of next September the bunch will sigh, for a chance to return to Lawrence. The Chancellor has the baseball bug. He was practicing the outboots yesterday with little Frank in the lawn. Olin Diebert and G. A. Rathert got as far as Holliday on their canoe trip to Kansas City Friday. The wind caused such high waves that the soph marines were driven to port, continuing their journey from Holiday to Kansas City by rail. The latest fad is belling the freshmen. Last evening the inmate of the Babb house borrowed the bells from an ice-cream wagon, tied them successively on various freshmen and with paddles persuaded the freshmen to cavort to the music of the bells. One of the most popular women of the University is setting an example of economy to College girls this spring, by wearing a hat which she says is five years old. Now this may be easier because of importance of styles, any way there are rumors that a new victoria plays a part in the story. K. U. Calendar Athletics Apr. 17. Baseball, University of Hawaii, at. Lawrence. Apr. 18. Baseball, University of Hawaii, at Lawrence. Apr. 18. Drake Relay Games at Des Moines 10:30 a.m. Interclass meet Apr. 25. Outdoor interclass meet, McCook May 1-2 Seventh Interscholastic tennis tournament, McCook. May 1 N. U.K.U. dual track meet, McCook. May 2. Eleventh annual interschol- aic track meat. McCook. May 5. K. S. A. C.-K. U. dual track meet, et. Manhattan. May 6-7. Baseball, M. U., at Law- May 14-15. Baseball, M. U., at Columbia. May 16. M, U.K. U, dual track meet, at Columbia. May 23. Annual invitation H. S. track meet at Lawrence. May 30. M. V. track meet. St. Louis. June 6. Western Conference track meet at Chicago. Future Events Future Events Mar. 31. Piano Recital, Alice Eldridge. Apr. 15, 20-30 Eleventh Annual Music Festival. Apr. 22 8:15 Annual spring concert of the University band. UNIVERSITY OF HAWAII CHINESE TEAM vs K. U. THURSDAY, 3:45 p.m.; and FRIDAY. 2:30 p.m. Admission 50c. Student tickets admit STATE HISTORICAL SOCIETY TOPEKA KAN UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN VOLUME XI. UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS THURSDAY AFTERNOON, APRIL 16, 1914. DOROTHEA HACKBUSCH IS W.S.G.A. PRESIDENT New President Outlines Policy of Woman's Council for 1914-15 WILL HAVE STUDENT UNION K. U. PREPARES FOR ANNUAL JUNIOR PROM Work of Association Next Year Will Include Establishing an All University Women's Club House NUMBER 134. The election of officers of the Women's Student Government Association yesterday, resulted in the following choices for 1914-15 council: president, Dorothea Hackbusch; vicepresident, Naomi Simpson; vicepresident, Fine Arts. Nina Kanagar; secretary, Genevieve Herrick; treasurer, Stella Stubbs. The new officers will assume their duties with the beginning of the fall term next semester. A total of 413 ballots were cast as follows: Dorothea Hackbusch 396; Naomi Simpson 328; Virginia Goff 169; Nina Kanaga 325; Eiusplease Amt 185; Genevieve Herrick 283; Stella Stubbs 265; Helen Trant 167. "The policy of the new council will be to work for a spirit of unity among the women students of the University," said Maria Mauro. "Although we hope for a women's building very soon, we realize we are not going to get it this year, so we are going to work for a women's club house similar to the Men's Student Union. We expect to have it ready early this year, so it is the only way to get the girls together and get them acquainted." The annual Junior Prom, the biggest social event of the year at the University, will be held in the Gymnasium tomorrow night. Governor and Mrs. George Hodges, the Board of Administration, and prominent members of the faculty will be on on the receiving line. Above is shown a scene from a prom of a former year. "The new council is extremely fortunate in that it has Mrs. Eustace Brown to begin her work with it and we feel that we have a large field of possibilities before us for next year." MAY COMMIT MELODRAMA!! When asked in regard to the policy of the new council in regard to the enforcement of the mid-week date rule, Miss Hackbusch said: "We hope to create a sentiment among the girls for enforcement. of higher standards that will allow the 'rule' from the question and make the matter of mid-week dates a question of honor with every girl in the University." THE DANCE FESTIVAL AT THE ATHENA Kansan Board is Considering Presen tation of Play Written by the Actors According to present plans, the plot and action of the meidramda will be devised by the committee, and the actors left free to write their own lines with certain restrictions, of course. In this way the work and responsibility of authorship will be equally divided. Melodiarr in its most horrible form will be perpetrated by the members of the Kansan Board next month, if they present their play, "Adventures of Orville McScoop, the Cub Reporter," which is being considered in the minds of the Kansan Board. A committee was appointed last night to determine the advisability of presenting the play, and to report at the next meeting of the Board. HOLD PROM TILL THREE A. M Managers of Functions Petition Uni versity Senate for Late Hour Begin at Seven A petition has been submitted to the University Senate by the managers of the Junior Prom to allow them to attend continuing training to continue until three o'clock. The reason for this is the late hour in the afternoon that the baseball game will keep the students. If the petition is granted the Prom will not be opened until seven o'clock instead of six, as therefore, thus abstention from such a chance to get ready for the evening's entertainment. "The Prom should be supported by the juniors, because it is a class affair; and by all the rest because it is a University function," said Carson in urging more rapid payment of dues. The dues for the Prom are not coming in as fast as they should according to Cale Carson, one of the dues may be paid up to noon tomorrow. Send the Daily Kansan home. Send the Daily Kansan home. OH, MR. HEARST! PIPE THE YELLOW KANSAN Biggest Scream in University Journalism Will be Turned Loose April 22 Yellow as a squirrel print poster, or a pullman porter's new shoes, or a vivid burnt orange tango bloomer, or cup of hashbone coffee, or President Hureta's face when he heard instructions to pack their field kits, will be the usually staid and solemn University Daily Kansan on the evening of Wednesday, April 22, (order extra copies now), when an attempt will be made to teach Hou. W. R. Hearest a few new wrinkles in saffron journal. The Yellow Kansan will handle only the news of the day, (order extra copies now), but will handle it in a way that would bring joy to the heart of the editor of the K. C. Post, et al. In fact the Kansan board promises that the Yellow Kansan will prove an epoch making feature of University journalism, and (order extra copies now) will prove an interesting contrast to the usual type of college newspaper. Students or members of the faculty who have ideas for the Yellow Kansan are politely requested to communicate with the editor, John Madden. He will put your ideas in the hands of the proper committees (order extra copies now). The following committees have been appointed: Committee on faculty indirection, committee on student graft, committee on the probity law, committee on the Sorry Chair, committee on leadership of jitney shows, committee on quiz week, committee on eligibility of faculty members to teach in the University, and committee on golf link dates. The price of extra copies of the Yellow Kansan (order then will) will be five cents. Orders may be turned to a numbered card, hand to any member of the staff. Prof. W. A. McKeever was selected Monday night to represent Lawrence at the Sixth National Conference of the American Civic Planning Association, to be held in Toronto, Canada, May 25, 26, and 27. Professor McKeever was appointed at a meeting Lawrence Playground Association. The yellow edition will probably be followed some time later with a Boston Transcript—London Times antidote. Chance For Student Prof. McKeever a Delegate If you want a proposition for the coming year while going to school See Information Bureau. Not solicitation Room 8, Leader Building—Adv. Send the Daily Kansan home. TO FOLLOW SAME POLICY IN OREAD HIGH IN 1914-5 TO FOLLOW SAME POLICY The **Administrative Committee** of the School of Education held a business meeting yesterday to discuss plans for Oread high school for next year. The same policy that was pursued this year will probably be used and several more permanent teachers will be hired. Several of this year's graduates of the School of Education have already been placed in positions for next year, and no one can not be obtained until after May 1. NATIONAL GUARDS MAY GO TO MEXICO University Soldiers Are Subject to Call of Government in Case of War "If we have war with Mexico, it is my opinion that the National Guard will be mobilized as soon as war is declared," said Capt. F. E. Jones, of the University. K. N. G., today, "Whether it will be sent directly into the fight or not is hard to tell. The National Guards may be sent to the army or to guarding the uclairs or they may be sent to garrison the forts of the departed armies. All this will be under the direction of the secretary of war." The present enlistment of the organized National Guard is only about one third fighting strength. In case of a war the ranks of the regular army and the militias will be reduced, and when this is done, if more soldiers are needed, the president may call for volunteers. According to faculty men who were on the hill at the time of the Spanish-American war, there is not as much war spirit now as there was then. At that time every one who was old enough and many who were too old or too young were anxious and ready to go. The conditions are different now, however, because there is no longer a need to talk as to seriousness of a war with Mexico. Even under these conditions, Captain Jones is certain that it would be no trouble to fill up his company if its service needed. The $5000 damages recently awarded Miss Lora McKay, a student at the University last year, for injuries received when a street car ran away and overturned on the south side of Oread in 1111, told us to $5000 by Judy Smart yesterday on the ground of an error in judgment. LORA McKAY GETS BUT $3,500 Former K. U. Student's Damages Reduced from $5,000 by Judge Miss McKay asked for $30,000 for alleged permanent injuries. DENIED NEW TRIAL IN FRATERNITY TAX CASE A motion for a new trial in the Kappa Kappa Gamma fraternity tax case was denied County Attorney Charles Noll, who district court yesterday afternoon. Judge Smart recently made permanent an injunction against the county, forbidding the collection of taxes on fraternity property. It is possible that the case may be appalled; depending chiefly on advice given the Douglas county officials by the state tax commission. Seniors Will Hold Vote or Enterprise at Chapel SELECT MEMORIAL AT CLASS MEETING Hour The meeting will be conducted by Webster Holloway, president of the class. Short talks will be given by a shareer of the class during the meeting. senior class meeting is the program for chapel tomorrow. The purpose of the meeting is to make a selection of the memorial which the 1914 class plans to leave to the University. A number of lantern slides of proposed memorials will be flashed on a screen and a vote of the class will be taken to determine which is the most satisfactory. When one has been chosen, an assessment will be made and a committee appointed to look after the financial end of the enterprise. All seniors are urged to be press- at the meeting and help in the sol- ests. Manager W. O. Hamilton signed a contract this morning for a baseball game to be played with Highland Park College, of Des Moines, on the Iowa trip. This game will be played May 23. MANAGER HAMILTON GETS GAMES WITH HIGHLAND PARK Kansas will play Ames May 21 and These games have been sched- ed. segotations have been opened with Tarkio College, of Tarko, Mo. for a game of baseball on May 20 and basketball on May 18. Baseball schedule will be complete. Reads About House Fly Roy Fraser read a paper on "The Role the House Fly Plays in the Spreading of Disease in the Hossegor Club and the Entomological Club today." Detwiler Improves The condition of Captain John Detwiler, who is sick with yellow jaundice at his home in Smith Center, is improved. Detwiler is able to be up. 鱼夫少年会 JO灭活 大目 出 互佰 国心 Caucasian versus Mongolian will be the bill on McCook baseball field this afternoon when the Chinese team from Hawaii tackles Coach McCarty's Varsity nine. The Orientals arrived after defeating after defeating the Farmers 7 to 1. The Celestial line-up probably will be shifted today because of injuries. Ako, the yellow peril of Chinese baseball is slated to twirl for his race today. Ako recently held the Normal at Emporia to one hit and is the mainstay of the Dairy industry. Yin Feng, of Punxing field, and Aiko in the box, McCarty's men will have to play their best to subdue the Oriental. The Varsity had a hard practice last night and is in good condition for today's game. Coach McCarty has not announced his line-up but said there would be several changes. Bishop probably will pitch the first game against the Hawaiians. The game will be called at 3:45. They Play Ball all the Year Round in Honolulu "Why do we have such a good baseball team every season?" Simply because we play the year around in Hawaii and keep in training," said Captain Ken Yin, third baseman for the Chinese baseball team, which is playing the Varsity on McCook this afternoon. Ken Yin is a nimble little Chimaan and has occupied the third sack for the Hawaiian team two seqsons. "Everybody plays baseball in Honolulu, but that is not the only sport on the island. We play soccer and collegiate football but baseball is the most popular game." STUDENT MAKES RECORD ON OREAD GOLF LINKS Allen Sterling created a sensation this week in Oread golf circles when he made hole No. 3 on the course in four shots. This hole is 530 yards from the tee and the average golfer is doing well to get the ball in the cup in six strokes. Sterling got a nice round hole. The iron stroke sent the ball near the green. A long lucky putt put the sphere in the cup. Food Expert to Kansas Louis A. Condong will become assistant pure food officer of Kansas, to take office in Topeka, May 1. Although his headquarters will be at the capital, Mr. Condong will work with the University food experts and help enforcing the food regulations over the state. ALICE NIELSEN GIVES K. U. GIRLS THE GRIP Famous Soprano Singer Meets Kansas Members of Mu Phi Epsilon LIKES THE KANSAS PEOPLE Madam Nielsen Disagrees With Dean Skilton; Audience Not Cold and Iresponsive at K. U. She Likes K. U. "Yes, I'm a Mu Phi girl, too," assented Alice Nielsen last night after meeting the Kansas members of the band and being in touch at the close of her delightful recital. "I always glad to meet the Mu Phi girls; I had nearly forgotten the grip this time, and they had to show me how to do it. You see I crossed my fingers this way, and ought to be—but there, that's just like a woman, isn't it? It's a secret case, and we aren't supposed to tell it." Madam Nielsen likes Lawrente, she said so herself with an emphatic nod and a merry twinkle in her pretty blue eyes. "Dear Skilton, warned me that I might find the K. U. people cold and irrespective; like the New England people, you know. But I'll have to disagree with your Dean. They seemed very appreciative. The people are one of the nice things about Kansas. At Lindsborg and Newton, as well as here in Lawrence, I liked them very much. Applauds Kansas Music Applauds Kansas Music "And that chorus at Lindsborg, it isn't simply grand? Kansas is doing some extraordinary work in music, so I have found in my little trip through this part of the state. "I don't think the country matters very much," she said when asked about the value of study in Europe as compared with that in America. "It is entirely a question of genius. We have a lot of genius, and a singer will succeed if she has the talent whether she gets her training here or abroad." "Know Mr. Harold? I ought to; i sang with him in Toronto last summer. He sings tenor and has a very fine voice. indeed." That South View Pleased Her The singer was asked if she knew of Orville Harold, a Kansas singer now in London. Miss Nielson enjoyed an hour and a half sight seeing in Lawrence yesterday afternoon. She found the hills around Jackson Institute the chief places of interest. "The view south of the University is splendid," she declared, "and I liked the trip out to the Indian school, too; and that reminds me, we have an Indian driver tonight. I expect you." We say goodbye. Will you please send in one of tomorrow's papers; I want it for my scrap book." K. U - Paid $8 Each Minute To Hear Miss Nielsen Sing A little more than eight dollars a minute was the price the University had to pay Madie Alice Nielsen, for her songs last night. According to Dean C. S. Skilton, manager of the university's prima soprana company, in return for about an hour's singing, with the time for intermissions taken out. Carrying these figures further, 13 ½ cents a second was accruing while Miss Nielsen was on the platform singing. Her repertoire contained eight songs with four encores. Twenty-three dollars was paid for each song. For each note that the grand opera star sang, she received—but that same note never occurred. Attendance Was Biggest Ever, Eses Dean Skilton "The attendance last night was larger than for any other single concert ever given under the direction of the School of Fine Arts," said Dean C. S. Skilton, who is anaging the Festival. "More than a thousand music lovers heard the concert. The appreciation that University students have for artists was shown by the large number." Madame Nielsen Charms Big Audience With Concert One of the largest audiences that ever greeted a visiting artist at Mount Oread greeted Madam Alice (Continued on page 4) UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Official student paper of the University DITORIAL, STAFF KRISTIN A. BENNESIS JOHN C. MADDER, JOHN LARBERT, JOHN GUISHER, JOHN UHRSNER, HIGH HARDMAN, CALVIN LAMBERT, Editor-Dr.齐治 Associate Editor Manager Editor High School Sport Editor BUSINESS EDWYN ANGELI ... Business Manager BAY EATONU ... Circulation Manager JOB BIRCH ... Advertising CARL S. STREVYAN ... Advertising REPORTORIAL STAFF BAUD REMUN GUILDTON ALSTAT GUILDTON ALSTAT CHARLES SISWON CHARLES SISWON LUCIL HOLIDENN LUCIL HOLIDENN LAURIE BROWN LAURIE BROWN SMITH GUILDTON GUILDTON GUILDTON LUCY BABBOR W. W. PERCUSION HENRYBERRY FLINT RAY GLAUPER RAY GLAUPER WILLIAM S. CADY JORGE PARK NIRBIND Entered as second-class mail matter September 17, 1910, at the post office at Lawrence, Kansas, under the act of March 8, 1879. Subscription price $2.50 per year, in advance: one term, $1.50. In published in the afternoon, Bivues takes a walk from the office of the department of Ranas, from the press of the department of Ranas. The Daily Kansan aims to picture the undergraduate students go to further help them more printily, the news by standing in front of no fearlesses; to be clean; to be cheerful; to be smart; to be curious; to be more serious problems to widen heads; to be willing to sacrifice the students of the University. THURSDAY, APRIL 16, 1914. Comparisons make enemies of our friends.-Philemon. AHA, OPPORTUNITY KNOCKS And besides it may start a tradition. The supposed lack of traditions at the University is traditional. Freshmen who have never seen the inside of another university will become eloquent when talking about the comparative absence of venerated customs at K. U., two months after they arrive in Lawrence. Everything is new on Mount Oread, and smacks of fresh paint and varnish. We are told that students have no charming ruins, no musty moss-covered walls, no hollow spots on the campus—to say nothing of the absence of annual events which began before the Revolutionary war—that they may love and rever after they are separated from their alma mater. WHAT IS IT? If for no other reason, therefore, than the possibility of starting a bewhiskered tradition, the sophomores and freshmen should get together on the suggestion to engage in a tug-of-war across Potter lake on or about May 1. a joy of the springtime. A harbinger. Popular with students and profes $755 Inexpensive. Proof of the band's philanthropic nature. Delight of the "daters." Conducive to spring fever. Sounds best from Museum steps. Never lasts long enough. Fatal to loneliness. Competes successfully with the movies. Almost due. REAL BASEBALL The race war has begun. Not a Mexican invasion, a Boxer insurrection, or a battle with the Japanese navy, but merely two contests with the Chinese baseball team. from Honolulu. The first game today is almost over but the teams play again tomorrow and every student has a chance to see an international exhibition of the sport which has made America famous. Remember the game begins at two-thirty tomorrow on account of the Junior Prom. “ALL THINGS COME—” At last, a start toward the senior memorial! Even though this is the eleventh hour there are yet sixty figurative minutes remaining—and that is enough time to do a great deal, if the proper spirit is shown. The class honor societies are united for a memorial, in fact, opposition to the idea itself is scarce, but a variety of suggestions will undoubtedly be presented and discussed. Each senior present will hear something of interest in Snow Hall tomorrow at chapel time. and he should be there to speak his mind, or forever afterwards hold his peace. Some plan will be adopted without doubt, and the success of that scheme, whatever it is, will depend upon the enthusiastic support of every loyal '14 student. Extracts From K. U. Congressional Record The Senate met at 4:30 o'clock The VICE PRESIDENT resumed the chair. The Journal of the proceedings of the preceding meeting were read and approved. Senator MURRAY. Mr. President, I notice that there are very few Senators in the chamber and I therefore suggest the absence of a quorum. Senator BAILEY. I desire to announce that the junior senator from the department of chemistry is unavailable. The golf links are now in shape. THE VICE PRESIDENT. The roll call shows that there is a quorum present. The presentation of petitions and memorials is in order. Senator BOYNTON. Mr. President, many of the senators present will no doubt attend the Junior Prom in Robinson Gymnasium Friday evening. There seems to be some doubt as to the propriety of diapers for the children of the teachers and flowers. I wish to announce myself as being decidedly against their use. I also ask that my stand on the matter be printed in the record. Senator WILCOX, Mr. President. Senator from the Department of Greek Senator WILCOX. I can never consent to any such violation of the established custom of formal society. Flowers are the finishing of a full dress affair. Cabs afford privacy which screens evening dress in ascending the hill before sundown. We Kansans are too prone to cast to the wind the established customs of polite society. Senator THORPE. Mr. President. It seems to me that this is a proper matter to be decided by the Committee on Personal Revenue. The hour of six o'clock having arrived. The VICE PRESIDENT said: the hour having arrived at which the constitution requires adjournment, the Chair declares the session adjourned sine die. ENDS AND ODDLETS CRACK IT YOURSELF After reading the list of "favorite airs for that Old Song Day" in the Daily Kansan yesterday the office humorist insists that the sort of ozone needed is a little FRESH air. The names of the editor-in-chief and business manager of The Scoop, published in Chicago, are W. E. Daton and Wm. Frederick Nutt. Dr. Wiley lost a lot of prestige in the eyes of his countrymen when he publicly announced that he didn't like pie. One of Cy Byron's mortal enemies has written in to the editor insisting that the poem by that distinguishes author Richard C. Moore should not have been headed "The Vacant Prow," but instead, "The Vacant Brow." BARRED FROM THE MALES The "Bald Headed Number" of the Pennsylvania Punch Bowl was refused admission to the Philadelphia postoffice by less than a hair's breadth because of a puzzle picture which the government officials declared to be a lottery. A pig's eye has been grafted on a boy and he can now see, but when he grafts it and goes to college he'll tell the whole team of the boarding house chicken every time. K. U. menagerie adds several new freaks. A pure white quail and a perfectly white squirrel, a white oppossum, a white Kingbird and a white raven that may be classed as out of the ordinary. BARRED FROM THE MALES THE NATURAL HISTORY ME- NATURAL NAGERIE The Kansas menagerie is one of the best equipped in the country.— Ex. A Harvard professor says that there are 143 "good English substitutes for damn." What a slim supply for the spring quiz season! 一 WITH K. U. POETS By Esther Clark, Former Student. "the Knave of Hearts he spied the turtles and took them quite away." Of course, you know I love you; so You are my Queen of Hearts. I've wondered, too, if it was you The Queen of Hearts she made some tarts I were wonderla, too; if it does you Who made those toothsome tarts? Now, I am not a knave, God wot! Yet, had I knavish arts, All that stopped suddenly when I was fourteen years by reason of the family moving to "town," said town being the straggling and impoverished village of Ioa. I remember school for the reason that it was so very bad. The last year of my preparation for the 'University there was not one thing taught in the Ioa school that I needed in order to pass my entrance examinations, and so I had去 to school to myself—a lonely business. Dear me! I have already run over my limit of 200 words! Let me take just enough more space to say that Life suits me fine! Every year is better than the last one and after twenty, or say thirty more years of it, I could not go back to the beginning and try it all over again! CAMPUS OPINION What is there about a crowd of forty college students at a college dining table so appalling and so distasteful to the average human being? The question why full grown men continue to return to college dining rooms, day after day, year after year, with the same unaccountable idea of polite behavior, from the meanish soup suppe- tor to the masticating woman, Bosio the Snake Eater? BETTER TABLE MANNERS Twould be the Queen I'd steal, I ween, And leave behind the tarts. Why doesn't the University, so anxious to help the rising generation, issue occasional pamphlets on simple matters of general conduct? Isn't there some way to make people understand that they need not: (3) collect an array of dishes as we learn, considering their starving neighbor. (2) anchor knives and forks on the plates. The handles are not dead. (Written by order of the editio with the warning that the narrative should be "fair, flattering, and frivolous.") (1) lie on the table. It will not fly away. Missionaries to the heathen? Yes, mionarches the pets of Cicea. Save, save, pearls. "Critical" Also. THE STORY OF MY LIFE By C. F. Scott. I was born, as I have been informed, on a farm in Allen county, ever and ever so many years ago—although he has been my friend. I suppose I went to school some, while living in the country, but what I chiefly remember is shooting prairie chickens and hunting rabbits and killing skunks and swimming skating and fishing and showing riding and raking hay and herring cattle. About the only chance I ever had for distinction in a literary way while in the University, Nature robbed me of. I was "Orator" on the Oread Commencement Week program. The Oread evening's prize was to be held a little storm came up and pested the roof off the University. The University only had one roof then, and when it was gone there was nothing for the Oread Society to but cancel its program. And I was canceled along with the rest of them. But I have spoken at the University again so maybe it didn't make very much difference in the long run. The nearest we came to having any sort of athletics during my University years was an occasional and desultory game of football. I was catcher one or two years,—a very poor one. Ed. Little, since substantiant Colonel Bates, a leading candidate for Justice of the Supreme Court of the state of Kansas, and Ralph Waldo Emerson Twitchell, since Attorney General of the Territory of New Mexico and the author of some remarkable books about that state (which I have been too poor to buy and he has been too economical to send to me), alternated as pitches and between us, and with some help from Don Rankin, and a few others out in the field, we managed one year to win the silver (plated) ball which I think may still be seen in some of the University museums. You'll realize when you come here to look at clothes how much real service a store like this is rendering you. You'll find that we've been a sort of "purchasing agent" for you, subject of course, to your approval. Hart Schaffner & Marx clothes are here because we believe they're the best way for us to serve our customers in clothes; the best value possible for your money. In that we are offering you our best judgment; if you don't agree with us, that's your "look out;" we've done our best for you. PECKHAMS This Store is the Lawrence Home of Hart Schaffner & Marx Clothes Heid Caps CITY CAFE 906 Mass. 906 Mass. Emery Shirts Strictly Home Cooking Strictly Home Cooking Ever try our Special 15c Lunch? You'll like it. A GOOD PLACE TO EAT AT JOHNSON & TUTTLE 715 PROPS. Mass. ANDERSON'S OLD STAND SPRING SUITTINGS FRANK KOCH TAILOR 727 Mass. PROFESSIONAL CARDS W. C. M'COONNELLY, Phycdan and Associate, Boca Raton, FL Hospital 3849, Residence 13464, Tenn. Tampa, FL. J. B. FROCK, Optometrist and Specialist of Eye Care Office 802 Mass. 58, Ball phone 695. G. A HAMMAN M. D. E. eye, ear, Safety Guaranteed. Dick Building. Satellite HARRY BEDING. M. D. Eye ear, nose BLOOM. Bloom 813. Home 512. Blume Phone. 813. 613. Home 512. DR. H. W. HAYNE, Oculist, Lawrence, Kansas. J. W. O'BRYON, Dentist. Over Wilson's Drug Store. Belfair Phone 507. J. R. BECHTEL, M. D. D. O. 833 Mass Abbey Street. Both phones, office and phone cards. Q. W, JONES, A. M, M. D, Disease of Bronchial Tissue. St. John's St., both phone. Residence, 120-756-3848. DR. H. T. JONES, Room 102 F. A. A. Bldg. Residence 1130 Tenn. Phones 2111. DR. H. L. CHAMBERS. Office over Studio. Rhône phones. Copyright Hart Schaffner & Marx DR. BURT R. WHITE Ogeeopath. Phones. Bell 938. Home 257. Office. 743 Mass. St. fd. W. Parsons, Engraveer Watchmaker and Jeweler, Diamonds and Jewelry, Bell Phone CLASSIFIED Plumbers S. T. GILLISPIS, M. D. Olsen corner B. A. GAREN ST. Residence 728 Phonon 728. Phonon 728. Queen City College. System and sewing machines. Mrs. F. Cordier, school. mrs. G. MarkGown, 884 KY. Ball Copyright Hunt Baker Corp & Margo Phone Kennedy Plumbing Co. for gas Madea lamps 185 Mass. Phones 885. MERRIS MELLISON, Dressmaking and Ladies Vernons, Beverly Hills, 1682 Vermont. Phone Bell 2411 West. Ladies Tailors Hair Dressers faldressing, shampooing, scalp and facial massage, shampooing, hair-gifts. Many apparel and nail salons. appointments call B51 1872, Home. 31. The folded hair Dress Shop, 927 Mass 84. Barber Shopa go where they all go J. C. HOUK 913 Mass. Student's Co-Op Club $2.50 to $3.00 per week 13:40 Kge, Geo. H.vanell Seward The "BEE" Electric Suction Sweeper We are exclu-sive Selling Agents. We are Price $25.00 Let us show you this sweeper MOTOR CITY TOY COMPANY WEAVER'S Drink Coca-Cola Coca-Cola BOTTLE FLAWER AUTOMATIC RELEASE Coca-Cola BOTTLE FLAWER AUTOMATIC RELEASE College Friendships Make college life worth while. Coca-Cola is a friend worth knowing and having all the way through from Freshman to Senior year. It will fill your college days with pleasure, health and benefit. delicious—Refreshing Thirst-Quenching THE COCA-COLA CO. Atlanta, Ga. PROTSCH The Tailor SUM ST. SNUBERT MAT. WED. and SAT. REG. OW. MY HEART THEY ARE HERE PEG O' MY HEART Sam S. Shubert Next: PASSING SHOW OF 1913 Whenever you see Annie think of Cone-Cola Bert Wadham THE COLLEGE BARBER On 14th Street A. G. ALRICH Printing Binding, Copper Plate Printing, Bubber Stamp, Engraving, Steel Die Embossing, Seals, Badges. 744 Mass. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN WANT ADS FOR RENT- Two dress suits, Clark, 730 Mass. 132-3 LOST—A golf club called a mid-iron on the golf links Saturday. Bell phone 1926. 132-3* LOST—A Kappa Kappa Gamma key and not jeweled and with Nellie May Schall engraved on back. Return to Kansan Office. Cottages in Estes Park for rent. Call Bell 1318 or address X, Care University Daily Kansan. 129-5 A. D. S. P. Peroxide Cream at Barber's Drug Store...Adv. Junior Laws! Positively the greatest value and the largest selling golf ball in the United States is our Red-dot, at 50c. Carroll's.-Adv. Damagas and domestic relations—Prices right—second hand and new books. F. D. R. Miller, 1041 Vt. St.—Adv. Wanted—Salesmen Profitable vacation employment for Students selling guaranteed household articles. Last season students made from $274,000 to $398,000. Give your territory now National Co. 3rd St., Newark, N. Y. - Adv. 132-8 Geologist Lectures Prof. A. N. Winchell delivered two lectures in the mining engineering building today the first at 10 a. m. and the second at 4:30 p. m. The subjects dealt with were "The Mining Geology of Butte" and "The Origin of Butte Ores." Both lectures were illustrated. Would be Councilman George H. Vansell, a junior in the College, announced his candidacy for membership of the Men's Student Council this morning. Send The Daily Kansan Home The Crowd Reads THE DAILY KANSAN If you want a crowd at your Play Dance Mixer Advertise it,in the Daily Kansan Kansan Ads Pay You Can Earn a Good Living and lay up some money too, on graduation from college. You can get ready and you'll secure a good position Free Employment Bureau at your service Business College at your best Business College. No vacations. LAWRENCE Business College Lawrence, Kansas. WATKINS NATIONAL BANK Capital $100,000 Surplus and profits $100,000 The Student Depositary K. U. SEISMOGRAPH RECORDS EVERYTHING Instrument Registers Earthquakes and Wit-Sparkles Brought Here in 1911 Not long ago someone in the University unknowingly dropped a sparkle of wit. The little instrument over in the basement of Fraser recorded the shock, and the following day the local papers devoted three columns on the front page to a vivid and graphic description of a terrible eruption in the University Senate. The seismograph was brought to the University of Kansas in the spring of the year 1911 and located in the room in the basement of Fraser Hall. This instrument is a design of Professor Wiechert, a geophysicist, of Goettlingen, Germany, and is known as the astatic horizontal seismograph. The purpose of this form of seismograph is to register the shocks and undulatory motions of earth oakes. To the ordinary observer the seismograph appears as a combination of a moving picture reel, a gasoline engine tank and a very small pair of steering wheels. In frame work, and the framework in turn resting on a large cement block. The "reel" is a cylinder around which a paper strip, coated with lamp black is pasted to form a ring. This cylinder revolves very slowly, so slowly, in fact, that when you are standing right beside the machine you find it very difficult to determine which of the aluminum levers, to which are attached fine aluminum writing points, extend out over the cylinder. These points trace lines on the paper as the cylinder revolves. What appears to be a gasoline engine tank is a stationary mass weighing four hundred pounds. This mass is like an inverted pendulum, the turning point being formed below on the stand from a Cardanic system of springs. The pendulum mass has its enter of gravity one meter above the turning point and is at this spot held by two thrust arms, one in the North-South and the other in the East-West direction. Each of the thrust arms moves a two-sided lever arm of aluminum, the axis of which is vertical. On one side of the lever the air damping is fixed. On the other side a point, against which a small thrust arm lies, moves the writing point. When a disturbance of the earth's surface is held in the medium mass remains fixed, and the movements are transmitted to the writing points by the system of levers previously described. The writing points receive the impressions and record them on the blackened surface of the paper on the cylinder. Any movement of the earth is recorded. If the disturbance is a small pressure drop it may be slightly. If the shock is quite pronounced, the lines zigzag very noticeably across the cylinder. For the more lunging motion of the earth during an earthquake the magnification of the motion by the seismograph is about 100 to 1. According to Prof. F. E. Kester, of the department of physics, "in addition to this effect there is another, due to the rocking of the earth's surface, which gives about one-half an inch of motion of the recording needles for a title of one degree of the crust of the earth. The sensitivity for this last type of motion so great is so low that it often enters the slightly tilted action in the surface caused by the march across the country of the high and low pressure areas such as are sketched daily on the weather maps. Around Mount Oread Ward Barber is now convalescents from the severe attack of pneumonia which necessitated his removal from here to his home in Abilene some years ago. He is now a hard-working, weak, however, that he will be unable to finish this semester. A senior in the College in his four years spent at this seat of learning has raised the art of "grafting" to the nth power. For instance, he filled up a rooming house with students for the landlord, hence his roomrent free all year; he is steward of a club, he his board cover; sells tickets for a pantomime, hence his tickets for a chorusiform, hence his laundry free; is agent for a laundry route, hence laundry free; and besides all these activities works in a down town store to help out with his heavy expenses. The Rev. Mr. Hamilton, of Pleasanton, Kans., is visiting his son this week at the Kappa Sigma house. J. M. Johnson intended to spend his Easter vacation in the quiet confines of Spooner, but after certain exciting events of last week, he thought it best to go home and have a few buttons reattached. Jerry Reisley who is taking the "family" in the sociology department, told his professor yesterday that the reason he was not at class last Thursday was because he had to hurry home to engage a cook. Jerry says he took a course and all I know but the singing. The date has not been set for the ceremony yet but Jerry says there will be "two of us in school next year." Earl Plowman was an interested spectator at a picture show this week. Right in the middle of a thrilling drama some roaring individual seated behind Plowman, grabbed Plowman's hat, and said it far over the audience, "Oh, there's a little girl, seeing the reflection on the screen, "see the pretty little bird." "Little," granted a cynically wise witness in the back row. "It's seven and seven-eights if it's an inch." SOCIOLOGISTS WILL GO TO INDUSTRIAL SCHOOL Prof. A. W. Trettine will take his class in sociology to Topeka Saturday to make a coprative study of the youths in the Boys' Industrial School of Topeka. The class is making practical experiments along the lines of mental and physical hygiene. They have recently been doing work with the students of the Haskell Institute. Y. W. Officers to Topeka. The Cabinet officers of the Y. W. C. A. organizations throughout Kansas will hold a convention at Topeka Friday and Saturday of this week. Marie Russ, Florence Engel, Evelyn Strong, and Florence Witcher will represent the University cabinet. Fischer's Shoes are Good Shoes Try On a Fischer's Pump That's more convincingThan pictures and words Fischer's for the Junior Prom. The pleasing price is $4.00 THE FLOWER SHOP Phones 621 8251-2 Mass. St. FLOWERS FOR THE PROM for those who care for the finishing of a full dress affair FF Just a few of these great MEMORY BOOKS left, so if you want one, hurry to Wolf's Book Store, where you can get one for $2.00. Don't lose all the programs and momentos of the year. WARWICK Front 3% in. Inch. 15% in. Warranted Linen Barker Collars only at PECKHAMS CHEMICALS HAVE FULL DAY Disciples of Prof. Whitaker Inspect Chicago Manufactories—Will Be Home Monday Prof. W. A. Whitaker and his party of chemical engineers are in Chicago today, inspecting the Armour and Co. Soap, Glue, and Glycerine plant, the People's Gas, Light, and Coke Co., the Government food and drug laboratories, and the factory of the Oxweld Acetylene Co. Tomorrow the party will go to Argus, Ill., where the Corn Products Refining Co., is located. Returning to Chicago at noon, the afternoon will be spent with the Board of Trade and The American Linseed Oil Co. The Board will visit a visited Saturday morning and the afternoon will be free to the class. They will return to Lawrence in time for recitation Monday morning. Applications for the scholarships open to women students for 1914-15 should be made to the committee before April 15. Scholarships for Women The scholarships offered are: The Marcella Howland Memorial Scholarship, $87.50. Open to young women of the junior and senior classes of the College. The Eliza Matheson Innes Memorial Scholarship, $100. Open to women students of the college above or two other students of the Graduate School. The Daughters of the American Revolution Scholarship, $100. Open to women students of the College above the freshman year and to women students of the Graduate School. The Association of Collegeiate Alumnae Scholarship, $50.00. Open to women of the junior and senior years of the College. The Caroline Mumford Winston memorial scholarship of $35 is open to women students of the College of classes above the freshman. The Lucinda Smith Buchan Me- The APRIL SALE at the Innes Store Offers many opportunities for Saving Fancy Tailored Suits will be specially priced in this sale Suits that were $16.50 and $18.00 at . . . . . Fancy Tailored Suits of Highest Class Materials, Wools, Crepes, Honey Comb Cloths Wool Packages, Honeycomb Packages were $10.00 and $25.00 at . . . $27.75 Suits of Silk Poplin and Moire in best shades, were $35.00 at . $29.75 Silk Suits that were $37.50 and $39.75 at . $34.75 I Wool Dresses of Crepes, Poplin and Needle Cords, Tangue, Rose, Copenhagen, and Navy were $20 and $22.50 at. ... $17.50 Silk Dresses, Crepes, Taffetas, Foulards and evening dresses of Crepe, Chiffon, Messalins or Lace, up to $16.50 at. ... $12.75 Cotton Blouses, of Crepe, Rice Cloth, Voile and Printed Crepes, up to $1.50 value at . . . . . EVERYWHERE IN THE STORE you will find spring things specially prized—Hosiery, Gloves, Neckwear, Ribbons, Handkerchiefs, Embroideries and Laces at enough less than usual to be a reason for buying now. Onms. Bullene Hackman Committee: Committee: E. Galloo. Ida H. Hyde. Hannah Oliver Limeade 5c, every drink in a clean glass at Limade's Drug Store. -Adv. Send the Daily Kansan home. Send the Daily Kansan home. See our tennis hats, shoes, three different kind, all reasonable in price. Carroll's.-Adv. Razors, blades, and stoppers of all kinds at Barber's Drug Store. Adv. Pineapple ice cream at Reynolds Bros. Bell phone 645...Adv. Special—Lemon ice at Reynolds Bros. Bell phone 645—Advils. Send the Daily Kansan home. Send the Daily Kansan home. Mr. Baseball Fan Are you interested in the Varsity team,the fraternity leagues,and the inter-club league? If you are,you will want to get all the dope of the games. Mail fifty cents to the University Daily Kansan and have it delivered the rest of the school year, until June 5. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Correct Clothes for the "Prom" Unsurpassed in elegance and correctness of detail. Most carefully hand tailored by the most proficient experts who devote their time exclusively to the making of Full Dress Clothes. All the accessories to complete your Full Dress costume you'll find in our Evening Dress Department. Make your selections early. See Window Ober's HEAD TO FOOT OUFF FITTERS See Window 293 K.U. TO SEND SEVEN TO DRAKE RELAY GAMES Kansas Men Will Run in Mile and Two Mile Races Coach Arthur St. Lerger Mose and seven members of the K. U. truck squad will board a train tomorrow for Des Moines, where the teams will play in relay games. Saturday, Kansas will be in the mile and two mile relays. Edwards, Fiske, Creighton, and Grady are picked for the mile event while Cissna, Elswick, Edwards, Heenan, and Jenkins are candidates for the two mile relay. All the Missouri valley teams are expected to be in the relay games, as well as runners from Illinois, Chicago, Minnesota, Grinnell, Iowa, and Colorado. Manager Hamilton will go to Des Moines Saturday. TOMORROW'S GAME AT 2:25 Manager Hamilton Advanced Time on Account of Junior Prom "Tomorrow's game will be called at 2:25 and I don't want to see a coat in the bleachers," Manager Hamilton said today, in regard to the second Chinese baseball game tomorrow, when the league started early because of the Junior Prom. "The games with the Chinese are the big athletic events of the year and I would like to see a large crowd tomorrow." Manager Hamilton said. Allegretti's the original chocolate creams 65c the pound. Carroll's.- Adv. BISHOP SIGNS CONTRACT WITH CLEVELAND TEAM Varsity Pitcher to Report to Manager Birmingham at End of School Year Lloyd Bishop, pitcher for the Varsity, has signed a contract with the Cleveland American League team and will report to Manager Birmingham at the end of the school year. Bishop's contract guaranteed him with the Naps during the entire season and will not be farmed out. Pitcher Bishop is one of the most consistent twirlers in the Missouri Valley. After a successful season with Fairmount, Bishop came to Kansas and finished the season, last year with but one defeat out of nine games. He is a senior in the law school. George Huff, scout for the Naps, discovered Bishop last spring and has been negotiating with the K. U. twirler ever since. PROF. DUVALL WILL LEAVE Mathematics Teacher Resigns From K. U. Faculty to go to Oklahoma —Better Salary Prof. E. R. Duvall assistant professor in the department of mathematics, will resign his position on the faculty of the University at the end of this semester to go to the University of Oklahoma. He will have the rank of associate professor of mathematics there. "There is no dissatisfaction whatever with the position here," Professor Duvall said this morning. "The Oklahoma chair will be in place, but I can't afford to refuse it. I have no complaint at all with my present position." Apparel for the Prom Correct apparel for evening wear--- The new pleated shirts The new pleated ties to match The new stock ties in black and white White hose with a black clock Dress shirt, tight-fitting priced pique to the finest quality of silk Gloves, studs, buttons, and all accessories to make you the well dressed man Johnson & Carl SECOND DIVISION HASH HOUSE LEAGUE SCHEDULE—First Division. The Ellis Gillespie Cor-op Columbus Ko-op Martin Marks K K Ellis Daily Apr. 18 F 10:15 Apr. 24 F 4:30 May 2 F 8:30 May 9 F 8:30 May 16 F 1:30 May 23 F 8:30 May 30 F 1:30 Gillespie Apr. 18 F 10:15 Kansas Apr. 30 F 10:15 Apr. 24 W 4:30 May 16 F 10:15 May 9 W 10:15 May 2 F 10:15 May 23 F 1:30 Co-op Apr. 24 F 4:30 May 30 F 10:15 Prints Apr. 18 W 10:15 May 23 W 8:30 May 2 F 10:15 May 9 W 10:15 May 15 W 4:30 Columbus May 2 F 8:30 Apr. 24 W 4:30 Apr. 18 W 10:15 All May 30 W 10:15 May 23 F 8:30 May 9 F 8:30 May 10 F 8:30 Ko-op May 9 F 8:30 May 16 F 10:15 May 23 W 8:30 May 30 W 10:15 Hash Apr. 18 F 10:15 Apr. 25 W 8:30 May 2 F 1:30 Martin May 16 F 1:30 May 9 W 10:15 May 2 F 10:15 May 23 F 8:30 Apr. 18 F 10:15 House May 30 F 8:30 Apr. 24 F 4:30 Marks May 23 F 8:30 May 2 F 10:15 May 9 F 10:15 May 16 W 8:30 Apr. 25 W 8:30 May 30 F 8:30 League Apr. 18 F 1:30 K K May 30 F 1:30 May 23 F 1:30 May 15 W 4:30 May 9 F 1:30 May 2 F 1:30 Apr. 24 F 4:30 Apr. 18 F 1:30 News The Babb Babb (Continued from page 1) ALICE NIELSEN GIVES K. U. GIRLS THE GRIP The selection of numbers was extraordinarily well suited to the hearers and their rendition held the audience. The fifth group of songs, which contained several delicate and beautiful forms, was very popular, probably, but in praising these no credit should be taken from any other number. Madam Nielsen, with her personality and her excellent interpretation of her songs, truly charmed her hearers. Vivacious and attractive, she had no trouble swaying her several hundred admirers and her songs, one and all, brought thunderous applause. Would Be V. P. Nielsen at her concert in Robinson Auditorium last evening. The whole lower floor was crowded and the galleries were well filled. The encores were airs, familiar to everybody and Madam Nielsen possibly obtained her greatest effect with "Sweet Genevieve" and "In the Land of the Sky Blue Water," songs familiar to all. Mr. Edwin Schneider at the piano accompanies in a true artistic style. Mckinley H. Warren a junior in the teaching department of the President of the Student Council. K. U. Calendar Athletics Apr. 17. Baseball, University of Hofwynn, at Laverne. Apr. 18. Baseball. University of Hawaii, at Lawrence. Apr. 18. Drake Relay Games at Des Moines. Apr. 25. Outdoor interclass meet, McCook. May 1 N U.U.K. U. dual track meet, M.Cook May 1-2 Seventh Ditscholastic teni- p tournament. McCook. May 2. Eleventh annual interscholastic track mee. McCook. May 5. K. 5. S. A. C.-K. U. dual track meet at Manhattan. May 6-7. Baseball, M. U., at Law- rence. May 14-15. Baseball, M. U., at Columbia. May 16. M. U.-K. U. (dual track meet, at Columbia May 23. Annual invitation H. S. track meet at Lawrence. Future Events May 30. M. V. track meet St. Louis. June 16. M. V. conference track meet at Chicago. A. T. O. DEFEATS SIG ALPH Apr. 22 8:15 Annual spring concert of the University band. Apr. 15, 29-30 Eleventh Annual Music Festival. Mar. 31. Piano Recital, Alice Eldridge. New tennis balls at Carroll's.- Adv. We feature our Geneva racket at $1.50 for women; it's a Spalding. Carroll's--Adv. Pan-Hellenic League Opened With Lop-Sided Score 19 to 7. Line markers for tennis courts, $1.00 at Carrolls--Adv. The Pan-Hellenic baseball league opened yesterday afternoon when the Alpha Tauus defeated the Sig Alphas in a wied game 19 to 7. The game was full of sensational hits, bonehead errors and clumsy base running, but the game for the Alpha Tauus while Welch was hammered hard and had poor support. Stuewe's batting and Fairchild's fielding featured. The score: Alpha Taus Sig Alphs Batteries; for the Van der Vries, Meadows and Ice; Welch and Johnson. Umpire HAZEN TO EASTERN MEET? R. H. E. 283 600 0—19 17 3 103 110 1— 7 4 10 Three months in Europe for $600 is what the foreign travel ad in this issue of the paper offers.—Adv. Send the Daily Kansan home New shipment of Red-dot golf balls just received. 50c each. Carroll's.-Adv. Limades, five cents, at Reynolds Bros. Bell 645...Adv. Approves Track Captain May Go to Philadephia phia April 25 if Athletic Board Captain Dan Hazen, of the Kansas track squad, will go to Philadelphia, April 25, and compete in the big inter-collegiate meet on the university campus. If a football athlete boar dapproves, Coach Hamilton will ask the board to send Hazen and will accompany the Kansas captain. The K. U. relay team may make the trip if it shows exceptionally strong in the Drake relay games. Saturday Captain Hazen is in good shape this spring and Coach Hamilton believes the speedy hurdler will make a good showing at Philadelphia. Athletes from all the leading American colleges and universities as well as teams from Cambridge and Oxford will enter the meet. This morning's express brought us some new ball caps; all you ball players like notice. Carroll's—Adv. Try the Orange Julip at Reynolds Bros. Phone Bell 645—Adv. Read your own KANSAN. "Kewpies" The Little Happy Gods They Drive Away Our Troubles Brooches . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25c. to $1.00 Rings . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25c Scarf Pins . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25c. to $1.00 Pendant . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25c. to $2.00 Spoons . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $1.75 Fork . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $1.75 Hat Pins . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25c. to $1.00 Bibb Holders . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $2.00 Gustafson The College Jeweler AT THE AURORA TOMORROW AT THE AURORA TOMORROW "JUDITH OF BETHULIA" THE GREATEST BIOGRAPH EVER PRODUCED. FOUR REEL SPECTACULAR FILM D'ART STATE HISTORICAL SOCIETY UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN TOPEKA KAN VOLUME XI. UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS FRIDAY AFTERNOON, APRIL 17, 1914 ORIENTAL CUNNING TOO MUCH FOR K. U. CREW Heatheh Chinese Proved Him self Peculiar By Winning the First, 9 to 2 CHINKS MADE NOT AN ERROR And They Were Only Wild When on the Bases—Game Today Called at 2:30. Better pitching, better fielding, better batting, and better base running gave the Chinese team from the University of Hawaii a 9 to 2 victory over the Varsity on McCook field yesterday afternoon. The Celtics stunned but buoyed by good support, and his team mates could not deliver with the stick. The Chinese played errorless ball, hit constantly and ran wild on the bases. Apau twirled for the Chinese and held the Jayhawkers to six safeties. The hitting of Aayu, the snoppy third baseman for the Honoluluwers, was the feature. Aayu knocked out the baseboarder. He also played a great game at short stop, accepting eight chances without a musec. The Hawaiians scored first in the third when Ayau smashed the ball into deep right for three bases after Pung had reached first on an error. In the fifth session, Apau and Pung occupied bases through the generosity of shortstop Morrow and Apau again cleared the bases with a three sacker. In the next inning, singles by Poster, Marks and Apau with a bagger run, the visitors won. Against the visitors, run, Apau's third three bagger with singles by three fellow Chinks brought three more Chinks across the platter. The two teams will play again this afternoon at 2:30. The batteries probably will be, Kansas: Snee and Cammerns; Hawaii: Foster and Ken Yon. K. U. made its first run in the eight, when Morrow doubled and scored on Sommer's single. The second was made in the ninth. Smee led with a two bagger and scored on a groundy by Van der Vries. The Score: NUMBER 135. Hawaii AB R H PO A F A Ayau, ss. 4 2 3 8 0 Akana, 1b 5 0 0 8 0 Kan Yin, c. 5 0 0 6 2 Mark, 3b 5 2 3 1 0 Foster, cf. 5 0 1 3 1 Chinn, 2b 5 1 1 3 1 Apau, p. 5 2 2 0 1 Alvin, rf. 3 0 0 1 0 Punr, lf. 4 2 1 0 0 the Quill Club, publishers of the only literary magazine in the state, will become a national intercollegiate organization. A literary society at the State Agricultural College, Manhattan, has already affiliated. Total 41 9 11 27 9 0 Kansas AB R B H P O Sommers, c. 4 0 1 7 2 0 Wandel, lf. 4 0 1 0 0 Smee, rf. 4 1 1 0 0 DeLongy, cf. 2 0 0 2 1 Painter, 3b. 2 0 0 2 1 Van de Vries, 2b. 4 0 2 3 2 Spilb, 1b. 4 0 11 0 0 Morrow, ss. 2 1 1 2 1 3 Bishop, p. 3 0 0 0 4 Total 31 2 6 27 11 Score by innings: R H 1 Kansas 9 023 003 19 9 2 Kansas 000 001 012 9 2 Summary—Three base hits, Bpau Ayun 3. Two base hits; Smee, Morrow, Apa. On bases on balls, Apau 2 Struck out, by Apau 7; by Bishop 9 Left on bases, Hawai 4; Kansas 5 Stolen bases, Pung, Foster 2, Mark 8 Hit by pitcher, DeLongy by Apau Umpire Wedell. [Picture of a large group of men and women, most wearing formal attire, posed in front of a dark background. The individuals are arranged in rows, with some facing the camera and others slightly turned away.] SCHOLARSHIP COMMITTEE WILL MEET ON APRIL 20 Owing to Dr. Hyde's absence in attendance at the meeting of the Association of Collegiate Alumni in Philadelphia, the Committee on Women's Scholarships will be unable to supportings until the twentieth of this month. So far there have been several applicants for the scholarships. It has been the custom for the Chancellor to announce the winners during Commencement week. None will be known before this date. Offers Four Jobs Con. Hoffman, Y. M. C. A. secretary, reports that he has several jobs open for men now. He wants a newspaper carrier and a restaurant man. For further information students should see Hoffman in Myers Hall. Ed. Abels and Charles Sturtevant, of the advertising department of the Daily Kansan, went to Kansas City today on business. Kansan Ad Men to K. C. The Quill Club, K. U. Literary Society, Will Be National Organization FRATERNITY TAX TO SUPREME COURT Case Will Be Appealed on Advice of State Tax Commission As a result of the denial of Judge C. A. Smart of a new trial in the fraternity taxation case, the county will carry the case to the supreme The members of the state tax tax commission, Sam T. Howe, J. A. Burnett, and J. H. Hostetler, were in Lawrence between trains yesterday, and advised County Attorney Amick a notice of an appeal immediately. Heredeto the fraternities and sororites have been exempt from the tax rolls as "college literary and secret societies", but the fact on which the county expects to base its success in an appeal is that the fraternity properties are owned not by the fraternities, but by house associations, organized for the purpose of holding the properties. The members are always fraternity men, but they are alumni and not students. OKLAHOMA PROFESSOR TO BE ALUMNI SPEAKER K. U. Graduate Will Give Address Commencement Week—Got Degree in 1902 The alumni speaker for Tuesday of commencement week will be John B. Cheadle, professor of law at the University of Oklahoma. He took his degree of A. B. at the University in 1898 and 1898 with J. B. degree in 1902. Since leaving the University Professor Cheadle has been very active in alumni affairs and was recently elected president of the Kansas alumni association of Oklahoma. Before accepting the chair of professor in 1908 he practiced law in Alva, Okla. DOES NOT KNOW FATE OF FRESHMAN PRIMARY "I do not know yet whether I shall call a primary to eliminate any of the freshmen from the Student Council race," said Avery Ollney, president of the College, this morning. Olney said he had some information as to who would be the winner and what decide that he is the logical man to make the race. Three freshmen in the College aspire to a place on the Council and there is a ruling that only one may serve. The plan of eliminating some of them will be decided in the next few days. "I want all the presidents of the county clubs and every other man in the University who is interested in a permanent Union to meet at the Stucco Club," 1:30." I said Larry Kinear, chairman of the permanent Union committee. Kinnear is anxious to learn the sentiment of the different clubs in regard to the raising of money for the building on the campus. Nonsense at Verein KINNEAR CALLS MEETING OF UNION PROMOTERS Prof. E, K. K. Kline will address the Der Deutsche Verein next Monday afternoon in the Blake Hall lecture room at 4:30 on "Deutscher Unsimm." Members and non members are invited. The talk will be illustrated. TO STUDY HONOR SYSTEM FAVORS Committee of Three Appointed B Chancellor Will Take up Report of Students Chancellor Frank Strong has appointed two committees, one to report on simplified spelling, and the other on the honor system. The committee on the honor system, consisting of Professors F. H. Hodder, G. C. Shaad, and H. A. Millis will consider the report made to the Senate some time ago by a student committee. The students did not think an honor system necessary because the honors department sentiments which should apply to the faculty as well as the student body. Professors Carl Becker, E. M. Hopkins, and Eugenie Galloo, who comprise the committee on simplified spelling, were appointed as the result of a communication from the University of Illinois. Illinois is trying to get simplified spelling in all schools and the committee's report is expected to recommendations as to the advisability of using simplified spelling in the University publications. Seniors Postpone Matter Because of Lack of Attendance—Meet Again Tuesday DID NOT ACT ON MEMORIAL The seniors took no action on their proposed memorial at the meeting in Snow Hall this morning, since only about 50 were present. The class will meet Tuesday at chapel time in the chapel room. There will be a short snappy program and the University Glee Club will sing a few lively songs. After this there will be a business meeting and some definite action will be taken on the memoir to determine what should be must be accompanied with estimates. The time for action is short and President Holloway wants to see the chapel filled with seniors Tuesday. Four proposals for memorials were made. Some wanted to get a new pulpit for the chapel in Fraser. Others thought it would be a good stump to plant some trees along the walk from the Museum to the Pi Phi house. The sentiment of the girls present seemed to be for a bench on which only Seniors could sit. Some of the engineers present were asked to give an estimate of the cost of this. When they said about 200 dollars the girls asked them, "Well, for landsake, how big do you want?" They answered that he didn't know. The other plan discussed was that of placing a bulletin board on the campus or in Fraser. Grad Talks to Class Will Enter West Point Desmond O'Keele will withdraw from school this week and go to his home in Leavenworth. He will enter West Point Military Academy on June 15. Makes Shift in K. N. G. By the order of Adjutant-General Mortin, First Lieutenant Samuel G. Martin, and General W. E. from duty in Company M of the K. N. G. and has been assigned to the First Battalion as Battalion Adjutant, and Prof. Edward W. Briggs has been transferred from his position as Battalion Adjutant to Company M with the rank of First Lieutenant. Clarence B. Francisco, a graduate of the School of Medicine in '07, and an orthopedic specialist, who is on his way to Europe, addressed the freshman medici class this morning in "Helpful Hints to Beginners." Will Enter West Point Makes Shift in K. N. G. CONCERT OPEN Director J. C. McCanles is in favor of open band concertes on the museum stage at the St. John's School. He believes that such concerts would be well attended, as they were when last tried and is willing to do so. He also gives the students such entertainments. Director McCanles Would Give En entertainments on Museum Steps or Other Convenient Place Last year no such concerts were given because of the cold weather in the spring, but in the years before when the plan was in vogue it was very successful. This year the weather is good and the director thinks the entertainments should be given, and will probably take up the matter as soon as the regular concert next week is disposed of. INEZ SMITH GETS FELLOWSHIP Graduate Student Gets Prize Scholar ship at U. of Calif.-Carries $600 Annually Inez Frances Smith, '13, a graduate student of the University, has received notice of her election to the fellowship of protozoology in the University of California. This is generally conceded to be the best fellowship of the kind in this country. It carries a salary of $600 as well as the tuition and other school expenses. Miss Smith has an exceptional record at K. U. She is the only student for nearly twenty years who has made both Phi Beta Kappa and Sigma Xi. Her home is in Topeka and during all of the four years of her undergraduate work, she did out side work to pay her school expenser SQUAD ELECTED BISHOP Players Chose Star Pitcher to Lead 1914 Baseball Team Lloyd Bishop, of Conway Springs was elected captain. of the baseball squad by the players before the Chinese game, yesterday afternoon. Herb Sommers, was the other candidate. Captain Bishop was the leading twirler for the Varsity last season. He recently signed a contract to play with the Cleveland American league team at the end of the school year. He is a senior law student. An impantant meeting of the Quil. Club will be held in Room 210, Fraser, Monday, April 20 at 4:30 to discuss plans for nationalization and the remodeling of the constitution. A representative from the Beta Chapter, the Hamilton chapter will be sent to convene with members of the Alpha chapter. The program will consist of the reading of Kipling's "Friendl Brother in Law, and the Matriarchal bolt, to Dunn, and a discussion of th story by Wayne Wingat. QUILL CLUB WILL ADOPT NATIONAL CONSTITUTION Get New Uniforms A new olive drab cotton uniform for summer wear has been issued to the members of Company M of the K. N. G. The Weather Weather Forecast: Fair tonight cloudy tomorrow. Colder. Peak temperatures: 70°F. 7 p. m. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 71% 0 a. m. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 64% 2 p. m. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 74% MUNICIPALITIES TO DISCUSS ICE PLANTS Will Advocate Public Manu facture in Meeting Here Next Fall Municipal ownership of ice plants will be advocated at the meeting of the League of Kansas Municipali ties on Mt. Oread next fall. C. H. Talbot, head of the municipal reference bureau, and secretary of the league, tells of the Kansas situation and the need of such plants in the April number of the National Municipal League magazine. At present there is no plant which enables towns to run ice manufacturing plants in connection with their light plants and Attorney-general Dawson has ruled that they cannot handle snow on an ice surface with a definite enclosure law is passed. The need of ice plants in Kansas towns was very apparent last summer when many places were in a state of actual suffering from the lack of ice. It is estimated that the ice manufacturer by the city in connection with the water and power plant will cost the consumer very much less than ice which has to be shipped to the town. The cities of Oklahoma, Oregon, and California, have the right to manufacture their own ice, and if the league approves of municipal ownership it will be taken before the Kansas legislature at its next session. KANSAS TOWNS VOTE FOR MUNICIPAL OWNERSHIP Will Issue Bonds For Light and Power Plants and Water Systems The municipal reference bureau is receiving reports of the victories of municipal ownership advocates in the elections held April 7. The victories in all of the towns were by large majorities. Larned voted $80,000 bonds for a light and power plant; Pratt voted bonds for $50,000 for a light plant; Hulme voted bonds for a water system; Holyoed, a city of 370 persons in the central part of the state, voted $10,000 for a light plant; Effingham voted $12,000 for municipal light service. Free public libraries were voted in Wellington, Garnett, Larned, and Norton. The abolition of pool halls in Emporia marked the end of such places in all Kansas cities which have state educational institutions. HOME ECONOMICS WOMEN GIVE DEMONSTRATIONS The women in the class of Selection and Economic Uses of Food, in the department of home economics are now giving food demonstrations Friday they had a large number of visits, when they gave their demonstration of broad making, taking from the bacteriological standpoint. Yesterday afternoon they gave a demonstration of frozen deserts and puddings. Next week they will take up pies and pastries. Spring target practice of the K. N G.'s will begin May 1. Boyton Has The Gripe Owing to a slight attack of gripe, Parker will meet his classmates today. He expects to be on the Hill again Monday. SENATE REFUSES THE PROM PETITION Managers' Request That Festivities Last Until Three Not Granted EVERYTHING SET FOR EVENT Gym Decorated in Green and White With Raised Platform for Orchestra—225 Tickets Expected The petition to the Junior Prom managers to the University Senate that the Prom be allowed to continue until three o'clock was refused. The Prom will be allowed the late hour at which the event will begin because of the ball game. The cause of the denial of the petition was expressed by Dean Templin, who laughingly said, "We thought young girls should be taught enough for young folks to be out." Everything is set in Robinson Gym for the big social event of the 60th annual convention, students may participate. The room upstairs is decorated in green and white, and the corners are cut off in alcoves. An embowered raised table holds two chairs wound with small pins is set in middle of the room for the orchestra. The managers expect the number of paid admissions to reach 250. There is five or more guests besides the managers who paid their fees last year. The class officers and patrons who will receive are: Gov. and Mrs. George H. Hodges, Chancellor and Mrs. Frank Strong, Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Lewis, Gov. and Mrs. E. W. Hoeh, Mr. and Mrs. Ed. T. Hackney, Dean and Mrs. Lerly F. Walker, Dean and Mrs. Lerly F. Walker, Dean and Mrs. Arthur T. Walker, Mr. and Mrs. Brown, Stanley Nelson, Trine Latta, Cale Carson, Ida Perry, Russell Gear, Edith Ublrich, Fred Blachy, Edith Case and Herbert Coleman. the farce, "A Case of Suspension," preceding the Prom proper, will begin at 7 o'clock instead of 6 o'clock as previously announced. The cast follows: Lewis Allen, Dean McElhennay, Wayne Wingart, H. C. Anderson, Madeline Nachtmann, Genevieve Herrick, Virginia Goff, Cecil Burton, Dorothy Parkhurst, and C. Edgar Williamson. Dues may be paid at the door tonight. BOARD HAS CHOSEN STUDENTS' AUDITOR J. T. Lardner, Purchasing Agent, Has Charge, Says E. V. Hackney The question of auditing student accounts was brought before the Board of Administration by a committee from the Men's Student Council, and in writing and the committee discovered that the funding has already been provided for. "J. T. Lardner, auditor and general purchasing agent for all state institutions has the matter in charge," says Mr. E. T. Hackney, president of the Board. "This matter is a part of his regular duties." Mr. Hackney was not sure how Mr. Lardner would proceed in checking over the accounts. He can either make a trip to Lawrence or have the accounts sent to him, according to Mr. Hackney. SOME FACULTY MEMBERS LIKE YELLOW KANSAN IDEA "I don't think much of the scheme," said an unpopular faculty member today when approached to ask how he could something like the Yellow Kansan. "Fine idea, fine idea," was the response of a popular faculty member, a moment latened when the same request was made. "I know two or three theories that I can write for the boys. Count on me to help thinness out." That is the way they are taking it all over the Hill. Students stood in little groups this morning, discussing the Yellow Kansan. Bets were freely made as to what would be exposed in its columns. "But they get me," a student was heard to remark. "A girl asked me to go to the Junior Prom and I acquired invitation. She paid my dues, too." Send the Daily Kansan home. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Official student paper of the University of Kansas DIRECTORIAL SCHOOL JOHN C. HADEN John C. Haden LION KRAHN Lion Krahn ASSOCIATE Editor ASSOCIATE Editor FREWK A. B. HENDERSON High School Editor CALVIN LAMBERT Sport Editor BUSINESS STAFF REPORTORIAL STAFF BUSINESS EDWIN ARENEL Business Manager RAY EDDINGER Circulation Manager JOB BISHOP Advertising Manager ADVERTISING STAFF Advertising S. CHARLESTY Advertising SAM DROGEN GRAHAM GLENSON GLENDON ALLINE ROSE BURNER BURNER BURKE LUCLE HILDINGER LAWRENCE SMITH LAWRENCE SMITH HAWKINS HAY LUCIY BARBER BENITT BARBER J. A. GREENEERES HEBRIDY BARBER WILLIAM CLAPER RAY CLAPER WILLIAM S. CADY WILLIAM L. COOPER GARDEN LAIRD published in the afternoon, five times a week. He was a member of Kanawa. From the press of the department of science. Entered as second-class mail matter entered at New York on March 14, Lawrence, Kansas, under the act of March Phone, Bell K. U. 25. Address all communications to UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Lawrence, Kans. Subscription price $2.50 per year, 1 advance; one term, $1.50 The Daily Kannon aims to picture the undergraduate students go further than they might print the news by standing up for their rights and not fearing it; to be clean; to be cheerful; to be more serious problems to uder heads; to be more diligent; to be more diligent at the students of the University. IN THE LEAD FRIDAY, APRIL 17, 1914. The University of Kansas leads rather than lags behind in state service work. It now comes forward with two plans that are attracting attention all over the country-Merchants' Week and the Journalism Conference. Death calls ye to the crowd of common men...Shirley. The merchants of Kansas have shown that they are strongly in favor of a merchant's meeting and the newspaper men have made many favorable comments on the Conference. Broadening the influence of state institutions so that they touch as many citizens as possible seems to be the spirit of the day and the University is keeping its place on the frontier line. STUDENTS AND ART The best attractions on Mount Oread, whether they be lectures, art exhibits or concerts, are usually well attended. The universal rule seems to apply at college as well as anywhere else. Give something worthy of a big crowd, and the seats will not be vacant. The attendance at the opening number of the Music Festival was encouraging to the guarantors of the series and surprising to the pessimists who insist that students are unappreciative of art. HAVE YOU AN OPINION? Did you ever take a snap three hour course and then turn around and take a fearfully hard one for the same amount of credit? Rather hard on your temper, isn't it, besides being unfair if you stop to think about it. A suggestion has been made that the departing seniors give their opinion on methods of standardizing courses and upon the work which needs revision. As a method of getting at facts preparatory to change, the suggestion seems to be a good one. Students who are interested should see that the matter gets to the attention of the faculty since the inspiration for sending out a questionaire of this sort must come, undoubtedly, from the undergraduates. ARE K. U. WOMEN ASLEEP? It has been some time since that well known ballad entitled "Dormitory is our Story" has been heard on the campus, but interest in the subject will not be allowed to drop. In the few years that the matter has been agitated at the University, nearly $10,000 in pledges has been raised for building a dormitory, and most of the money has come from alumni. This year the Kansas Council of Women has taken the matter up and will ask the legislature to provide girls' dormitories for all the state schools. This is a step in the right direction, but the end in view cannot be attained until the people generally are brought to realize the need for dormitories, and the students are the ones to arouse and maintain interest in the matter. The importance of the question is indicated by the fact that every year the registar receives scores of letters from parents who would send their daughters here if there was a dormitory for them to live in. Nothing has been done this year, and the time is growing short. Would it be amiss to inquire whether a policy of "watchful waiting" is the most effective one possible under the circumstances? STUDENT JUSTICE Chicago University students have instituted a Students' Honor Court for recommending punishment to be given to students caught cheating or committing other misdemeanors. This court recently announced its finding, which referred the pension of overweight students and the debt of scholarship credit of others, all of them accused of cheating at the mid-year examinations. The matter of cheating probably can be dealt with by students, as is shown by the number of "honor sys-cles" in various universities of the country. This court's finding was speedy and severe, but it probably will hold an example before the eyes of the other judges. The judge would profit to them—University Missouri. COLLEGE "VAGRANTS" The attention of "uplift" bureaues of the Government and of municipal and private organizations, is being called to a Government report from a consular agent at Barmen, Germany, on the subject of the establishment in that country of "student shelters" designed to provide sleeping accommodations for students, in order to encourage the wanderlust among them, a harmless cause that it is thought would be popular among American college boys and school boys and a source of desirable educational opportunity. The movement originated in Austria in 1884, but reached Germany a few years later, and at present that country outranks Austria, both in the number of "herbergen" and in point of attendance. The institution of the Schuele Herbergen, which it is thought would fit in with the college and school life in America, was the outgrowth of a desire of young students of their own country. During every vacation large numbers of students make foot tours through the picturesque parts of the Fatherland, and so general has this "tramping" become among the young student population, that it is beginning to assume the guise of a national trait. Wander clubs have been organized to further systematic outings and excursions, and these have made walking almost a science. An ample knapsack provides provisions of a trip, and with his aluminum cooker, the tramper is enabled to prepare a savory lunch whenever the occasion may demand. During the vacation period of 1913, the various herberenberg offered a total of 109,400 combinations of midday and breakfast, averaging together about $2\frac{1}{2}$ cents to 11., 080 students—Providence Evening Bulletin. ENDS AND ODDLETS The open season for bagging K U. professors has already begun. K. U. Hughmoore insists that the headline over the Chinese baseball story yesterday was yellow. William friau doubled and scored on Jeffries Jewell won in the tenth when God-hit.-A newspaper accuse of a William Jewell baseball game. A college paper is a publication to which 10 per cent of the students subscribe and which 99 per cent criticize—Ex. Spring weathers here with violets, And bubbling rills and runs. The soil is full of onion sets, The mail-box full of duns. NO WONDER A woodpecker lit on a freshman's bead. And settled down to drill; He bored away for half a day And finally broke his bill. —Illinois Sifren. CAMPUS OPINION To the Editor of the Daily Kansan: The statement published in Wednesday's Kansan and accredited to me, and the itemized account of damages published in Tuesday's Kansan, Willis, were both unauthorized productions of some cub journalists' fertile brain. Here are the facts of the case. THOSE DAMAGES Tuesday afternoon J. W. Dyche and myself went to Mrs. Willis' home and inspected all damages done. Since those in the paddle party were from all the upper classes the girls had to be responsible, directly or indirectly, for the damage, and no assessment can or will be levied on the class. However, as a matter of courtesy to Mrs. Willis, I agreed to aid her in gaining recompense, and to ask a few of the boys to take up a collection of the damaged things done. The damage should be paid by those who were out that night, and I know that all the follows will want to do the square thing and contribute. J. M. Johnson. the "approximate estimate of damages" published Tuesday was not accredited to Mrs. Willis. The quotation from Johnson which appeared Wednesday was written by a reporter who interviewed him for a purpose of putting a statement.—Ed. THE STORY OF MY LIFE Brock Pembermont, first name Ralph, was born in Leewardworth twenty-eight years ago. (The use of the third person in writing this is calculated to be deceptive as in the case of the effulgent auto-biographies in "Who's Who.") At the age of two the shame of his father, a man upon his moving conscious son, upon his moving conscious son, to Emporia his family to Emporia. By Brock Pemberton There he attended the city schools, being graduated from the high school "cum laude" at the tender age of 16. The "laudus" ended with his valedictory address written upon a card he received with the aid of an able article in the Outlook and a professor in the College of Emporia. Adopting that Presbyterian college as his alma mater he succeeded in reaching the second semester of his senior year before he began his undergraduate studies. These expulations were for inciting riots against the Normal students at football games, arson, planting intermittent alarm clocks in chapel, hurling the chapel organ downstairs and similar harm to his students. In conclusion of his third farewell the college president said: "We hope you get your degree, but not here." During these turbulent years our hero had been chasing society and school items for the Emporia Gazette and when his his Ethiopian record followed him to the University of Pennsylvania, which institution he tried to enter the following fall, he went to work on the Philadelphia Bulletin. He managed to last till the new year. He made a day from re-reading an assignment to the city editor, he informed that inefficient individual that his idea of news differed vastly from the efficient Mr. Pemberton's. A few days later later Mr. Pemberton again at work on the Emporia Gazette, Bill Allen White's idea of news coinciding more harmoniously with his degree at the University of Kansas where he succeeded in catching up with his degree and a reputation as an ambidextrous fusser. After more work on the Gazette he went to New York, taking with him a suitcase full of clothes and a trunfal of letters of recommendation. After distributing the letters he got a job on The Evening Mail. After a year and a half on the Mail during which time he served as general reporter, ship news reporter and dramatic critic and editor, his experiences the rate and supreme importance of leaving The Mail flat on its back. "When do you want to quit?" inquired the managing editor meekly. "I don't want to quit," answered the interpid youth; "I have quit." Then he began work as assistant dramatic editor of The World, in which job he has continued ever since. It is said of him that he knows the real names of all the chorus girls in New York, but Mr. Pemberton denies this as a base libel. He says he knows few members of the chorus but that his work has given him a broad acquaintance with the stars. He asks him to be a living exemplification of the Kansas State motto: "Ad Astra Per Aspera." Mr. Pemberton's address is The "Don't you think you ought to be treated for the drink habit?" Mr. Pemberton's address is The City Club, New York. "Yes, that is a more economical business than buying them"--Illinois Siren. What Your Teller? Wax your tailor WE never repeat the same clothes order for two different men. Good merchant tailoring never calls for two suits precisely alike, for no two men are the same. Ready-made clothing can never compare in excellence with clothes which you tell us to have tailored-to-individual order by Ed. V. Price & Co. and we can prove it. S.G.Clarke Eldridge Hotel Bldg. 707 Mass. St. Typewriting Done By Alvin L. Babb St. Bell Phone 1574 CITY CAFE 906 Mass. Strictly Home Cooking Strictly Home Cooking Ever try our Special 15c Lunch? You'll like it. A GOOD PLACE TO EAT AT GOOD PLACE TO EAT AT ANDERSON'S OLD STAND JOHNSON & TUTTLE 715 PROPS. Mass. SPRING SUITINGS FRANK KOCH TAILOR 727 Mass. PROFESSIONAL CARDS W. C. M'CONNELL, Physician and surgeon. Obion, 819 Mass. B3, Bell 309. Ventura, 1346 Tenn. Tau. 1023. Hearn 936. B. P.RROCK, Optometrist and Specialist 15. J. Dukes Office, Office 902 Maas. J. Phone 800 663. HARRY BEDING. M. D. Eyres, ear, car. A Bide. Phone, 513. Home, 512. B Phone, 513. Home, 512. G. A. HAMMAN, M. D. Eyes, car, ear, and face. Deflated. Gauranteed. Dick Building. DR. H. W. HAYNE, Oculist, Lawrenzo, Kannas. J. W. 'B'RYON, Denist. Over Wilson's Drug Store. Bell Phone 507. J. R. BEHGHTEL, M. D., D. O. 833 Mess- Street. Both phone, office and address numbers. G. W. JONE5, A. M., M. D. Dissases of Rhetoric in the Classroom, Readence, 1950. Rhetorics in Education, Readence, 1950. DB. H. T. JONNE, Room 12. F. A. L. B. H. T. JONNE, Room 12. F. A. L. B. H. T. CHAMBERS, Offices over DR. BURT R. WHITE Osteopath, Phones, Bell 938, Home 257, Office, 745 Mass. St. W. P. Wardons, Engrave Watchmaker and Jeweler, Diamonds and Jewelry. Bell Phone T. GILLISPIE, M. D. Ofice office Ind. Phones 566. Ind. Phones 566. CLASSIFIED Plumbers Phone Kennedy Plumbing Co. 047 gs. Phone Kennedy Mada lamps. 047 gs. Phone Kennedy 885. Plumbers Ladies Tailors MRS. MELLISON, Dressemaking and Ladies Vernon, Phone Bell 2411 West. 1628 Vernon. Phone Bell 2411 West. Queen City College. System and sewing machines. Mrs. G. Mark Brown, 834 Kyl, messr. M. G. Mark Brown, 834 Kyl. Hair Dressers half dressing, shampooing, scalp and facial massage, shampooing, hair-fair goods. Appointments call Bell 1372, Home 151. The Salon Half Dressing Shop, 927 Mass St. Barber Shops Go shops they all go J. C. HOUR 913 Mass. Student's Co-op Club. $2.50 to $3.00 per week, 18KQ. Geo. H. Vassell Stewart 1 Special Corset Demonstration Miss Fern Smith, who has just taken charge of our Corset Dept. and who is very enthusiastic over the lines we carry—Gossard, W. B., C. B., and Warner's,—wants to demonstrate these corsets to you tomorrow. She will fit any corset from $1.50 and up. WEAVER'S A MERE VENEER- OLUS UNION SUITS Simplicity—The Secret of OLUS Superiority OLUS one-piece PAJAMA is the same principle as the ULUS Union Suit—coat cut, closed crotch, THE first layer of comfort is your underwear. It's an unbroken, semi-selting layer of cotton. You can layer it over a Union Suit and back and permanently clothed crotch, protecting the body at every point. Only one thickness of cloth works on all fabrics, also plain and mesh knitted. Price $1.00 to $3.00. Important Booklet on Request. To: Deskware The Business Distributor Carrie O'LIS. closed back, and only one layer of material is behind it. Because no string nusance because OLUS PAJAMAS have no strings to tighten or come loose. *Prices $1.50 to $8.50.* Or just use an OLUS or Pajama, or your OLUS, instead on OLUS at your desk. To Dealer-ers Important Booklet on Reques To Dealers with The Girard Company, Makers Dept. N 348 Broadway, New York FLOWERS FOR THE PROM for those who care for the finishing of a full dress affair THE FLOWER SHOP Phones 621 8251-2 Mass. St. High School Student If you are a You may be interested in knowing what vocations are open to the Graduate in Pharmacy The two year course and the three year course prepare for the examination in pharmacy by the State Board, admitting to practice as a pharmaceutical chemist. The four year course opens the way to such broader vocations as United States Chemist State Food Inspector State Drug Inspector Chemist for Drug Manufactur The number of such positions is steadily increasing. Address UNIVERSITY KANSAN VOCATION EDITOR LAWRENCE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN WANT ADS FOR RENT—Two dress suits, Clark, 730 Mass. 132-3 LOST—A Kappa Kappa Gamma key, nature, not jeweled and with Nellie May Schall engraved on back. Return to Kansan Office. Like eating fresh oranges—the orange ice at Wiedemann's.—Adv. Geologist Lectures Prof. A. N. Winchell delivered two lectures in the mining engineering building today the first at 10 a. m. and the second at 4:30 p. m. The subjects dealt with were "The Mining Geology of Butte" and "The Origin of Butte Ores." Both lectures were illustrated. Brown bread ice cream at Wiedemann's - Adv. Chance For Student If you want a proposition for the coming year while going to school, Sex Information Bureau. Not solicitor, Room 8, Leader Building—Adv Orange ice made from the fruit at Wiedemann's.—Adv. "My wife kisses me evenings when I get home late." "Affection?" **Attention:** "No, investigation."—Illinois Siren. "Yes, I am glad he's my friend. I is a corning good fellow." "If you had seen him at the club last night you would have called him an uncorking good fellow."—Illinois Siren. "Why is a hen immortal?"? "Dunno. Why is she?" "Because her son never sets."—Ex. "Gee, but that's a nice looking chicken." "Yes, but her father was a bad egg."—Illinois Siren. Send the Daily Kansan home. Send the Daily Kansan home. The Crowd Reads THE DAILY KANSAN If you want a crowd at your Play Dance Mixer Advertise it in the Daily Kansan Kansan Ads Pay You Can Earn a Good Living and lay up money too, on graduation from the Lawrence Business College or on your degree in a good position. Free Employment Bureau at your service. Best Degree and best Business College. No vacations. Business College Lawrence, Kansas. WATKINS NATIONAL BANK Capital $100,000 Surplus and profits $100,000 The Student Depository Around Mount Oread Yesterday marked the first wedding anniversary of Robert Rowland, owner of Rowland's Book Store on Ohio Street. A year ago Bob could be seen daily disporting himself on the light end of a golf course, now he turns on the heavy side of a garden rake. But he doesn't seem to mind. "This is the life," Bob sings daily. "This is the life for me." Chas. (Choppy) Clark, a graduate of the Schools of Pharmacy and Law at the University, now located at Washington, Kans., was in Lawrence yesterday looking over the familiar scenes and visiting friends. Prof. F. C. Dockery, assistant in psychology, has finished his experimental work with dogs and now has an old hen an several young chicks down in the basement of the house, a suitable time to perform psychological stunts on them. He says that he is getting to be quite some farmer. Jim Butin, a sophomore in the College, who is known over the hill for his versatility in whistling, was one of the solitary students at Easter vacation Butin will be with the Redpath-Horner Chautaqha this summer. Prof. H. A. Millis cornered a reporter yesterday. "Change the time of that economic lecture announced for this afternoon to eleven o'clock, will interfere with the students in the room," he whispered. "The change is made for the benefit of the students, of course." Of course it is. If any one had seen Agnes Moses get out of her taxi Tuesday morning and walk the rest of the way home he might have thought she was put off for not paying her fare, but such was not the case. The taxi driver discovered that he was out of gasoline. Professors occasionally impose upon them the good graces of their classes. Prof. S. L. L. Whitcomb was discussing a pastoral poem with his English Literature class, and in speaking of a young girl driving PROTSCH The Tailor THEY ARE HERE Sam S. Shubert MAT. WED. and SAT. PEG O' MY HEART Next: PASSING SHOW OF 1913 Bert Wadham THE COLLEGE BARBER On 14th Street A. G. ALRICH home the cattle said. "No. I should not call her a cowardess." A student would be shot for saying such a thing. Binding, Copper Plate Printing, Bubber Stamps, Engraving, Steel Die Embossing, Seals, Badges. Printing Thomas Root and Roy Stevens will be instructors in swimming at a summer camp on Lake Michigan. A Kansas City people will camp there. 744 Mass. Doubtless catching the spring fever epidemic which is prevalent on the Hill, the little shetland pony belonging to the Post boy, walked out on the campus in front of Fraser Hall this morning and laid down in the shafts of its cart. Being nicely settled it proceeded to munch the University grass as contentedly as a freshman sleeping in rhetoric class. Scholarships for Women Applications for the scholarships open to women students for 1914-15 should be made to the committee before April 15. The Eliza Matheson Innes Memorial Scholarship, $100. Open to women students of the College above or any other student students of the Graduate School. The Marcella Howland Memorial Scholarship, $87.50. Open to young women of the junior and senior classes of the College. The scholarships offered are: The Daughters of the American Revolution Scholarship, $100. Open to women students of the College above the freshman year and to women students of the Graduate School. The Association of Collegiate Alumnae Scholarship, $50.00. Open to women of the junior and senior years of the College. The Lucinda Smith Buchan Memorial Scholarship maintained by the alumnae of the Pi Beta Phi sorority is a loan scholarship of $200. It is open to women students of the College. The Caroline Mumford Winston memorial scholarship of $35 is open to women students of the College of classes above the freshman. E. Galloo. Ida H. Hyde. Hannah Oliver Committee: NAVAL ACADEMY EXAMS TO BE HELD NEXT WEEK TO BE HELD Examinations for appointment to the United States Naval Academy at Annapolis will be held on Tuesday, Wednesday, and Thursday of next week, before W. H. Moyes, of the local civil service board. The order exempting college students from taking technical examination for appointment to the Military Academy at West Point was not followed by the authorities at Annapolis. For that picnic lunch don't forget that Dummire has olive salad, all kind of deviled and potted meats, large bulk olives, cheese wafers, and in fact everything that you would need for a picnic. Phones 58...Adv. Campus photography is best at bud-swelling time. Try it with Kodak orthochromatic film from Woodward's.-Adv. 135-3 REYNOLDS BROS. "THE CREAM THAT SATISFIES" "Don't' miss 'your' opportunity of getting a copy of the "Harvester." Only 50 cents each at Wolf's Book Store.-Adv. 135-2 Ice Creams--- Chocolate Vanilla Strawberry Caramel Nut Brown Bread Raspberry BASE BALL GOODS Bell 645 Order for Sunday now. Home 358 Orange Apricot Ices--in the Daily Kansan last week brought eleven replies to the advertiser The Sporting Goods Headquarters KENNEDY & ERNST 826 Mass. St. Phones 341 WARWICK FF Just a few of these great MEMORY BOOKS left, so if you want one, hurry to Wolf's Book Store, where you can get one for $2.00. Don't lose all the programs and momentos of the year. HORNED COLLAR Front 3% In. Back 1% In. Warranted Liner Barker Collarls only at PECKHAMS EVERYBODY WANTS KANSAS TEACHERS Pittsburg Normal Receives Scores of Orders for Manual Training Instructors PITTSBURG STUDENTS LEARN TO FIX AUTOS Pittsburg, Kans., April 17.—The spread of manual training in the schools of the state of Kansas and in neighboring states is effectively shown by the mail which comes to the office of President Brandenburg of the State Manual Training Normal here. It is not unusual for President Brandenburg to find a dozen letters from school superintendents "ordering" teachers of manual training. The writers are scattered over the West, Middlewest, and Southwest. Kansas demands are given first attention. However, it is found hard to take care of the needs of the home state school heads for President Brandenburg doesn't to take their classes to the Normal School they have completed their courses although competent teachers could be found among the students. Students in the machine shop of the Pittsburg State Normal are completing the rebuilding of the engine of a big motor truck. Last winter Prof. W. D. Elzinger sent out a call for a "patient" for a "clinic." A Pittsburgh business man had a big truck which was a joy to the repair shop men and a sorrow to the owner. He responded to Elzinger's call. TheNormal students have made new parts for the engine and thoroughly reconstructed the truck and it soon will be put back into the service. "Special" the "Harvester" by "Jene Stratton Porter" was $1.35, on sale at Wolf's Book Store for 50 cents per copy.-Adv. 135-2 Send the Daily Kansan home. K. U. ECONOMICS CLUB JOINS THE FEDERATION CLUB WOMEN TO WORK FOR K. U. DORMITORIES Women Students at University Affiliate With Kansas and World Organization The Home economic club of the University of Kansas has united with the Kansas federation of women's clubs, and with the general federation, a world-wide organization. There are about fifty girls in the club, all of whom are students in the department of education. Dr. Edna Day. This is the first college club to join the national organization. The union of the University women with the state and international organizations came as a direct result of an address by Mrs. Eustace University advisor of women, to the Home economics club of the University. In her address, Mrs. Brown pointed out the difficulty of fulfilling the role with the national organizations, and emphasized the benefits a woman gained from association with the General Federation, a world organization of a million women. "The state federation is much gratified with its new affiliation at the University," said Mrs. Brown. "The club women over the state are thus made to feel a closer association with the university of the University of students of the University have the advantage of being affiliated with a million of the best educated and most progressive women in the world." PUBLICITY FOR UNION DEBTOR Names of Those Who Owe Dues Will Be Published Soon "We expect to publish the names of those who have not paid their Student Union dues," declared J. R. Kennedy this morning in discussing the number of delinquents owing the dollar fees. Between 150 and 175 have not paid their dues. Kennedy says that all who have not paid the fees will be notified of the fact through publication a week from today, Friday, the 24th. Kodaks are the most perfect pocket cameras. Woodward & Co., specialize with them—Adv. 135-3 If you like fruit salad try ours. Wiedemann's.—AdV. Fineapple ice cream at Reynolds Bros. Bell phone 645..Adv. Good Citizenship League Starts Movement to Provide for College Girls A statewide government for dormitories for rownthe K. U. and other state educational institution was begun at a recent meeting of the Women's Good Citizenship League at Emporia, when resolutions were provided for an appeal to the legislature for the installation of dormitories. The Kansas Federation of Women's Clubs also will work for women's dorsitories and in addition will try to influence the legislature in other areas of state institutions. Prof. Alberta Corbin, of the University of Kansas and Mrs. Eustace Brown, advisor of women at the University, will appear before the annual meeting of the Federation at April 6, and will speak favor of the dorsitories and the mill tax. Miss Genevieve Chalkley, of Lawrence, is president of the Citizenship League, which recently met at Emporia. Mrs. Brown is chairman of the legislative committee of Women's Clubs. Both of these women are strenuous workers for the mill tax and for women's dormitories. COMMITTEE SELECTS MARVIN BUST ARTIST Professors W. A. Griffith, C. G. Dunlap, and A. M. Wilcox, faculty members of the institute are committee for both bust, have an advantage choice of an artist for the work. They have sent their report and the samples and photographs submitted to them to the two other members of the committee, who live in Denver and investment concerning the awarding of the contract will be made until the opinions of these two members have been ascertained. If you like the flavor of brown bread try the brown bread ice cream at Wiedemann's.—Adv. Special—Lemon ice at Reynolds Bros. Bell phone 645.—Advids Friday and Saturday are fruit salads days at Wiedemann's.—Adv. Pure ice cream, best by test, the taste tells. Wiedemann's--Adv. One Want Ad Kansan Want Ads always bring good results UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Student Plays Student Dances Student Mixers PAY When they are advertised in the Daily Kansan. 3,000 Students Faculty and Alumni read it every day. H. H. LEAGUE OPENS AT 8:30 K. U. TRACK MEN TO IOWA Season Opens With Games on Wood land and Freshman Fields—Eight Contests Tomorrow The Hash-house baseball league season will open tomorrow with the Babb vs. Daniels, 1:30; Woodland; Stevenson vs. Hope, 1:30; freshman; Wouldst vs. 1221, 8:30; Woodland; Co-op vs. Knights of Columbus, 10:15; Woodland; Nutting vs. Woodland; Woodland; Marks, 1:30; Woodland; Ellis vs. Gillespie, 1:30; freshman; and Ko-op vs. Martin, 10:15. freshman. FRESHMAN BREAKS RECORD Fred Rodkey Runs Half Mile in Two Minutes and 2-5 Seconds Fred Radkey, of the freshman track squad, broke the University half mile record Wednesday when he completed the circuit in two minutes and two-fifths seconds. Coach Mosse kept time on the spinner. "Real Estate and Christ" "Real Estate and Christ" J. H. Powell, of Kansas City, will present a lecture on Sunday April 19, at 4 p. m., on the subject of "Real Estate and Christ." All teams wishing to use the baseball fields must get permission from Manager Hamilton and have a time assigned, in order to avoid conflicts. Haskell Gospel Team at Y. M. Haskell Gospel Team at Y. M. The Haskell Institute Gospel team which recently spoke at the SMP conference be at the Y. M. C. A. Sunday, April 25. School Children See K. U. D. M. Harris, principal of the schools at Weaver, Kans., and former student at the University, was on the Hill this morning with a party of his pupils looking over the University. Seven Jayhawker Runners Leave for Drake to Enter Relay Games Tomorrow The Kansas relay men went to Des Moines, Ia., this afternoon, where they will enter the Drake relay games tomorrow. Coach Mose accompanied the runners and Coach Hamilton won the two mile relay last year and is doped to win at least one of the races tomorrow. The following members of the track squad went to Des Moines: Edwards, Elswick, Fiske, Clayton, Cissna, Davis, Grady. SEVEN FORFEIT TICKETS Manager Hamilton Collects Those Not Presented by Their Owners Seven student enterprise tickets were collected at the gate of McCook field yesterday afternoon by Manager Hamilton because they were presented by others than their owners. "Tickets must be signed, and must be presented by the person to whom they were issued," Manager Hamilton said this morning. "It's a straight out and out encounter that it should enforce it as rigidly as I can. Tickets will be taken up whenever a violation can be detected." STATE WATER ANALYSISTS TEST WAKARUSA CO. WATER The department of State Water Analysis is making analysis of the water from the wells of the school houses in Wakarusa township. This survey is in connection with the sociology department. Five samples were received yesterday and there are ten more to be examined. The analysts do five samples at a time. According to Prof. F. W. Watera analysis department the work will be done in about a week. How Experts Help Kansas Fruit Trees L. LAMIE Representative from the University department of entomology treating fruit, trees to kill, pests. K. U. Engineers Will Survey Robinson Estate SANDWICH, N.Y. - A group of African-American soldiers from the United States Army's 1st Infantry Division were in Sandwich, N.Y., on January 30, 1942, for a training mission in Haiti. The soldiers were learning to conduct basic military operations, including firearms and combat techniques. They were also learning to live with the poor and to be respectful of their neighbors. In addition to learning the basics of warfare, the soldiers were also learning how to use basic tools such as knives and axes. The soldiers were also learning how to build and use simple weapons and equipment. The soldiers were also learning how to build and use simple weapons and equipment. The K. U. engineers will survey the Robinson estate, near Lawrence, for their work at the summer camp this year. The estate is the property of the University, a gift from the late Ex-Governor Robinson. Above is shown a scene from a camp of a former year. VARSITY TENNIS TEAMS WILL HOLD TOURNAMENT Tryouts for the Varsity tennis team will meet at 7:15 Monday evening at the Student Union. A round robin tournament will be held and the four highest men will make the team. It is important that all those with tennis hopes be present at this meeting, since no names will be considered after this date. He—Seventy-five dollars for a spring hat. It's a sin. She—Never mind, dear, the sin will be on my head—Illinois Siren. Limedeas, five cents, at Reynolds Bros. Bell 645.."Adv." SIGMA CHIS DEFEAT BETAS Bunny Wilson Pitches His Team to a. 10 to 6 Victory Bunny Wilson pitched the Sigma Chis to a 10 to 6 victory over the Betas on freshman field, yesterday afternoon. The game was called at the end of the fifth on account of darkness. Sweeney was the hero of the game. He knocked two two-baggers and a homer in three triples to the plate. The game was the second of the Pan-Hellenic schedule. Batteries: Householder, Ackers and Strothers; Wilson and Russel. Umpire, Wedell. Scorer, Kinear. The score: R. H. E. Beta 301 20 60 10 244 1⁰ 144 ⁹ PITCHER FOR CHINESE TEAM, IS SICK WITH GRIP Guynay Ako, one of the star pitchers for the Chinese baseball team, is sick with the grip at the Eldridge House. Ako took sick at St. Marys and returned to the ball team form. He will accompany the team to LibertyMo., tomorrow. New Bridge on Links A long bridge with a plank floor, will be built across the ravine which runs through the golf course, several yards north of the present bridge. Conceit may pull a man up, but never prop him up—Ruskin. ELEVEN STUDENTS TAKE U. S. CIVIL SERVICE EXAMS K. U. Men Try-out For Government Positions—Salaries From $540 to $1800 Eleven students of the University are taking examinations today, for positions in the classified civil service in the Lawrence National Bank Building. These places have salaries to start ranging from $540 to $1800 a year. Only one of the places has a minimum salary as low as $700. "For some reason persons taking civil service examinations get nervous," said W. H. Moyes, secretary of the local civil service board, this morning, "and as a consequence many of them are bored because the examined pass the examination and about one half of these are appointed." According to statistics that have been gathered by the United States Civil Service Commission more than eighty per cent of these students are required passing the examinations for the positions for which they are applicants. The persons who pass this examination and are appointed will become a part of an army of nearly 606,000. The only way to be with Uncle Sam in the same way. K. U. Calendar Athletics Apr. 18. Drake Relay Games at Des Moines. Apr. 25. Outdoor interclass meet, McCook. May 1-2 Seventh Interscholastic tennis tournament. McCook. May 1 N. U.-K. U. dual track meet, McCook. May 2. Eleventh annual intercol- lege meeting. McCorkle May 5. K. S. A. C.-K. U. dual track meet at Manhattan. May 6-7. Baseball, M. U., at Law- rence. May 14-15. Baseball, M. U., at Celum- May 16. M. U-K. U. dual track meet at Columbia. May 23. Annual invitation H. S. track meet at Lawrence. May 30. M. V. track meet St. Louis. June 26. M. V. track meet St. Louis. meet at Chicago Future Events Picture Book Mar. 31. Piano Recital, Alice Eidolmine Apr. 15. 29.30 Eleventh Annual Music Festival. Apr. 22 8:15 Annual spring concert of the University band. New tennis balls at Carroll's- Adv. We feature our Geneva racket at $1.50 for women; it's a Spalding. Carroll's—Adv. Line markers for tennis courts, $1.00 at Carroll's.-Adv. Send the Daily Kansan home. INTER-FRATERNITY LEAGUE
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Pi Upsilon April 18Sigma Delta Phi April 18Phi Alpha Delta April 17Sigma Phi Sigma April 18Phi Beta Pi April 18Keltz April 17
Keltz April 24Phi Beta Phi April 25Sigma Delta Phi April 24Pi Upsilon April 25Phi Alpha Delta April 25Sigma Phi Sigma April 25
Phi Beta Pi May 2Phi Alpha Delta April 28Sigma Phi Sigma May 1Sigma Delta Phi May 2Keltz May 1Pi Upsilon April 28
Sigma Phi Sigma May 9Keltz May 9Pi Upsolin May 9Phi Alpha Delta May 9Sigma Delta Phi May 8Phi Beta Phi May 9
Phi Alpha Delta May 15Sigma Phi Simga May 16Phi Beta Phi May 16Keltz May 16Pi Upsilon May 16Sigma Delta Phi May 15
Seniors—A Reminder Seniors - A reminder Have a cap and gown picture made at Squirres' Studio. We furnish the cap and gown - Adv. Do it now—have that picture taken at Squires' Studio—Adv. Stylish clothes serviceable clothes chultz's clothes are the best clothes to wear DUSTIN FARNUM The Feature Picture of Them All -IN THE SQUAW MAN Bowersock Theatre, April 17 and 18 [The Only Fire-Proof Constructed Theatre in Lawrence] Price 25c Any Part of House. Friday and Saturday Nite. Matinee Saturday AT THE AURORA TODAY AT THE AURORA TODAY "JUDITH OF BETHULIA" THE GREATEST BIOGRAPH EVER PRODUCED. FOUR REEL SPECTACULAR FILM D'ART STATE HISTORICAL SOCIETY TOPEKA KAN UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN VOLUME XI. NUMBER 136. JUNIORS PROMENADE TILL WEE SMA' HOURS Entertain Seniors with One O Most Gorgeous Proms Ever Held at K U' UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS MONDAY AFTERNOON, APRIL 20, 1914. FARCE BRINGS APPLAUSE "Case of Suspension" Entertain Crowd for Hour and Half—President Gear Leads March Four hundred people attended the Junior Prom Friday night and pronounced it one of the most successful held at this school since the custom was adopted. From the beginning of the farce 'till the orchestra played its last encore on the last number, not a hitch in proceedings occurred to mar the presence of either manager or guests. The was good, the music was good, in short, the affair was nothing but a success. The farce, "A Case of Suspension," began promptly at 7 o'clock and was carried through in true professional style. Genevieve Herrick and Easy Anderson, with the help of C. Edgar Williamson, and with the help of three quarters of an hour and brought down considerable applause. At the conclusion of the farce, the customary line up and march down the receiving line followed. In the line were Chancellor and Mrs. Frank Strong, Mr. and Mrs. W. Frank, Mr. and Mrs. Hoeh, Mr. and Mrs. E. T. Hackney, Dean and Mrs. Perly F. Walker, Mr. and Mrs. Eustace Brown, Stanley Nelson and Trina Latta, Cale Carson and Ida Perry, Russell Gear and Edith Case, Blanchy and Edith Case, Herbert Coleman and Mrs. L. W. Coleman. At the first notes of the orchestra, President Gear of the class of 1915 led a grand march around the hall, at the conclusion of which programs were given out by Blair Hackney and Rebecca Cooper; leather programs with the letter K embosed on the front and containing the names of the class officers and committees, the chaperones and the managers. Refreshments were served in three shifts in the east room downstairs. The decorations in the hall, which consisted of green and white drapings over the ceilings and cozy little bowers in the corners of the room, together with the dresses of the women made the affair one of the most spectacular gatherings ever held at the University. The house mothers of the various fraternities assisted in chaperoning. The light rain which fell during the latter half of the dance marred to some extent the 'Promenade' phase of the event but, between showers, the rain continued over J. Pluvius and strolled over the campus as was expected of them. COLLEGE FACULTY WILL CONSIDER MAJOR SYSTEM The College faculty will meet tomorrow to pass upon the reports of the committees on the major system and on the codification of rules for the sub-committee, to which the possible revision of the majoring system was referred, worked for several weeks and last week made their report to the committee, but the results of their investigations were withheld until the faculty should pass upon them. The committee on faculty rules has been standing since last year and made a report last fall which was not acted upon. Recently the faculty asked that the report be revised and the committee has revised the rules as well as codified them. Their report will be passed upon by the administrative committee tonight before going to the faculty. To Start Tennis Tourney All candidates desiring to try out for the Varsity tennis team should meet tonight at 7:15 at the Men's Student Union. Drawings for a round-robin tournament will be made in the first place, probably will compose the team. This is the last call for tennis players, and is important. Special Issue Merchants' Week Special Issue Merchants' Week The Merchants' Journal of Topeka will issue a special Merchants Week number this week. The Journal has had men at the University getting material and pictures. The program for the week has been completed and copies will be sent out this week to over five thousand merchants in Kansas. Send the Daily Kansan home. McKEEVER TO HELP TOWNS TRY FOR STUBS PRIZE Prof. Wm. A. McKeever left today for a four days trip to Columbus, Garnett, Yates Center, and Neodesha. He went in response to requests from students of the institute in organizing competition for the Stubba Child Welfare prize. The list of towns in the contest is steadily increasing and by summer Professor McKeever hopes to have nearly all of the seventy second-class cities in the contest. At present there are prizes of $1,000 and $500 offered the winning towns, and the department of child welfare is making arrangements to obtain a third prize of $250 or $300. K.U. MILITIA IS READY FOR SERVICE But Captain Jones' Company Has Had No Orders From The Front Captain Jones will go to Topeka today or tomorrow to get some more equipment that the company needs this spring and summer. In addition, the Kansas guards he will get them first hand from the governor's office. "I have not received any orders to proceed to Mexico yet," said Captain F. E. Jones, of the local K. N. G. nature. "There is no cause for alarm as yet because it will take a little time before we can be called out in the night to go. In case the militia is called out it will probably be to garrison the posts vacated by the regulars. As I understand the regulations, a militia must be sent into armed fighting unless he volunteers to go to the front." The University company of the K. N. G.'s has room for about 105 more men and in case it is called into service, it will be filled up as much as possible with University men. In case the students are unavailable, outsiders will be taken into the University company until its ranks are filled. 7 Students Go to War, They Might Earn Credits "We will not cross the bridge until we get to it," smiled Chancellor Strong this morning when asked concerning credits for those students who might be called to Mexico. "The right thing would be done by the boys, though." continued the It is the general opinion that in 1808 when war was declared with Spain that University students were given their credits for that semester. In 1824, they were placed on the minutes of the University Council at that time to such an effect. Graduates of the economies department are making good in their advanced study, according to Prof. H. A. Millis. Another baseball field may be constructed if the interest in, the national game continues among the Kansas students. The Hash House league, Pan-Hellenic, Inter-fraternity freshmen and Varsity squads contain almost five hundred players and the new freshman field is too coachable to multitude. Coach Hamilton has been looking over the ground near McCook field and may soon start work on a new field. MAY HAVE ANOTHER FIELD Homer Hoyt, '13, who has been taking work at the University of Chicago, has just received another fellowship there which will carry him next year at the University. His work is in advanced economics. Agnes Hobson, '13, who specialized in economics, is the Univer- F. B. Danskian, whor took his master's degree here last year, is now assisting in working out a schedule for the Kansai Utilities Commission. Interest for the National Game at Kansas Demands Another, Another Dean P. F. Walker, of the School of Engineering, received a letter this morning from John M. Sills, class of 1903, who is now with the University of Houston to attend the School of Engineering to take positions with that road. Asher Hobson, '13, who specialized in economics while the University, has a research fellowship at Chicago also. FORMER ECONOMICS SHAKRS .. MAKE GOOD ON OUTSIDE Want to Hire Graduates Board Raises Registrar's Rank J. W. Gilligan The Board of Administration has conferred the rank of associate professor upon George O. Foster, who has been registrar of the University for the past fifteen years. Mr. Foster came to K. U. in 1891 as stenographer to Chancellor Snow. In 1890 he was made registrar, and in 1892 he became his degree of A.B. more than says that he has bee ntoo busy since then to get any award. Mr. Foster has never had a faculty ranking before. SOPH HOP TICKET SALE BEGINS THIS MORNING Cylide Van Derilp, manager of the sophomore hop, began the sale of tickets this morning. Beginning tomorrow, some one will be at the Fraser all day, to whom payment of sophomore dues may be made. ROGERS MADE ASSOCIATE PROFESSOR BY THE BOARD According to Van Derlip, all those to whom invitations have been sent and who expect to attend, must turn their names in to the management. In the case of the hop hop are made, and the only thing remaining is the collection of the dues. All seniors will meet in Frazer to morrow at the chapel hour to take action on the memorial. Seniors to Meet Tomorrow D, C. Rogers, of the philosophy department, was raised from assistant professor to associate professor, by his salary on Friday. His salary also increased. Professor Rogers was recently offered a position with an eastern school which was better than the one he held here. The Board decided that K. U. could not lose so valuable a man. Cash Cheeks by Wednesday All persons holding checks on against the Junior Prom managers must have them cashed by Wednesday night, as the managers will order all payment stopped at that time. It is necessary in order to have the books balanced up by the required time. BOARD THINKS STATE WILL GIVE GROUND FOR UNION "I am of the opinion that there would be very little trouble in getting a plot of ground on the campus if the students raise the money for a loan," said Press E. T. Hackney, of the Board of Administration today. "While I am not prepared to say positively, I feel sure that a grant from the legislature would be the only way to secure the ground. I am confident that the legislature would recommend it if the school authorities recommended it. The Board is in favor of the movement." DES MOINES CARNIVAL TOO FAST FOR KANSAS Jayhawkers Take Fourth in the Mile and Fifth in the Two Mile Kansas failed to place in the mile and two mile relay races at the Drake Relay Carnival in Des Moines Saturday afternoon, but the speedy Jayhawkers led the other teams from the Missouri Valley conference. The Kansas team was fourth in the mile event and fifth in the two mile race. The weather was cold and damp with intermittent showers. Kansas was in fast company at the Drake races. Illinois won the two mile event by crossing the tape in 8 minutes, a new record. Chicago set a new record in the half-mile, running the distance in 1:31. The Summaries: Two-mile relay - Illinois first; Chicago second; Northwest third; Chicago fourth; Kansas fifth. Time 8.00, edd. 8.10, 1-5 (Minnesota). One mile relay--Illinois first; Iowa second; Northwestern third; Kansas Coach Hamilton and Coach Mosse entered the following Kansas in the meet: Edwards, Elswick, Clayton Fiske, Glisse, Cissna, and Davis. Send the Daily Kansan home K. U. Engineers Will Have Their Day on May Fifth CINEMA ELECTRICITY SUPPLIER EVERYBODY INWORK FOR CHANICAL ENGINEERING MECHANICAL HARSE BRIDGE CO H. H. LEAGUE OPENS WITH EIGHT GAMES Engineers' Day will, in all probability, be held on Tuesday, May 5. A consensus of opinion taken in the senior classes of the School of Engineering this morning favored that date. Committees have been appointed by the various engineering societies, and now that the date has been chosen, they will start work in preparing a program for the fall semester, the usual program will probably be adhered to. Above is shown a scene from Engineers' Day in 1912. Teams From Sixteen Boarding Houses Battle on Opening Day SEVERAL HARD-FOUGHT GAMES Stevenson and Hope, and K. K., and Marks Differ by Single Tally—Ko-op and Martin Tie Standing of the Teams W. L. Pct. Columbus 1 0 1000 Midway 1 0 1000 K. K. 1 0 1000 Stevenson 1 0 1000 Babb 1 0 1000 1221 1 0 1000 Ellis 1 0 1000 Martin 0 0 000 Ko-op 0 0 000 Hope 1 0 1000 Co-op 1 0 1000 Wouldst 0 1 000 Nutting 0 1 000 Daniels 0 1 000 Gillespie 0 1 000 Marks 0 1 000 The Hash House League opened Saturday with eight games. Some of them were a bit ragged, but there were some good games too, and already one or two men have been mentioned as likely Varsity timber. The teams all showed lots of pep, and students generally are evincing considerable interest, in the league. Dad Gregory will keep the standing and the results of the games posted on the Student Union bulletin board. Ellis 12, Gillespie 4 Because you're a good hash slinger is no sign that you can play ball. Chef Gillespie's team of baseball sharks went to defeat before the Ellis came on a one-sided score of 12 to 2 all piled up in five 'short' and long innings. Manager Ropy Thompson, star twirler for the victorious team, who struck out eleven men, says he'd have struck out as many more in the next four innings and have doubled his team's score if both teams had been content to stave off their hunger for hash. The game was a hit run from the time Palmer lead off with a three base hit. George Smee acted as umpire and "Thundering Thousand." Lindsey as official score keeper. 1221 12. Wouldst 11 score by inmins Ellis 331 23—12 14 Gillespie 100 10—12 14 Batteries: Ellie, Thompson and Palmer; Gillespie, Cooper and C. Chu By a spectacular batting rally in the last innning, the 1221 club baseball team defeated the Wouldst club at Woodland park Saturday morning by a score of 12 to 11. The untamed condition of Gloom Flint, who served the pellet for the Epicures was responsible for a three run lead of the Axemen throughout the first six innings. After the second two Wouldst batsmen, until he was superseded by Busenbark in the first of the sixth. Blincoe, the Wouldst pitcher, kept his hits well scattered until the fatal seventh. Two three-base hits and a home run with the S. R. O. sign at all stations, chased home six runs for 1221. The Score: R. H. E. 125 020 310 6-1 9 5 124 214 100 6-1 9 5 121 241 100 6-1 Ko-on 7. Martin 7 Ko-op and Martin played seven innings to a tie. While loose in spots, the game was interesting. Ko-op acquired the lead in the third, and held it to the sixth. When Martin took two with two tallies that made the tie The game was called at 12:30 in order to allow the players to reach their respective goals. The team will be played off at least. The tie will be played off at a later date. store by inmates 102 013 0-7 Keo-OP 101 102 0-7 Martin 101 102 0-7 K, K. 7, Marks 6 K. K, and Marks played another 7 to 6 game, the former winning. Trece, the K. K. Twirler, won his own game in the eighth, when he brought home a man from Seaside. From Seaside, Trece allowed 9 hits, McFadden, Marks' pitcher, allowed 8. K. K. made 3 errors, Marks 6. Batteries: K. K., Treece and (Continued on page 4) UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Official student paper of the University EDITORIAL STAFF EDITORIAL STAFF JOHN C. MODERN JOHN HARRIS JOB GIBBERNER PRANK B. HENDERSON High School Editor Sport Editor REPORTORIAL STAFF BUSINESS STAFF COPPER ABBEY, Inc. Ray Burroughs, Joe Birnbaum, Tony Fiore Advertising Manager Circulation Manager Advertising Manager Advertising Manager CORRAL & BROOKS Advertising CUBE BAYER BURGESS MIDDEN J. A. GREENLEAF HEBBERT FLINT MURRAY RAV CLAPER RAV CLAPER WILLIAM S. CADY JOSHEN HOWARD ROBERT LEE SAM DEEREN BROOKLYN ALLEYNE GOLDEN ALLEYNE RUSHMORE BURNARK LUCILE HILDINGER LAWRENCE SMITH GIHLANE CALKTON GIHLANE CALKTON knurred or second-class mail matter Winter 17.1910, at the post office at Lawrence, Kansas, under the act of March 3.1819. Subscription price $2.50 per year, in advance; one term, $1.50. Published in the afternoon five times a week, by students of the University of Kansas, from the press of the department of Journalism. Phone, Bell K. U. 25. Address all communications to UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Lawrence, Kans. The Daily Kkanan aims to picture the undergraduate students go further and more明确ly present the news by standing up and playing no letzter; to be clean to be cheerful; to be more serious problems in upper heads MONDAY, APRIL 20, 1914. WHAT IS YOUR FAVORITE? Be not wise in your own conceits. -Romans 12:16. WHAT IS YOUR FAVORITE? The best thing about the senior memorial meeting Friday was the underlying assumption that every senior favored the idea itself, and that the only chance for argument lay in the sort of a memento to leave. Not a word was spoken against the memorial plan. Four possibilities were suggested—a palpit for chapel, a seat on the campus, bulletin boards in the principal buildings, and a double row of trees down Oread Avenue. Each plan had ardent supporters and a hot debate over the matter is certain at the meeting tomorrow. A rule requiring all suggestions to be accompanied by a definite statement of the probable cost will limit the discussion to those schemes which have been given some investigation. Tomorrow is the day actually to select the memorial. Time is short and further delay is unnecessary. If you have anything to say, Mr. Senior, be in chapel and speak out. Then if your pet idea is not adopted be a good loser and back the decision of the majority to the end. DISCOVER EACH OTHER! The honor sentiment committee composed of students, discovered a list of faculty methods which were unfair and unjust to the undergraduate Suggestions and recommendations were submitted to the faculty and now a committee of professors has been appointed to investigate the matter. By taking notice of the student's point of view the faculty is beginning to unify interest at the University in a way that has long been needed. Students and professors should appreciate the work and problems of each other to a much greater extent. A senior should know a half dozen professors almost well enough to call them by their first names—and he doesn't. May methods of causing undergraduates and instructors to study each other's difficulties be multiplied rapidly! CENSOR THE CROWDS, TOO With all the talk about censoring moving picture shows the reformers seem to have forgotten the audience completely. The man, woman, child, or college student who attends these shows is often as much in need of revision outward as is the film. Probably every one who attends the theaters even occasionally has experienced some annoyance from that form of pest who is unable to sit quietly in his seat while the en- ertainment is going on. The vexation may take different forms. Some of the nuisances talk in a loud tone to their boorish companions; some of them insist on singing if the orchestra plays a popular air and some keep up a running fire of monolog comment expressing their views of the stage performance. Then there is the individual who has seen the picture before, and keeps his neighbors informed as to what is to come next. To remonstrate with the noisy one is to invite a public "bawling out," as they consider it an attempt to infringe upon their personal liberty. Our suggestion is that each theater and motion picture house employ a censor and a "bouncer," the bouncer to remove the offending ones when the occasion demands, and the censor to refuse them admittance when they apply for admittance again. RAIN OR MUSIC If the present weather continues, the popular out-of-door concerts which the band gave two years ago could be started immediately. Whatever the barometer man decides to do, we hope he will not give us more raw evenings like those furnished last spring—and spoil every concert which McCanles and his men attempt. "ALRIGHT" OR "ALL RIGHT?" "ALRIGHT" OR "ALL RIGHT" The Kansas City Court of Appeals refuses to say which is correct, "alright" or "all right." Of course Webster gives two words but the court evidently is thinking of unwritten law. And which really is correct? Website law "already" and "altogether" in one-word form. It senses that "all right" was not in the modern sense when dictionaryis were started. Conventionality is the strongest band in the world. This is the chief argument against a radical application of simplified spelling—University Missourian. OUR DAILY QUIZ Use honor system and grade yourself CAMPUS SEATS Q. Why is a campground A. Principially to provide the tired engineer a resting place between stares of his daily Marathon. Q—Is that their only excuse for existing? A—Oh no, the steps of Green Hall are going to need supplementing it if you don't have them. Q—Where are our campus seats? A—As yet they are confined to their own premises. Q. —When will they be put in a more useful place? A—As soon as the students realize how desirable they are. —and when will that be wherefore. When we stop to give the matter a turn. Q. Who is going to buy seats for our campus? A. —Well there's John D., and the Board of Administration, and the alumni, and, if worst comes to worst, the student themselves. A—Call them class memorials and they will go down all right. Q—What! The students buy furniture? University? Shades of legislatures Q—Aren't they rather expensive in A.—Depends on the material. But if every student would deny himself a couple of trips to the nickel the money saved would buy one or two handsome concrete benches. Q. —Might not these seats be objected to on the ground of encouragng loaoting? A—People who want to loaf will do it anyway, and certainly a bench is a healthier place to loaf than on a staircase. And not so full of chiggers, either. A. —Try putting up posters announcing that the Lawrence police will arrest anyone on suspicion of having bunches placed on the campus. Q—How might general enthusiasm be aroused? By Ethel A. Hickey, '98 THE STORY OF MY LIFE Head of the Department of English in the University of New Mexico. I don't know why you chose me for a Who's Who candidate unless that little date of April 1 has an insidious meaning. Nevertheless, I bite—always do bite, always thereby—because a wide guaste that maybe by and will crystallize into a discriminating astе. "The Story of My Life" . . . . I smile. But here goes: I was born—never mind when. But it was I N Kansas—I never balk on that fact. I went through school quite as a matter of course: I never had that yearning for knowledge you encounter so often in syrup stories; I never had a purpose; never cared to be a good example to anybody; didn't know a blessing about Uplift, nor the heights we should or any of the俯卧 heights we should Aim at the short I went to school be. I was expected to go, and I got into as much mischief as I could and was scared to death when I was caught. On into college and then suddenly in my senior year, I was bitten by the bug of Reform, and tried to turn things topsytyv... I suppose you are still doing it back there, writing things in your Daily that occasionally set the school by the ears, call down the wrath of the Faculty, and sometimes the animosity of the state. When Johnson was my medium, Hillard Johnson was our editor; and I can still see the smile with which he accepted my outbursts against the evils of the world and of K. U. in particular. I thought the smile was appreciative then but I know it was wise, for Johnson, the teacher, the teacher was a politician, a manipulator; and I carried out unaware many a suggestion that gave tong to our columns. Well, it culminated when he turned over the "weekly" to the girls for the Woman's Edition—the first, believe—and I wrote ap ap newspapers that caused him to sit, and the Woman's League and the Y. W. C. A. and the Discipline Committee and the Chancellor and the Chancellor's wife pounced upon me. Oh, I had my Fame's Little Day right enough. But I'm sorry now and I take this opportunity to apologize to old K. U. for maligning her sons and especially her valuables and forgetten and forgotten and hope the harm done was not great... It was great fun that year working for the "weekly" and the "K. U. Idler." and the Annual, and getting into scraps and scrapes and being graduated by the grace of the Faculty. Pity. I remember only the fun. And then came reality; three or four years of grind, of learning what the old school had taught us, easily easy sailing. To be sure, I've had my ups and down; and teaching is not all an "up." But I've seen a baker's dozen of boys and girls get into our good magazines and I've rejoiced more threaten than mourned over the return of my own manuscripts. I've had my Wunderkid—rather a laughter-year. And. I have many sheets of covers of our own books. I have slept under the desert stars in a city high in the sky; I have followed strange processions of Flagelantes dripping with blood from shoulder to heel; I have seen brown-skinned Cristos agonize under the weight of the Lenten cross; I have seen a pagan dance night betwixt Christmas Eve and Christmas Day; I have shot through a torrent-canyon into a primitive town two-score miles from the railway, and have found there a colony of men and women who are Doing things—artists from Paris and New York—with evening dress and wine and music and laughter and much It's out in the desert I live, but every day I stand where, in every direction he nadir, I can see. I've seen it all. And there's something in that, you know, There! Will that do? I fear me I have run over the word limit—never do have patience enough to count the words. And after all, I have said nothing. Cut all you call, or if you wish the facts are so few, merely threel teen years of teaching, first in high school then in college. My life is but a simple one. Teach a little, study a little, read a little, write a little—that is my routine. Now and then a jaunt off to some strange rite or place, now and then an address to some association—Bless me, it I've even been invited to "orate" at a Mother's Congress. didn't—these furnish the relief from the monotony. Life, truly. Not all content—by no means. There are ambitions which he still by the grace of will and weok to realize. What I have accomplished weighs but the smallest part of a grain. The purple patches are but few. But it's a good old world and I hope I may not soon leave it. Pauline Madden, '09, is making good as city librarian. She is using live methods and interesting people. A little advertising scheme she used a week or two ago has brought good results. And though so much novel reading on the part of the patrons no doubt distresses her. I believe she likes the work. I am sure we like her. "Me for the burlesque show tonight." "Aw, save your money and read the Cosmos"—Illinois Siren. WATKINS NATIONAL BANK Capital $100,000 Surplus and profits $100,000 The Student Depository R. E. Protsch TAILOR Sam S. Shubert MAT. WED. and SAT. PEG O' MY HEART Next: PASSING SHOW OF 1913 Bert Wadham THE COLLEGE BARBER On 14th Street A. G. ALRICH Binding, Copper Plate Printing, Bubber Stamps, Engraving, Steel Die Embossing, Seals, Badges. 744 Mass. Riveri's Tale Powder Morses Chocolates Typewriting Done By Alvin L. Babb MeCOLLOCH'S Drug Store. 1334 Ohio St. Bell 'Phone 1574 W CITY CAFE 906 Mass. Strictly Home Cooking Ever try our Special 15c Lunch? You'll like it. A GOOD PLACE TO EAT AT ANDERSON'S OLD STAND JOHNSON & TUTTLE 715 PROPS. Mass. SPRING SUITINGS FRANK KOCH TAILOR 727 Mass. PROFESSIONAL CARDS W. O. MCOONNERLY, Phylogenid and Molecular Biology, Washington Univ. 9340, Washington, Ridanceo, 1344 Team Tm. 8526, Washington, Ridanceo, 1344 Team Tm. J. F. BROCK, Optometrist and Specialist Office 802 Mass. Phone bp9 605. HARRY REDING. M. D. Eye, ear, nose and throat. 815-422-6700. Home 815. Hotel 513. Home 812. G. A. HAMMAN M. D. E. ear, car, Battleship guaranteed. Dick Building. J. W. BRYON Dentist. Over Wilson's Drug Store. Boll Phone 507. J. R. BEGITEL, D. D. O. 833 Mass J. R. BEGITEL Street, M. bth phones, office and library W. J. WONES, A. M., M. D. Dlesses of Buteo buteo. Readence, 1200. Both plumage. Readence, 1200. DR. H. T. JONES, Room 12 F. A. K. Bldg. Residence 1300 Tenn. Phones 211. DR. BURT R. WHITE Osteopath. Phones, Bell 938, Home 257, Office, 745 Mass. St. D. H. L. X CHAMBERS. Office over QUIRRE Studio. Both phones. W. D. Pappos, Engraver, Watchmaker and Jeweler. W. D. Pappos and Jewelry. Boul House Mansion. Mans. CLASSIFIED S. T. GILLISPLE, M. D. O'Brien corner Gilpin house, Warren st. Residencia 728 509-648-3122 Phone Kennedy Plumbing Co2, for Massa Mazda lamps. 897. Massa lamps 655. Plumbers Ladles Tailors MRS. ELLISON, Dressmaking and Ladies Workshop, Phone B421 841-7022, 1052 Vermont Avenue, Phone B421 841-7022. Queen City College System and sewing taught. Dressmaking in connection with Mrs. G. Mark Brown, 834 Ky. Bell 1764. Hair Dressers dressing dressing, shampooing, scalp and facial massage, shampooing, half-gadgets, salojo shampooing, apparel apportion call 812. 756-7222. Home .51. The Select Hair Dressing Shop. 927 Mass. 85. Barber Shops Go where they all go J. O. HOUK 913 Mass. Student's Co-op Club. $2.50 to $3.00 per 1340 KY. Geo. H. Vansell Steward OLUS OLUS Turn Your Shirt Tails Into Drawers What Good Are Shirt Tails Anyway? IN OLUS the outside shirt and underdrawers are one garment. This means that the shirt can't work out of the trousers, that the shirt tail can't bunch in seat, that the dresser's "may put" to any nothing of the comfort and economy of saving a garment. OLUS is coat cut, opens all the way down—closed, stitch closed back. See illustration. OLUS one-piece PAJAMAS for lounging, resting and comfortable sleep. Made on the same principle as OLUS Shirts but cut, closed back, closed crotch. No strings to tighten or come loose. $1.50 to $8.50. wear, we collar sweater. Extra sizes for very tall or stout men. Ask your dealer for OLUS. Booklet on request. PHILLIPS-JONES COMPANY, Makers Dept. N 1199 Broadway, New York AURORA—GRAND The best in MOTION PICTURES We run exclusive service films A FEATURE EVERY DAY The Flower Shop The Crowd was at the Music Festival The Crowd reads the Daily Kansan Advertise it in the Kansan If you are a High School Student You may be interested in knowing what vocations are open to the Graduate in Pharmacy The two year course and the three year course prepare for the examination in pharmacy by the State Board, admitting to practice as a pharmaceutical chemist. The four year course opens the way to such broader vocations as United States Chemist State Food Inspector State Drug Inspector Chemist for Drug Manufacturers The number of such positions is steadily increasing. Address Address UNIVERSITY KANSAN VOCATION EDITOR LAWRENCE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN FRATERNITY LEAGUE FINISHES FIRST ROUND Sigma Delta Phi, Keltz and Sigma Phi Winners in Initial Games The first series of games in the inter-kernity league resulted in victories for the Sigma Delta Phi, Sigma Phi Sigma, and Alpha Pi, Sigma Pi, and Alpha Delta taking the count before each team respectively. The second series of games for the Johnson & Carl and Carroll trophies will be pulled off next Friday and Saturday. Sigma Delta Phi taking on the pennant winning Keltz team, and Pi Upsilon the Phi Betas. The first game will be played Friday afternoon on the Haskell diamond and the second Saturday afternoon at Woodland. Sammons of the Sigma Delta Phteam, had his little out-drop working to perfection and held the Pi U's at bay till the fifth when he began to weaken. The game was called in the seventh by agreement and he escaped a drubbing and got away with the score 10-4 in his victory, his pitching featured in his victory of the winners. Jenkins, second baseman of the winners, caught mapping off the bag at second when Stockton "hid the hall" and tagged him. The score: Pi Upsilon Sigma Delta Phi R, H: 000 041 1—6 5 306 041 x—10 11 Batteries: Pi Upsilon, Stockton, Gattskill and Carson. Sigma Delta Phi, Sammons and Zimmerman. Umire, Coolidge. Lefty Schenck and his Medies were greeted with an unpleasant surprise when they went up against Sigma Phi Sigma with its kid pitcher, Poier. Lefty left the field holding the short end of a 7-6 score. Poier held the enemy to five hits and fed seventeen of them in nine innings of play, who whole Sigma team, many members in the league, our show considered class and promise to give the leaders a run for their money. The score: Phi Beta 000 200 300 1— 6 5 Sigma Phi 004 040 1— 7 11 Batteries: Phi Beta, Bowman, Schenck and Dively; Sigma Phi, Poirier and Cazier. Phi Alpha Delts The champion Keltz team almost hit a snag when it came up against the Phi Alpha Delts but emerged from the conflict in the lead in a 6-2 game. Seitz of the champs pitch a great game and he plays the lawyers on his curves all through the contest. Curran of the Phi Alpha Delts dislocated his thumb when he got hit by a fast one behind the bat. Keltz 6 Phi Alpha Delta: Batteries; Kelts, Seitz and Harrell Phi Alpha Delta: Lovelace and Curran, Lindsay. The Crowd Reads THE DAILY KANSAN If you want a crowd at your Play Dance Mixer Advertise it in the Daily Kansan Kansan Ads Pay Around Mount Oread Clyde Maris spent Easter vacation with Forest Jones at the Latter's home in Neodesha. The visit was of especial interest to the budding engineers because of the new million dollar oil refinery which has recently been installed there. Neodesha is also noted as being the temporary home of "Pet" Patterson, former star athlete of the University, who is now engaged in drilling Latin into Neodesha youths. Shorty Strothers was up before "Doc" Burdick in domestic relation's class. To the question as to whether a promise of marriage by a minor to a grass widow will succeed, she answered that the minor would be bound. "Humph," Dr. Burdick said, "what grass widow has been telling you that?" The fire escape on the west side of Fraser Hall is being painted. “A drop of paint looks much better on the railing than on a blue coat,” mused Charles Sweet as he removed a spot with turpentine. When the ball struck the Chinese catcher on the shoulder Thursday, the yellow haired baseman remarked, "Ish-ka-bibble." Who said that higher education did not help the "heaten China"? The boys in the 11 o'clock Newspaper class have adopted the dandelion as the class flower. Each morning on crossing the campus they pluck the blossoms and wear them to class. Huge Wedell, who umpired the game between the Chinese and Jayhawkers Friday, says he has not yet signed up as ampitie with any of the major leagues. He says he doesn't like to stand behind the co-host-protector and a mask on prison, it reminds him too much of prison. The duel is no longer in code but students must "defend their honor" even now in some manner. Instead of throwing wine in the other fellow's face (Kansas is the modern duellist) down to the duelist, it "clash" in a hair-raising game of cribbage and their honor is satisfied. Harry A. West, a sophomore medic at Rosedale, spent the week-end in Lawrence visiting his University friends. Andy Groff is bothered considerably because of the fact that there is another A. Groff in town and there often occurs a mixup in how you open it, opened by mistake read in part, "How are you and your wife?" W. S. G. A. President to Convention Dorothy Hackbuch, president of the W.S.G.A. will attend a convention of College women's councils at Bloomington, Illinois Thursday and Friday. Practically all of the colleges at the conference are different school organizations. Their object in getting together is to exchange ideas and discuss plans for the coming year. S. A. E. vs. Phi Gam Tomorrow The Sig Alphas beat the Phi Deltis in a practice game of baseball on freshman field. Saturday afternoon, 11 to 3. The Phi Deltis and Phi Gams will play a red and white game; the diamond tomorrow afternoon. The batteries will be: Phi Deltis, Lyman and Blair; Phi Gams, Craig and Wickstrum. Speaks on Christ and Business -Mr. J. H. Powell, who for the last twenty years has been a revered dealer, devoted much to pressing the diversity Y. M. C. A. yesterday on "The Practical Working of the Principles of Jesus Christ in business." Speaks on Christ and Business The freshmen of Kappa Alpha Theta entertained Saturday night in Ecke's Hall in honor of the upperclassmen of the sorority. Profitable vacation employment for Students selling guaranteed household articles. Last season students made from our school's territory now, National Co., 3rd St., Newark, N. Y., Adv. 132-3 "Don't" miss "your" opportunity of getting a copy of the "Harvester." Only 50 cents each at Wolf's Book Store—Adv. 135-2 Wanted—Salesmen Campus photography is best at bud-swelling time. Try it with Kodak orthochromatic film from Woodward's.-Adv. 135-3 KANSAS MERCHANTS WILL HEAR EXPERTS To Receive Training in Advertising, Salesmanship and Business Methods at K. U. May 5-7 Three days of training for Kansas merchant by experts in the advertising, salesmanship and modern business methods were announced today by D. C. Croissant, director of the University of Kansas Extension Division. This Merchant's Week will be held at K. U. May 5, 6, and 7. The following is the complete program for the Week: Chancellor Frank Strong, The University of Kansas—The Function of a University. TUESDAY. MAY 5. U., May 5-7 J. H. Craig, Director of Publicity, Company of Kansas Clive Psychology Advertising Henry Schott, Ferry-Hanley-Schott Advertising Advertising Kansas City- Nationwide Advertising C. C. Brown, Iowa Cash Store Cawker, Iowa Paper to Get Results. Paper to Get Results. Charles P. Adams, The Merchant's Journal, Topkea—How to Advertise a store by Circulars, Handbills, and Other Printed Matter. W. S. French, Kawnee Manufacturing Company of Niles, Michigan W. C. Simons, Lawrence Journal- al Lawrence, Kansas - The Spea- cial Sal. Chester M. Lessenden, Expert Ad & Show Writers. Never Leverily. - Show Card Writing. WEDNESDAY, MAY 6. BASE BALL GOODS Accounting and Store Management. M. L. Orear, Fairbanks, Morse & Company, Kansas City—Failures and Their Causes. J. C. Walker, Educational Division of Bursapee Making Machine Company, Minneapolis, MN Robert B. Schreffler, Department Store Efficiency Engineer, The Dry Goods Reporter, Chicago. Ill.-Departmentizing a Store. Wheeler Samms, Sales Editor, Book Department, System, Chicago Book Depository The Sporting Goods Headquarters George D. Wolf, Baker-Vawter Audit Company, Chicago, Ill.-Store C. E. Vandell, Western Electric Company, Kansas City—Credit. H. G. Moore, Merchant, Kansas, Missouri—Proper Business Practice. M. E. Garrison, Manager Wichita Association of Credit Men—Credit. Salesmanship W. J. Pilkington, The Merchant's Trade Journal, Des Moines, Iowa—The Human Element in the Distribution of Merchandise. H. D. Drake Chicago II–Business Building Houston School Henry S. Bunting. The Novelty New Yorker. A Premium Meth- dium Meth of Stimulating Business. Wm. G. Howse, The Johnston & Larimer Company, Wichita employment E. R. Moses, The E. R. Moses Merchant Company, Great Bend-How Company G. H. Forsee, Industrial Commission, the Commerce Department, sanitation city of Salesmanship. Prof. Arthur J. Boynton, of the economics department, is in Simons Hospital, suffering from an attack of bronchitis. He will not be able to meet his classes this week. KENNEDY & ERNST Interclass Meet Saturday The interclass track meet will be held on MeCook field Saturday afternoon. Prof. Boynton to Hospital First Call for Suitcases The pay roll is now open for signatures and will be open until April 23. 826 Mass. St. First Call for Salaries! Moving Picture Plays Wanted $10 to $100 each. Big demand! lend twenty-five cents for alphabetically arranged list of names and addresses of prominent film producing companies. The Aytucez Producer's list. Box 347. Pueblo, Colorado.—Adv. Moving Picture Plays Wanted WARWICK Phones 341 4058 front 3% In. Back 1% In. Warranted Linen Barker Collars only at PECKHAMS K. U. CHEMISTS WILL EXAMINE SOAPWEED Will Try to Discover Some Value in Hardy Western Pest About a half ton of Yuca Angustiola, commonly known as soap-weed, was received at the Chemistry Building today and will be analyzed with hopes of finding out what mix of its fiber contains the soap-making qualities that are contained in it. The week grows in Western Kansas and in some parts of Oklahoma and New Mexico. It has a tendency to choke out all the other vegetation that would otherwise grow in the region and the national market be created for it so that it will pay to have it cut out and shipped away. Prof. O. A. Beath, who has charge of the work, says he thinks the fiber of the yuca and that of the sunflower can be unified so that a tough rope can be manufactured and it is said that the soap made from it surpasses all others, especially for shampooing purposes. The work of drying the plants will occur in one or and the actual analysis will begin later. Bayles Not for the Council Bayles Not for the Council Charles Bayles is a candidate for election as vice-president of the Engineering School. Through a mistaken informant it was stated in Friday's Daily Kansan that Bayles wanted to be vice-president of the Student Council. Y. W. to Install Officers The Y. W. C. A. will hold its annual installation of officers tomorrow afternoon in Myers Hall at 4:30. The retiring cabinet members will have charge of the meeting. Seniors—A Reminder Seniors - A Reminder Have a cap and gown picture made at Squires' Studio. We furnish the cap and gown—Adv. An Expanding Vocation that merits the investigation of the high school student who is attracted towards science is that of Chemical Engineering The pecuniary rewards include both large salaries and liberal percentages of the saving which the chemist brings about. The demand for experts in this line is as keen as the desire of manufacturers for better processes and for the utilization of by-products. The course in the University is complete, and after the necessary practical experience and work in research, leads to the degree of chemical engineer. Address Vocation Editor UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Lawrence, Kansas One Want Ad in the Daily Kansan last week brought eleven replies to the advertiser Kansan Want Ads always bring good results UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN - - - - - Active Men's Summer Underwear You'll find our stock very complete. Every style, every fabric, every size and every price. It will be easy for you to make your selection once you see our extensive assortment. All designed with a first thought for your comfort. Come tomorrow and see 'em. "ONYX HOSIERY" "TOMORROW and the NEXT DAY AT SPECIAL PRICES See Windows Ober's HEAD-TO-FOOT OUTFITTERS H. H. LEAGUE OPENS WITH EIGHT GAMES Humes; Marks, McFadden and Allen. (Continued from page 1) Midway 9, Nutting 3 Midway 9, Nutting 3 Pitching was the feature of the game between Midway and Nutting, which Midway won 9 to 3. Batteries were: Nutting, Graft and King; Midway, Weddel and Potin. Stevenson 7. Hope 6. Stevenson and Hope played a fast 7 innings game, Stevenson winning 7 to 6. The game was tied 5 up in the fifth, when Stevenson broke away for 3 tallies, and another one in the next. Hope tried hard to come back, but were held to a score in each of the last two innings. See Windows The Score: Stevenson Hope R. H. E. 100 023 1----7 8 6 112 001 01----6 3 7 Batteries: Stevenson, Grady Motion: Tensely; Hope, Parker and Holstein. Columbus 16, Co-op 2 Columbus won from Co-op in a ragged six-inning game, 16 to 2. Numerous hits and several costly errors cost Co-op the game. Babb 11. Daniels 7. The Babb house defeated the Daniels club Saturday by a score of 11 to 7. Hash House League to Have Benches Spectators will no longer have to sit on the grass and watch the Hash House leaguers play hasbale on the freshman field. Manager Hamilton will place benches along the foul line on the two baseball diamonds this week. Another improvement on the new field will be made on the south side of both diamonds, where p deep ditch ends the excavation. The ditch will be tiled and a gradual slope will be made on to the golf course. The ditch has been a menace to outfielders and more than one fly ball has been spilled when the fielder upset in the ditch. Wife—Anyhow, a woman's mind is always cleaner than a man's. Husband—It ought to be. It changes oftener—Ex. WANT ADS LOST—A Kappa Kappa Gamma key on campus, not jeweled and with Nellie May Schall engraved on back. Return to Kansas Office. LOST—Last Thursday at Varsity tennis cuorts, a pearl handled pocket knife. Call 2626 Bell. Do it now—have that picture taken at Squires' Studio…Adv. Kodaks are the most perfect pocke et cameras. Woodward & Co., specialize with them—Adv. 135-3 Stude—Gad, that towel was hot. Barber—I am sorry, but I couldn't hold it any longer."—Illinois Siren. CHINESE AGAIN WIN FROM THE VARSITY You Can Earn a Good Living and lay up money too, on graduation free, because you don't have to pay. You can get ready and you'll secure a good position in a bank or a real estate firm. Write for catalogue to Kannan's office and best hope to be listed. LAWRENCE Business College Lawrence, Kansas. You Can Earn a Good Living Fast Invaders Overcome Earls Kansas Lead and Take Game McCarty's Caucasians again proved no match for the Chinese from the University of Hawaii and the Chinks won the second and last game of the series on McCook field Friday afternoon, 7 to 5. The game was a slugging match, but the Chinese did most of the slugging and overcame an early run by hawkers. Their win was hit frequently, support was supported in spots, Foster, the Chink's best pitcher, held the Kansans to seven hits. The visitors opened up with a tally in the first when Ayau singed and scored on Ken Yint's two bagger, Bishop's men came back strong in the aftermath and scored three runs when Sommers was safe on Foster's error, Wandell hit and DeLongy filled the bag with balls. Paint-blowers with a hot two-base blow which scored Sommers and Wandell, Delongy meandered off third and stole home when Foster negged high to Mark. The Chinks made another score in the fourth. A hit by Foster and errors by Morrow and Van der Vries allowed the Chinese pitcher to cross the plate. In the fifth Kansas increased the two runs, but Bung-Ping Wandell's fly and DeLung and Van der ries slapped out two baggers. A Chinese rally in the seventh defeated the Kansan. A single by Ayau, a homer by Akana and two base blows by Kan Yin and Foster with an error by Painter, was the progress. He struck eighth when Pung singled and was advanced to third on fielder's choice. Akana's single scored Pung. stored in Pangaea. A large crowd saw the contest and the band made music between the innings. The score: Hawaii. AB R H PO A E Ayau, b. 5 1 3 0 1 0 Akana, 1b. 4 2 3 9 0 0 Kan Yin, 3b. 4 1 3 3 0 0 Mack, c. 4 0 0 10 0 0 Chin, 2b. 5 0 0 1 1 0 Foster, p. 5 1 3 0 5 1 Alvin, rf. 3 0 0 0 0 0 Tin Lo, cf. 4 0 0 3 0 0 Pung, lf. 4 2 1 1 0 0 Total 38 7 13 27 8 1 Kansas AB R B 19 10 Summers, c. 5 1 1 1 5 2 Wandell, rf. 5 1 1 0 0 Smee, p. 4 1 0 3 3 DeLonge, lf. 4 2 2 2 Sproul, bh. 4 0 0 0 Painter, bh. 4 0 1 1 3 Vries, 2b. 3 1 1 1 1 Morrow, ss. 3 0 0 2 2 Bishop, cf. 3 0 0 2 3 Bishop, cf. 4 0 0 4 0 Total 36 5 7 27 10 5 Watch for the "Yellow" Kansan Do you think that the Kansas City Post is yellow? Do you think that the New York Journal is yellow? Do you think that the Chicago Examiner is yellow? Well, you are mistaken. If this is your opinion your newspaper education is sadly deficient. For real rich ochre, saffron and burnt orange journalism, see the Yellow Kansan. Issued April 22. Extra copies (order now) Five Cents. Score by innings: R H I Chinese 100 100 410—7 13 Kansas 020 020 000—5 7 Summary: Home run, Akana; two base hits, Kan Yin 2, Akana, Foster, Lebonyg 2, Akana, Foster, Lebonyg, Pung, Sommers, D- Longy; Base on bails, Off foster 2; left on bases: Hawaii 8. Kansas 6; Sacrifice hits: Mark, Alvin, Akana, Kin Yin, Umpine Wedell. Notes of the Game Notes of the Game Ayau, the clever shortstop for the Laundrym娟, had another good day at the bat. The Chinese fence buster landed on three singles out of five trips to the plate. Where K. U. Engineers Study the Principles of Mechanics Scene in the power plant, the labora tory of the School of Engineering. A The Chinese went to Liberty, Mo. Saturday, where they defeated William Jewell. Bishop played center field and captured four flies from the wind. Morrow had another bad day at short, bobbling two grounders. An inspection of the diamond will readily excuse the K U. short ball that was missed and the infielders are lucky to scoop up ground balls without a fumble. Lefty Sproull made a pretty catch when he hopped and pulled down Tin Lo's drive in the eight. Smee made a spectacular bare hand catch when he ran outside of the diamond and caught Mark's foul in the seventh. The Orientalists only stole one base. Togo Sommers had his eye on the Chinks and they were afraid to wander from the bags. Prospective view salesman—I have on hand about a hundred dollars worth of views which I will sell at a good discount. These views are the best made and in perfect condition. Phone B. 428.—Adv. Orange ice made from the fruit at Wiedemann's.—Adv. Sam S. Shubert MAT. WEDNESDAY & SATURDAY Passing Show of 1913 Return Next Week, "Pet o' My Heart" SOPHOMORE HOP DINNER——HALEY'S ORCHESTRA——FARC Get Your Dates Now STATE HISTORICAL SOCIETY TOPEKA KAN. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN VOLUME XI. SENIORS CHOOSE STONE BENCH AS MEMORIAL Select Seat on Campus Reserved for Fourth Year Students WOULD START A TRADITION Class Initiates Plan to Celebrate "Freshman Cap" Night During Last Week of Semester The class of 1914 has come to life. Besides voting to erect a memorial—a stone bench—the class will initiate a movement to celebrate "freshman cap night" and furthermore it has decided to be prepared for graduation. Some original class souls and vells. Margaret Villepigue had plans ready for the stone bench eight feet long with a name plate in the back. The cost will approximate $100. A fifty cent fee will be levied by the bank. If enough money is obtained a longer bench will be erected. The pulpit for chapel and the senior fence were suggested at this morning's meeting again but the final vote was unanimous. No one was proclaiming of the plan is that only seniors will be allowed to use the seat. All this was decided at the chapel meeting this morning which made up in enthusiasm and ideas what it lacked in attendance. Paul Cubbison suggested the "freshman cap night" idea. The plan is to have the four classes form in front of Fraser at eight o'clock some evening during the last week of school. After a march over the campus led by the seniors in caps and gowns, through rows of red torches the procession would go to the golf links and hear farewell dresses by a few seniors, short dresses by members of each of the other upper classes, and then the meeting could be turned over to the freshmen. A snake dance and yell fest would end in a grand cap burning. The seniors will ask other classes to assist in completing the plans for the new custom. The president of the class will appoint committees to perfect these suggestions in a day or so. WOULD HAVE FORTY GO TO ESTES PARK Y.M.C.A. Starts Campaign for Big Delegation to the Annual Conference "Forty Men to Estes Park" is the slogan which has been adopted by the University Y. M. C. A. for the rest of the school year. At a meeting of the Estes Park committee held yesterday afternoon this goal was chosen for the campaign to be started this week. The men who are laying the plans for the big campaign are: Leland H. Jenks, chairman, Ralph Yeoman, Hugo T. Wedell, Harry McColloch, Rex Miller, Chancellor Frank Strong, and Prof. U. G. Mitchell. For several years an annual conference of college men has been held at Estes Park immediately after the close of the school year. In addition to furnishing a splendid outing at small expense, this conference has proved a tremendous inspiration to students who have attended it from about three or four hundred men from Kansas, Nebraska, and the Rocky Mountain states have been in attendance. An alumn of the University, H. L. Heinman, '06, has active charge of the conference this summer. The dates are June 9 to 18. Speakers of note from all over the country have been secured for the meetings. As a nucleus for the Kansas delegation this year, it is probable that the Y. M. C. A. cabin will make the trip in a body. Plans to defray part of the budget delegates as an inducement to the trip are now under consideration. College Faculty to Meet College Faculty to Meet The faculty of the College will meet this afternoon at 4:30 to consider the majoring and group system and the codification of the faculty rules. Judge Case, of Oswego, addressed a special meeting of the School of Law at 10:30 this morning. TO GIVE SECOND SERIES OF VOCATIONAL LECTURES UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS TUESDAY AFTERNOON, APRIL 21, 1914. The second of a series of lectures on "Vocations Other Than Teaching" will be given tomorrow at 4:30 in Room 110, Fraser, and will consist of instruction in the instructor of drawing and painting in the School of Fine Arts, and the second, an illustrated lecture, by Dr. Margaret L. Johnson. K. U. BAND WILL GIVE CONCERT IN FRASER NUMBER 137. Will Make Seventh Annua Spring Appearance Tomorrow Evening The K. U. band will give its seventh annual spring concert tomorrow night at 8:15 in Fraser Hall. The boys have been working for the event for some time and under the guidance of their teachers have prepared some good pieces. The selections to be given are not the kind the band has been playing at athletic events but are the kind that are now being played by the leading professional bands of the country. This concert is the second one of year. Enterprise tickets will admit. PROF. HODDER DOES NOT FEAR WAR WITH MEXICO Professor Hodder left for Washington Friday night, and will return to Lawrence the latter part of the week. Deference is to be held April 22 to 25. The war scare coming up from the south does not prevent Prof. F. H. Hodder from meeting in Washington on Wednesday to the international Peace Conference. ATHLETIC BOARD HAS NO CANDIDATES YET Up to the present time no candidate has announced himself for the Athletic Board. Petitions for this board must be handed to President Dodd of the Student Council before six o'clock April 24. The election will be on Tuesday, April 26. The student members will be involved in student members any. Any man may become a candidate who is a member of the Athletic Association and who conforms to the scholarship eligibility rule governing student organizations. Prof. F. W. Blackmar, dean of the Graduate School, went to Topeka today to attend a meeting of the educational board of the Kansas Conference of the Methodist Church, where he will confer with them about the institution of religious work in state schools. Read your own KANSAN. BOARD RAISES LIMITS OF FACULTY SALARIES Advances ProfessorsFrom $2, 500 to $3,000—Others in Proportion IT MAY PROVIDE INCREASES New Schedule Puts Instructors at $1200—Ass't Professors at $1,700 and Associates at $2,200 A raise of salary is now a possibility for the proverbially poor professor. The Board of Administration yesterday raised the salary schedule of all K. U. teachers from a $200 raise for instructors to a $500 for professors. The Chair also assists, assists and associate professors. Any raise in the salaries will come as a recommendations from the dean of the school. The following statement in regard to increased expenditures over the amounts provided for in the University budget was made to a reporter by Bidil Kansan by a member of the Board of Administration yesterday; "Ordered that the general policy in regard to increases in salary for the next year as set forth in the recommendations of the Chancellor for April 17th. be approved as follows: "After consideration of the whole subject by the Deans in connection with the making of the budget for the next year it was agreed that the best policy to pursue in their judgment is to have a degree of control on the basis of the present year with items already ordered by the Board for next year, to which should be added the automatic increases rightfully expected by members of the faculty under contract, and, finally, as far asas funds permit such other factors to present salaries as seem for the best interests of the institution." Ordered that the following salary schedule be adopted: Instructors $ 600-1200 Assistant professors 1200-1700 Associate professors 1700-2200 Full professors 2200-3000 Elected Phi Beta Kappa Word has been received of the election of Phi Beta Kappa of Miss Constance Caton, at Leland Stanford University. Miss Caton was also appointed a fellow in history. She went to Stanford last fall from KU. Prof. D. C. Croissant will go to Wichita, May 6, to address the state meeting of the Kansas Confederation of Women's Clubs. Croissant to Wichita BOARD TELLS WHERE INCREASE HAS GONF Points Out That Many Deep apartments Had to Exceed the Original Budgets ENROLLMENT NOT ANTICIPATED Heavy Demands Made on Extension —$10,000 for Coal—Saving in Business Office of $6,000 "Few people realize how difficult it is to carry out the original plans of those who make up budgets for a great university like ours. It is impossible to anticipate every need that must be met. In connection with the budget presented, we are of interest to present a few figures based on the budget presented to the Board of Administration by the Chancellor and Deans, May 1st, 1913, showing when expenditures have been authorized over the amount recommended in that budget. "In the Engineering School the experience of working at that time unlocked for expenditures of Dean Marvin's salary as dean for three months and as Advisory Dean for nine months, and Mr. Porterfield's salary, made necessary by the orders of the Santa Fe Railway requiring their civil engineers to work in their service, and also the adding of Professor Goldsmith's department of architecture to that school. "That budget has also been exceeded in Bacteriology to the amount of $780 because it was necessary to buy extra microscopes. Needed Graduate Physician Needed Graduate Physician "It was also exceeded by the sum of $4,733 in the department of medical physiology and pharmacology of the University of California standardizing agencies that it was necessary to have a graduate physician devoting his whole time to that subject. "The budget was also exceeded in the department of laboratory diagnosis because of the necessity of buying $200 worth of extra microscopes. "It was exceeded by the sum of $2,233 for propping of the library floor, at Rosedale, which was sinking and the requirement that we paint the inside of the hospital to make it habitable. "In state service work the budget was exceeded by $3,594; $1,000 for publicity, $1,500 for the purposes of grasshopper prevention, $300 for pellagrass experiment and $400 for extra equipment for the water analysis department. In addition, the requirement of the United States Treasury Department that the University should certify the purity of water used on inter-state trains and the expenditure of $380 to cooperate with the Foundation in the To- beke Survey. Many in Correspondence Courses "In the Extension Department the budget was exceeded by $1000 on account of the very unusual enrollment in that department which made necessary the appropriation of $750 more than Mr. Price thought was needed by the city attorney of papers and also made necessary the use of extra stenographers. Forgets The Game Warden "The budget for the museum was exceeded by $600 arising from the relation of Professor Dyche to this museum," he wrote. He drawn $3,000 per year from the University budget. No provision was made in the budget for his pay. It became necessary to appropriate $1., for his salary, the other $2,000 to be paid and this adjustment makes this loss. "The budget for general expenses was exceeded in the appropriation to the amount of $12,124. $10,000 of this was for coal, $500 for the University Kansan, in part payment for 900 copies sent out daily, $250 for Graduate Magazine, $414 for Lawrence Today and Yesterday, $96 for Science Bulletin, and a few other small items. "Under general maintenance there was a gain in each department. The business office will cost $6,118 less than the budget, the Registrar's office $20 less than the budget, and theancellor's $100 less than the budget." "The Advisor of Women will cost $750 for the year." PLAN CRIBBAGE TOURNAMENT Experts in "15-2-15-4" Will Compete at Student Union There will be a cribbage tournament at the Student Union beginning Friday evening. Every student and faculty man is eligible for this tournament. All those who wish to enter can leave their names with Dad Gregory at the Union on or before Thursday. Dad will run the tournament. Each player will play the other player an even number of games and the results will be figured on the percentage basis. A prize will be given to the winner of the tournament. "T N E " ADORNS PRINCIPAL SIDEWALKS OF CAMPUS K. U. Prepares for Annual May Festival Skull, cross-bones, with the letters "TNE" beneath, and a rude arrow pointed upward at the left side of the skull appeared painted in white-wash on the principal sidewalks of the student district and the University. Adjacent to it were numerous janitors with long handed brushes had removed most of the piratical insignia from the campus sidewalks at eight o'clock. Fred Blachly, a junior engineer pledged Acacia Monday evening. Send the Daily Kansan home. Scene of a K. U. May Fete celebration. This year the May Queen, Winona McCoskie, will be crowned at the Pinafore production, which has been changed from April 27 to May 9. The Chorus Manager, Ward Hatcher, has been out of town for the past week and no practices held. Owing to the short time between Easter vacation and the date of the performance the management has placed the date at May 9. Tags will be placed on sale about May 1. [Picture of a large building with multiple levels, surrounded by trees and a street filled with people in uniforms. The scene appears to be a historical or architectural view.] K. U. REPRESENTED AT SCENE OF WAR Ralph W. Hutchinson, '86, is in Oil Business at Tampico FUNSTON IS NOW IN CHARGE General Wood, Will Probably Take Over Forces in Texas Now Under Former Kansas Boy At last report the University was also represented at Torreon, Mexico. A. C. Rose, graduated from the Collegio de la Universidad with the Continental Rubber Company. The University of Kansas has one representative in the immediate vicinity of the pending United States-Mexican war. Ralph W. Hutchinson, who attended the University in 1886, wrote that he had seen He has been heard from recently and doesn't seem to be the least bit afraid of any danger. "I don't know how many K U. people are in Mexico now," said Prof. us GEN. FREDERICK FUNSTON L. N. Flint this morning, "Perhaps it is getting too warm for some of them." A year ago there were seven in Mexico who are not there now." SIGMA NU WINS FROM PHI PSI IN SIX INNINGS Omer K. U. soldiers are Clarence Cole, captain; Adna G. Clark, captain in the artillery service; Roy Winton, lieutenant; and so on, surgeon B. Ballinger, attorney C. Little, of Kansas City, Kansas, was a colonel in the 20th Kansas. The University also has some soldiers who are likely to take active part in the War if such should be declared against Mexico. Fred Funston, brigadier-general, is the most prominent of these. At present he is in charge of the forces gathered in case of war these forces would probably be taken over of General Leonard-Wood, but without doubt General Funston would take active part in any invasion of Mexico. Probably the most prominent K. U. man in Mexico is Flint L. Walton, who is with the Mexican Central Railroad. Others who were there when last heard from are: Frank L. Gilmore, general superintendent of the power and electric company of the Mexican Railway, O. Calheira, civil engineer of the Mexican Central Railroad at Monterey; Charles Hainbach, '13, and Stephen L. Caffer, '11, both mining engineers in the El Tiger mine at Sonora. In a six-inning pitchers' battle the Sigma Nus got the big end of a 6 to 4 score. The game was called in the first of the seventh on account of darkness. Lefty Sproull twirled great ball for the Phi Pis allowing him to hit being allowed with 15 strike outs. For the Sigma Nus, Bromo Stelzer allowed four hits and obtained 12 strike outs. Weldum wielded. THINKS OVER-INSURANCE IS NATION'S GREAT EVIL That over-insurance is the greatest evil in the country today was the opinion of like Lewis, state insurance commissioner of Kansas, in the 'series of economic lectures yesterday afternoon in the Administration building. To Talk on Heaven and Hell Prof. R. A. Schwegler will give the eighth of his series of lectures on "The Fundamentals of Religion" at 7:30 tonight in Myers Hall. His subject for tonight will be on "Heaven or Hell" or "The Law of Retribution." UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Official student paper of the University EDITORIAL STAFF JOHN C. MADDEN . Editor-in-Chief LIOND HARRER . Associate Editor JOHN C. MADDEN . Senior Editor B. HENDERSON . High School Editor CALVIN LAMBERT . Sport Editor BUSINESS EDWYN ARABEL Business Manager RATE ELIVERD Circulation Manager JOE BROPH Advertising Manager CHRISTOPHER CHAIN Advertising CHARA S. STORKYANT Advertising REPORTORIAL STAFF BAM DEGEN HENRY BARBER CHARLES ALVINE CHARLES GIBSON HENRY BARBER CHARLES GIBSON GRAY SCHWINER LUCILE HUNGERMAN RAT CLAPPER LAWRENCE SMITH WILLIAM S. CADY GLBERT CALTAYON JOHN LANDON **announced** 32 second-class mail matter in late September. Kansas, under the act of March Subscription price $2.50 per year, in advance; one term, $1.50. Published in the afternoon five times a week, by students of the University of Kansas, from the press of the department of Journalism. The Daily Kaman atomics picture the undergraduate students who are further than merely printing the news by standing on top of the press; no journalists; to be clean is to be cheerful; to leave more serious questions to wider heads; to be more active; to identify the students of the University. TUESDAY, APRIL 21, 1914. He conquers twice who conquers himself in victory...Syru. BE PREPARED Buy your smelling salts early. Professors with weak hearts should take warning. Don't faint. Be very careful if you are afflicted with apoplexy. Open your Daily Kansan tomorrow deliberately. Let the shocking intelligence which it will convey dawn on your mind by degrees. The "yellow" edition will make an effort to be admitted to the mails on Wednesday Restoratives can be obtained at any drug store. ore. ENCOURAGEMENT The expression of President Hackney, of the Board of Administration favoring the donation of a site for the permanent Union on the University campus gives added impetus to the plans of the Student Council committee. If the land is donated money for the building itself will be obtained more easily. Work by the incoming Council, and plenty of it, is the additional element necessary to actually achieve definite results toward a Student Building on Mount Oread, next year. A HUMBLE REMONSTRANCE Will some one kindly explain why it is that while students are obliged to maintain a death-like silence in the library, under pain of expulsion, any professor may come in and make as much racket as he pleases? Probably there are few of us who have escaped being annoyed in this manner, not once but many times. Certain professors seem to feel privileged to go romping up and down the room, commenting audibly on the state of the nation, humming or whistling under their breath, and otherwise disturbing those at work. It never seems to occur to them that there are people in the room who are actually trying to study, and that music and light conversation, though recognized as valuable adjuncts at a dinner, are not particularly enjoyable or profitable to one in search of knowledge. Perhaps each professor thinks that since his own students (apparently) do not study, neither do any others. Maybe he thinks we should learn to concentrate by studying in noisy places. Possibly it is only thoughtlessness, or the traditional professional absent-mindedness, that is responsible for such conduct. In any case, O revered instructors, know ye by those presents that a noisy professor is as big a nuisance in a library as a noisy freshman, and may even, by his unseemly behavior, be responsible for some of the poor library work done for his classes! INTRODUCING CHARLEY-HORSE The "hash house" baseball circuit got away to a flying start Saturday. Games were being played all through the day and several scores of students either got up the next morning with sore muscles or stayed in bed—too tired to move. But there lies the advantage of the league. Students who have not exercised since they left the farm are working hard. Cobwebs which have remained in brains all winter are being wiped away, and stagnant blood is getting busy and moving through the veins with a rapidity that is fully as beneficial as it is surprising. AND LO! BEHOLD! There appears another "aristocracy within an aristocracy" in this human world of ours—an aristocracy of automobiles. Who is it that has not marked the haughty disdain of the six cylindered palace, with its electric lights, its self-starting apparatus, its one-man top, its break-down steering wheel, its elegant and luxurious cushions? Who has not noticed it nose out and pass, with noiseless scorn and pity, its less modern one-lunged, bumptious, charging brother? We wonder if the contempt of the one and the hatred of the other, find any response in the hearts and faces of children who are not in any reflection in the public mind? We are inclined to inquire about your car, before settling upon your popular "social" status—in this human world of ours—Michigan Daily ORGANIZED CHEERING The Executive Committee of the Student Council of Harvard College recently decided that organized cheering in the arena at all future hockey games would be abolished. The reason for this seems to be that an attempt at organized yelling has been made and failed. No one will be able to miss no point to the yelling except when Harvard lined up against Old Eli. Just how far this abolishment of organized yelling may go in intercollegiate yelling is problematical. The college yell is peculiar to American colleges and is practically unknown to European institutions. In the Olympic gymnasium at Stockholm a great mass number of Americans were present and "rooting" for the athletes from this country. This action was particularly displeasing to our English cousins who were unable to understand just what function the excited yelled played in athletic contests, where the prowess of a man depends in a way not shown in Roman. The raucous cries of the Americans made a singular contrast to the stolidity of the English. If were not that rooting had become a time honored custom in American institutions of learning, one could hardly fail to see that it does not represent culture but the capacity for true sportsmanship in withholding an outward demonstration of the feelings.—Indiana Student. ENDS AND ODDLETS PLENTY OF Aik Nielkebel The Piper Hiedsick band an op-ed writer that fast outside the campus gate Thursday morning"— Daily Nebraskan. A horrible precedent was set when a Pennsylvania girl won a breach of promisal hustle that had played "Post-office" with the victim at a party years ago. PLENTY OF AIR NEEDED But old baseball has skinned them all, it's coming makes me glad. CY HAS COMPETITION Some folks are wild for football. They think all else is tame. Do you see me. I should see. Basketball's exciting But as for me, I'd rather see A good old baseball game. And leave your job so unpleasant. The winter's o'er, it's spring once. So put away your books, my friend. And leave your lab as dreamed, once And baseball time is here. —Dennis Dante. A million dollars has been left to the University of Pennsylvania by a one-time member of the faculty. K. U. professors please file that item away for future reference. PROBABLY MEANT FATHER "Resolved that the wearing of the Varsity "I" be restricted to those to whom the insignia is given by the athletic board, their mothers, sisters, or finances."—Daily Iowan. CAMPUS OPINION WANT A TUG-OF-WAR To the Editor of the Daily Kansan: The committee on athletics in the Public Discussion class wishes to submit the following report: We, the members of the class in Public Discussion, in order to encourage a more healthy and yet an orderly class spirit, do ordain and establish the following resolutions for the Men's Student Council of the university of Kansas: that Each student should attend Friday in April there shall be a tug-of-war between the sophomore and freshman classes according to the following rules: 1. Twelve men shall be chosen from either class as opposing parties. 2. Each party shall choose a position on either side of Potter's lake. 3. An inch rope of suitable length shall be stretched across the aforesaid lake; these opposing parties then put their ropes in such a way to pull one another into the lake. 4. Either party being successful shall be the acknowledged champions for that year, and no other inter-class fights to be allowed. MKean, Doggett, Amicke, Committee. STANDARDIZATION Leland H. Jenks. The Editor of the shipky magazine You have been published over and an editor has precedes calls attention to the widely differing amounts of work required for credit in the several college courses. The clarion call has been issued for upperclassmen to come to the fore with personal testimony and suggestive drawn from their experience. We have been looking for some response to come to the distress call to back up the editor in his attack on the curriculum. But in vain. Not a senior has arisen to propose a panacack for the lilies of the system. It is not a way to get an education though at the University of Kansas. This appears strange. But isn't it due, Mr. Editor, to the fact that you are trying to make a mountain out of a molehill, to attack an evil where there is none. It is an undeniable fact that there is a tree in the forest that works hard and is worked in maximum and minimum courses. But is this necessarily an evil? Is the amount of work a student does in a course a reliable standard of the educational value of the subject. My own experience inclines me to question this. The so-called "snaps" in literature, pedagogy and philosophy, in which I did practically no work at all mean more to me as I look back over my college course than all the weary hours I roiled over the "sulphide group" and the conjugation of irregular Greek verbs. Not that I regret the time spent on the latter. But for real cultural gain as a stimulus to the application is the best in the course it is largely the education—I portfolio that the so-called "snap" courses have a value wholly out of proportion either to the amount of credit given for their completion or to the work done by the student. A course is not necessarily worthless because it is easy, or of surpassing value because it is hard. Real ground for criticism arises where a student is compelled to perform a lot of "hack work" which adds little or nothing to the value of the course. Professors in cultural courses, such as Group VII, fear the imputation of a "soft snap" and occasionally prescribe heavy outside assignments which bear no very vital connection to the course. It is along the line of these special assignments that criticism might bear fruit in bringing about more careful consideration of their intrinsic value. The communicant has missed entirely the point made by the Daily Kansan. When one professor selfishly requires work in a given course out of all proportion to the credit, something is wrong. Flunks follow rebellion although the student may take the necessary time from course work to make more interested. Conditions are as bad, at the other extreme, when it is possible to obtain a I grade in another course after a negligible amount of study. These "snaps" by the way, may and may not be the sort of collegiate work with great cultural courses and courses with setting will norms form exactly to set standards but improvement over present conditions certainly is possible. The lack of communications on the subject is indicative more of approval than opposition by our readers. Students are apt to "take their pen in hand" to criticize than to pro- prove. Witness the above. Proof that theally important position is the fairly apparent, even among faculty members is shown by the favorable interview from Dean Templin printed March 31. The Daily Kansan favors a questionaire sent by the University authorities to all seniors, asking for facts concerning experience with unfair term assignments as well as with unfair habits of grading. With facts as a basis for action the authorities could proceed along the proper channels and institute permanent reforms. TURN ON THE MIRROR. Copyright Hart Schaffner & Marx TO promise you the most and always to fulfill—that's our creed here. CITY CAFE 906 Mass. Strictly Home Cooking Ever try our Special 15c Lunch? You'll like it. Campus photography is best at bud-welling time. Try it with Kodak orthochromatic film from Woodward's.'-Adv. 135-3 SPRING SUITINGS FRANK KOCH TAILOR 727 Mass. PROFESSIONAL CARDS It's a simple one; you'll find nothing more comprehensive. PROFESSIONAL CARES W. C. MONNELLE, Physician and surgeon. Ohio State University, Mass., 1346 Tenn. St. Bald 1023 Names 938. It's a service very much worth your while; you ought to try it J. F. BROCK, Optometrist and Specialist J. F. BROCK, Office 802 Mass. Ball phone 698. HABRY REDING, M. D. Eye, ear, nose and throat. Glasses fitted. Office, F. A. A. Bldg. Phone, Ball 518. Home 612. G. A. HAMMAN. Glasses fitted. Eye, nose, and throat. Glasses fitted. Satisfaction Guaranteed. Dick Building. DR. H. W. HAYNE, Oculust, Lawrence. The Hart Schaffner & Marx clothing we sell is made in this same spirit of service; so is all the other merchandise. Our purpose is to carry only the most favored things in style and fabrics to satisfy your wants;to sell our merchandise at prices that give you a good profit in value received; to make right any failure to secure for you hundred per cent satisfaction. DR. H. W. HAYNE, Oculat, Lawrence, Kansas. J. W. O'BRYON, Dentist. Over Wilson's Drug Bell. Phone 507. J. W. O'BRYDON, Dent. Store Phone 807. J. R. BECHTEL, M. D., D. O'833 Message Street. Both phone, office and website. DR. H. T. JONES, Room 12 F. A. H. Residence. 150th Tenn. Phones 2113. G. W. JONES, A. M. M. D. Dlesses of Rutgers H. I., A. Bills, Rudolph, 1802, N.Y. DR. H. L. CHAMMERS. Office over Studio. Both phones. S. T. GILLISEPIS, M. D. O'Brien corner Infirmary Green st. Residence 728 Influenza hospital DR. BURT R. WHITE Osteopath. Phones. Ball 831. Home 257. Office, 745 Mass. 85. Peckhams 6d. W. Parsons. Engraver. Watchmaker and 珠宝师. 6e. W. Parsons. Jeweler and Jewelry. 7. Mason. CLASSIFIED Numbers The Home of Hart Schaffner & Marx Good Clothes Regal Shoes Emery Shirts Plumbers Phone Kennedy Plumbing Co. for gas code 4053. Mada lampa. 897. Mada. Code 1605. Ladies Tailors MRS. MELLISON, Dressmaking and Ladies Verners. Phone Bell 2411 West. Vernors. Phone Bell 2411 West. queen City Colony. System and sewing room. Mrs. B. Mark Brown, 834 Kail. Mrs. M. Mark Brown, 834 Kail. Hair Dressers *Student's Co-op Club.* Ub $3.00 per week. 1840 KY, Geo. H., Vanceell Stewart Barber Shops Go where they all go J. O. BOUK 918 Mass. hairdressing, shampooing, scalp and facial massage, shampooing, hair-frizz-care, saloio shampooing, appoggio-baldness call Bell 1387, Home 151. The敷伤师 Dressing Shop, 927 Mass 84. The Crowd was at the Music Festival The Crowd reads the Daily Kansan Advertise it in the Kansan If you are a High School Student You may be interested in knowing what vocations are open to the Graduate in Pharmacy The two year course and the three year course prepare for the examination in pharmacy by the State Board, admitting to practice as a pharmaceutical chemist. The four year course opens the way to such broader vocations as United States Chemist State Food Inspector State Drug Inspector Chemist for Drug Manu Chemist for Drug Manufacturers The number of such positions is steadily increasing. Address UNIVERSITY KANSAN VOCATION EDITOR LAWRENCE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN WANT ADS LOST—Last Thursday at Varsity tennis courts, a pearl handled pocket knife. Call 2926 Bell. LOST—Y. M. C. A. K book, containing valuable data. Finder Call 2414 Bell. 137-3* Send the Daily Kansan home. Limeade, 5c. at Barber's Drug Store...Adv. Sam S. Shubert MAT. WEDNESDAY & SATURDAY Passing Show of 1913 Return Next Week, "Peg o' My Heart!" WATKINS NATIONAL BANK Capital $100,000 Surplus and profits $100,000 The Student Depository You Can Earn a Good Living and lay up your money too. You can furnish food, clothes and equipment. Enrol as soon get ready and you'll secure a good position. Preemployment Bureau at your services. Business College. Best jobs and best Business College. No vacations. LAWRENCE Business College Lawrence, Kansas R. E. Protsch TAILOR Bert Wadham THE COLLEGE BARBER On 14th Street A. G. ALRICH Printing Binding, Copper Plate Printing, Bubber Stamps, Engraving, Steel Die Embossing, Seals, Badges. 744 Mass. Morses Chocolates McCOLLOCH'S Drug Store. A GOOD PLACE TO EAT AT ANDERSON'S OLD STAND JOHNSON & TUTTLE 715 PROPS. Mass. The Crowd Reads THE DAILY KANSAN If you want a crowd at your Play Dance Mixer Advertise it in the Daily Kansan Kansan Ads Pay FOR A K. U.-K. C. TROLLEY Missouri Promoter Promises Cars to State Line by December 1 Mount Orend will be a station on an electric line from Kansas City to Topeka if the plans of J. J. Heim, who built the St. Joseph-Kansas City trolley are matured. Mr. Helm says he expects to have cars running as far as Lawrence by downstream and now the north bank of the river from Bonner Springs, from which town a line is now partially completed to Kansas City. The Kaw will be crossed at Lawrence, and the line will extend out Massachusetts street, south of Mt. Hushup the Wakaraura valley to Topeka. CHEMICALS RETURN FROM EASTERN TRIP Prof. W. A. Whitaker and his party of chemical engineers, who have been in Chicago and other places where they are an inspection tour were on the hill again yesterday. Solve Mexican Tangle Solve Mexican Tangle The Mexican situation was cleared up at a meeting of the U. Debutat and night and Huerta was branded an infamous coward and given a severe reprimand for refusing to salute the U. Another Hawk Tryout Another HAWK 1903. The first rehearsal of the Hawk club "The Fortune Hunter" will be held in room 101. Fraser Thursday night at seven o'clock. Wednesday night the second and last try of the play will be held. Prof. H. B. Hungerford lead his class in entomology I on a field trip Saturday. ANNOUNCEMENTS Final Hawk Club tryout Wednesday day night April 22, Room 101, Fraser. Everybody turnout. Seven o'clock sharp. first rehearsal of the Hawk club will be held Thursday night, April 23, in Room 110, Fraser, at seven o'clock sharp. Sigma Delta Chi will meet tonight at eight o'clock at the Pi Upsilon house. LOST—A Chi Omega pin, finder please return to Helen Crane. 1137 Indiana. Reach and Spalding baseball guide at Carroll's.—Adv. Reach and Spalding baseballs at Carroll's.—Adv. Send the Daily Kansan home. ALTA VISTA ATHLETES HOLD TRACK TRYOUT Rival Literary Societies Meet Winners to Compose Track Team Alta Vista, April 21.—In the third annual interschool track meet the Vims defeated the Literattae, 64 to 56 here this afternoon. Because of the high wind and the condition of the track, no records were made. The Vims took in field events but the Vims piled up enough points on the track to win the meet. The relay was the deciding event. The athletes showed best form on the distance runs, and in the broad and high jumps. Dierking, a miler, and captain of the track team won the mile, his teammate Nick O'Neill today's victory gives the Vim society two victories out of three meets. (Bv Harry H. Morgan) The primary purpose of this meet was to pick the team which will represent the A. V. H. S. at the county meet next Friday at Alma and at various state meets. The winners of first and second make the team. Eureka, April 21—The Eureka high school baseball team has been victorious so far this season. It took Howard to a cleaning Friday before he pitched in the game. The first score was 9 to 1, the last 6 to 0. There hasn't been an earned EUREKA OPENS SEASON WITH TWO VICTORIES New Vaudeville Theatre —TONIGHT Ora's Musical Comedy Co Presenting THE MISTREL MAIDS Presenting After The First Show Wrestling Match Between HERMAN STROH and and YOUNG TOGO Togo will forfeit $60.00 if Stroh staya 15 minutes. Stroh use any style. Togo using Jiu Jitsu. Fischer's Shoes are Good Shoes Change of Program Daily PRICES 15c Reserved Seats 25c 10c Matinee Daily 10c Change of Program Daily EDGRS Buy your Footwear from us. That's an advantage. We sell more and show more footwear than any other shop in the city. We SELL more because SHOW more. We SHOW because we SELL more. AURORA Francis Bushman in "THE SHADOWS" 2 Reel Drama with Two Excellent Comedies TODAY TODAY A Timely Tip WARWICK Fischer's GRAND Think this over, then come and see us. run made against him this season. Ackrigh, a sophomore, pitched both games. He was the town team's star pitcher last season. In the game against Yates Center he struck out fifteen men. 2 Reel Drama, "VICTIMS OF VANITY" Score: Euroke: Howard: R. R. E. 9 14 0 1 2 6 Front 3% In. Back 1% In. Warranted Liner Barker Collars only at PECKHAMS BASE BALL GOODS With Two Other Good Reels The Sporting Goods Headquarters KENNEDY & ERNST 826 Mass. St. Phones 341 Score: R. H. E. Eureka 6 9 1 Yates Center 0 3 5 Is On the Press Now, Says Russell Clark—1100 Copies Ordered ANNUAL TO BE READY MAY 15 Russell Clark, editor of the Jay-hawker, was in Teopela last week and came back very much pleased with the work she had done in the book. The engraving is all finished and the plates have gone to the printers. The printing was de- $15 Men who have been paying $20 and $25 for their suits are buying ours at because our one price of $15 for any suit gives much better values than any store can give with, many prices. We want you to try these on and compare them in style, fit, tailoring, and material with any $20 suit in Lawrence. M. J. Skofstad Good Clothes 829 Mass. St. layed a short time by an error of the engraver in making up the border but this is now correct and the work is completed only by the completion of the book is on the press now. "It will take about a month to get the printing done and we expect the books to be ready for delivery about May 15," said Clark this afternoon. "The printers have made new type mats for the entire book and the proofs that have been turned in to the management are excellent." There have been 1100 copies of the book ordered. Those who have ordered books must be ready to pay by the time that they are ready for delivery. First Call for Salaries! The pay roll is now open for signatures and will be open until April 23. Kodaks are the most perfect pocket cameras. Woodward & Co., specialize with them.-Adv. 135-3 Allegretti candy sale at Barber's Drug Store.-Adv. Wednesday--- Tomorrow The last of "Three Onyx Days." Onyx Hosiery at reduced prices. Women's 50c Gauze Liseh lose at. 3 for $1.00 at. 3 for $1.00 Women's 35c Onyx hose at ...25c Women's 50c Boot Silk hose at. ...3 for $1.00 at. ...3 for $1.00 Women's 50c Silk Liaise hose at. ...3 for $1.00 Women's $1.50 Pure Silk hose at pair, . . . . . Men's 50c Pure Silk hose in black and colors at ...3 for 1.00 ITEMS FROM OUR APRILSALE OF SPECIAL INTEREST TO THE YOUNG WOMEN UP THE HILL Woman in fancy dress, blowing a trumpet. NEW COTTON BLOUSES of Crepe, Vale, Rice Cloth, and Printed Vole, worth $1.25 to $1.50 at ... 98c SLIP OVER NIGHT GOWNS of Crepe, in white, pink, or blue, and other sheer materials. $1.25 value at ...98c PRINCESS SLIPS of batiste lawn, lace trimmed in pink, blue or white. $1.50 value at ... $1.23 BLOUSES of Fancy Net or Shadow Lace, under trim- mings of ribbon in Camesole effect. $4.50 and $5.00 values at... $3.48 KIMONOS of Cheneys Florentine Silks in New Japanese and Oriental Designs. Regularly worth $5.00 each. $3.98 BRASSIERES. The 50c kind at. . . . . . . Innes, Bulline & Hackman One Want Ad in the Daily Kansan last week brought eleven replies to the advertiser Kansan Want Ads always bring good results UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN COVE SIDE PANEL RUNNER PANEL FIBRE COVER NO JOINT SIX PLY HARDWOOD RAWHIDE PAPER LIMEN COLD ROLLED STI The only guaranteed and insured trunk on the market today. We are exclusive agents in Lawrence for Indestructo trunks and bags. May we show you? Johnson & Carl Guaranteed for Five Years --- FRESHMAN BREAKS SOME GOLF RECORDS C. O. Anderson Appears on Oread Links and Wins the Weekly Tournament. Several records were smashed on the Oread golf course Saturday afternoon. A new star appeared in the local golf tournament and it did not require the aid of a high-power reporter. The player was O. Anderson, a freshman in the engineering school, was the played who established the new records. Incidentally Anderson won the weekly tournament on the schedule of the Ofead golf club, a handicap against bogey contest. At the end of 18 holes play, he was 2 up on the "colonel," playing with a handicap of four strokes to the round, while the scores of the other contestants in the tournament ranged from one to 10 down to bogey. Anderson made the first nine holes in 7 strokes, three less than bogey, and a new record for nine holes in tournament play. The previous record was 38, held by L. W. Kinnear, present state champion, and O. A. Barteldes, both former champions of the Oread golf club. driving and approaching had to be practically perfect, for the temporary putting greens are still treacherous and uncertain. On the last hole of the fourth round he drove the green within ten feet of the flag, a distance of 220 yards, and putted out in three. In Kinear, Funnell, Barteldes, and Anderson the local club now has a quarter of golfers the equal of any in the state. Kinear won the state championship at Topeka last year, and an effort will be made to have all four enter the state championship meet at Salina next June. For the second nine holes Anderson turned in a card for 43, making a total of 80 for the 18 holes. This equally bledoged, and clipped 2 strokes off the previous record for that distance in tournament play, C. E. Funnel, the present champion of the club, having played the two rounds in 82 when he won the championship in the tournament last fall. that dandelion colored Kansan tomorrow extras—5c Two rounds constituted tournament play, but Anderson was going well, so he tried two more rounds. He made the third round of nine holes in 42 and finished strong with a 40 for the fourth. This made a total of 162 strokes for 36 holes, a new long distance record for the Oread club and one that will probably stand for some time. To make these scores Anderson's buy them in the Kansan office Medic Building Student Plays Student Dances Student Mixers PAY When they are advertised in the Daily Kansan. 3,000 Students Faculty and Alumni read it every day.
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PAN-HELLENIC LEAGUE K. U. Calendar Tuesday 11:00 Assembly: 3-4 Chancellor's all hour to hour. faculty. 4:30 Y. W. C. A. Installation of officers. Florence Fuqua and the old cabinet (Myers Hall). 7:30 Glee club practice. (Fra.) 7:30 Y. M. C. A. "Haven and Hell." Prof. R. A. Schwegler (Myers Hall). 7:30 Christian Science Society (Myers Hall.) Wednesday 4:30 Vocations for College Women. "Applied Art," Miss Maria L. Benson. "The Playground Service." Dr. Margaret L. Johnson. Illustrated lectures. (110 Fraser.) 4:30 Practice Teachers' Messting. (Myers Hall.) 4. 30 Cerule Francais, (206 Fra.) 7:30 Band Practice, (Fraser.) 9:00 Y, M. C. A. Campaign Committee, (Myers Hall.) 8:15 Annual Spring Concert, the University band. (Fra.) 11:00 Entomological Club, (Mu.) 4.00 Entomology (Far.) Thursday. 4:30 El Ateneo. (306 Fra.) 3:30 Baseball, St. Marys vs. Law rence (McCook) 7:00 Amer. Soc. Mech. Eng., (1607 Tem.) 7:30 Civil Engineering Society (Mavinci) 8:15 Graduating Piano Recital Miss Morin, (Chapel). Friday. 1:500 Economics Lecture, Mr. J. 4:00 W. Cable, of Kansas State Utilities Commission. "What Should Be Done with the Local Public Utility?" (Snow Lecture Room.) Saturda Friday. 11:00 Assembly 1:30 Outdoor Interclass meet (Mc. Cash) Cook.) 8:15 Spanish Play, (Robinson Gymnasmium.) Sunday 4:00 Haskell Institute Gospel Team. (Myers Hall.) Athletics May 1—Nebraska-Kansas dual track meet, McCoak. May 2—Eleventh Annual Interscholastic track meet, McCoak. May 1-2—Seventh Interscholastic tennis tournament, McCoak. May 6-7-Baseball, Missouri at Lawrence. May 8- K. S. A. C., K. U. dual track meet at Manhattan. May 14-15-Baseball, Missouri at Columbia. May 16- M. U.-K. U. dual track meet at Columbia. May 21-22-Baseball, Ames at Ames, Iowa. May 23-Annual invitation H. S. meet at Lawrence. May 27-28-Baseball, K. S. A. C. at Manhattan. May 29-Baseball, St. Marys at St. Louis. May 30-Missouri Valley track meet at St. Louis. June 6-Western Conference track meet at Chicago. Future Events April 28- M. U. K. U. debate (Fra.) May 1—"Pinafore" University campus. May 1—Interscholastic High School Debate League. May 5-7-Managers' Week. May 11-11-Kansas Newspaper Week. State and National News. May 11-14 Kansas Newspaper Week State and National News paper Conference. ITTAI LUKE APPPOINTED Ittai Luke, a senior in the College, majoring in physics, has accepted an appointment as an assistant observer on board the non-magnetic ship "Garnicne" now engaged in making scientific surveys for the government. LIMEX LOCK APPOINTED TO U. S. SHIP "CARNEGIE" KANSAN AND COUNCIL TO PLAY Luke will take up his duties May 15 and is doing extra work now in order to get his degree. The ship will probably go first to Norway where the magnetic phenomena of that region will be observed. Newspapermen and Student Solon Cross Bats on Freshman Field Tomorrow Afternoon We expect some bathing caps this evening. Carroll's...Adv. One of the biggest sporting events of the season will be staged on freshman field at 4:30 tomorrow afternoon when the University Daily Kansan and the Men's Student Council clash at baseball. The Kansan's challenge was accepted last week by the Councilmen. Neither team has had practice and the game promises to keep the scorers busy. The Newspaper aggregation will be piloted with either Flint or Smith in the box and Henry will serve behind the bat.. Halloway and Carson will be the battery for the Council. men. John Madden will umpire the game. The Lineups; Kansan: Henry, c.; Smith, Fh; p; Laird. 1b; Busenbark 2b; Gibson, ss.; Eldridge 3b; Degen, rf; Hars, cf.; Sturtevant, lf. Councilmen: Carson, c. "E; Holloway, p.; Chinnery, 1b.; Hilton, 2b.; Evans, 3b.; Kennedy, ss.; Kninear, I; Dodd, Ddd.; Coggrins, rf. See our $1.50 racket for the young woman—it's a Spalding. Carroll's.—Adv. PRIZES OFFERED STUDENTS FOR AUTOMOBILE ESSAYS $100 to Go for Best Paper on Running and Dodging of Machines Machines Prizes of $100, $50, and $25 are offered to the students of the University by Motor Print. for the three best essays on "How to Run an Automobile" or "How to Dodge an Automobile." Th prizes are open to all students, and in some classes the essays may be substituted for a part of the class work. They may be from 300 to 2,000 words in length. For informa- must be written students should see Prof. D. C. Rogers, of the psychology department. Four judges will pass on the work: Prof. Hugo Muensterberg, of Harvard University; Professor Hollingsworth, of Columbia University; McCormick, of the International Harvester Company, and Director Bancroft, of the Class Journal. New York City. New shipment of tennis balls just received at Carroll's...Adv. Send the Daily Kansan home. KANSAS OEFER Columbia Professor Will be Principal Speaker at Schoolmen's Conference Next Week Prof. George D. Strayer of Teachers' College, Columbia University, was accepted the offer made to him at the time of his recent lecture here and will be the principal lecturer at the Kansas Schoolmen's Conference o start the week of June 29. Professor Strayer will give a series of live lectures on important topics of school administration and will also preside at a like number of round able discussions. Other speakers of the conference will be leading superintendents and hindrives. A program will be published at onlineliving the speakers and their subjects. Students' down town athletic headquarters, they are all, buying their gloves, balls, bats, and rackets here. There's a reason. Carroll's—Adv. Manicure articles, razors, stropers, toilet waters and powders at Barber's Drug Store.-Adv. Tennis shoes, three kinds, the kind that look and wear at Carroll's.— Adv. Watch for the "Yellow" Kansan Do you think that the Kansas City Post is yellow? Do you think that the New York Journal is yellow? Do you think that the Chicago Examiner is yellow? Well, you are mistaken. If this is your opinion your newspaper education is sadly deficient. For real rich ochre, saffron and burnt orange journalism, see the Yellow Kansan. Issued April 22. Extra copies (order now) Five Cents. BASEBALL----ST. MARYS vs KANSAS THURSDAY, 3 P. M. Tickets 25c. Coupon No. 20 Admits. Grand Stand Cushion Seats 15c extra STATE HISTORICAL SOCIETY TOPEKA KAN. UNIVERSITY DEFIES STATE FIRE LAWS 1000 IN RIOT! THE YELLOW KANSAN UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON, APRIL 22, 1914. VOLUME XI. NUMBER 138. 6 STUDENTS FELLED BY CLUBBED PISTOLS KANSAS FIRE LAWS FLOUTED IN ROBINSON AUDITORIUM Students' Lives Menaced by Lack of Escapes Barred Windows, and too Many Seats between Aisles—Gym Not Fireproof 6 STUDENTS FELLED BY CLUBBED PISTOLS OF ANGRY SHOWMEN University authorities have been flagrantly violating the state fire laws for the past two years. In 1911 the legislature passed a fire ordinance governing theaters and other places of assemblage, few provisions of which have been observed at Robinson Gymnasium, where hundreds collect for concerts, speeches, and other University affairs. The law requires that doors shall swing outward and not inward. This provision is vidited. Notices showing the way to exits are not posted, as the law requires. There are no doorways on the floor, even covered with steel framework. The law specifies that no seat shall have more than six seats intervening between it and an aisle. At the music festival 16 seats were in the majority of rows, and these were only lightly fastened to the floor as the law demands. The custodian of the building is held responsible under the provisions of the law. The fire chief, fire marshal, or town marshal of the town is supposed to see the provisions of the law are enforced. The law went into effect March 27, 1911. The penalty for disobedience to it is a fine of ten dollars a day for every day the offence against the law is not corrected, and each violation constitutes a separate count. STUDENT COUNCIL IN A FLOP; BACKS WATER ON KANSAN ELECTION The Student Council has "backed water" on the resolution declaring the editor of the Daily Kansan out of office. The action was rescinded at the secret meeting March 24. Persistent rumors to this effect have been prevalent on the campus since that time and today a reporter has written about him, getting his information from an authentic source. Five loyal supporters of the original ousting motion stood by their guns to the last. Every other member of the Council voted against them. The name of the lone deserter to the Kansan's side was not learned. Members of the Council were pledged to secrecy concerning the action; the idea being, evidently, that no one would know whether or not they "made asses of themselves" if nobody knew what was done. A committee was appointed at the same meeting to confer with the Board of Administration for the purpose of presenting the Council's case to that body with a recommendation for action. The Board failed to appoint Miller and Holloway. The Board has not met in Lawrence since March 24 until this week and the Council failed to assemble last night so no report has been made. Engineers To Tango "One hundred mid-week dates for Tuesday, May 5." This is the slogan adopted by the engineers at a meeting held yester- (Continued on page 4) In open defiance of all W. S. G. A. rules, the advice of Dean, Walker, and of the Men's Student Council, the Lingerings evening evening. Whether or not the women will accept the dates is a question, but the Engineers expect T. N. E., FRATERNITY OF ALCOHOL, ACTIVE ONCE MORE AT K.U.? T. N. E. is said to be active again appeared on the sidewalk. Monday 24. This society was founded at the Adolphus Busch School for Bartenders at St. Louis several years ago, and Kansas Malt chapter was installed a few days later. The fraternity of breweries has tests of brewery workers, and has stood for the best moral and ethical element in the profession. The Kansas Malt chapter flourished until five or six years ago, when it died out at the instigation of the county attorney and the board of regents. The county attorney said the county survey, but the governor had decided the lord must descend. For a few years T. N. E. maintained auxiliary and branch chapters in the neighboring commonwealth of Missouri, at Kansas City, Joplin, East Atchison and East Leavenworth, but with alleged reincarnation of Kansas Malt chapter interest in the Missouri auxiliaries has waned. To Have Student Pastors Student pastors for the Methodist churches in La Porte, Manhattan, and Edinburgh, will be established as soon as desirable ministers can be engaged. Prof. F, W. Blackmar attended a conference of the educational committee of the Methodist church at Topeka yesterday and the plan of student ministers was adopted. The Reason Why Because the Daily Kansan Board has made an unusual effort this year to restrain itself to conservative college journalism; because it believes it can purge its system of every atom of stored-up "yellowness" today; because it will now feel better inclined toward the ordinary newspaper grind; and because, perhaps, our readers will appreciate an opportunity to see how vastly worse the Daily Kansan might be made;—the Yellow Kansan makes its first and only blazing bow, this afternoon. CHANCELLOR PLEADS FOR CESSATION OF HOSTILITIES FRANK STRONG. To the Students of the University of Kansas: As Chancellor of the University I call upon you to refrain from collecting on the streets of Lawrence tonight and from any disturbance whatever. I ask that students of the University conform to the standards of conduct to which all other good citizens are expected to conform. I cannot think that the students of the University of Kansas would be willing to jeopardize the good name of the institution and its financial support by thoughtless and disorderly conduct. Chancellor. BILLIONS OF BACTERIA MENAGE SWIMMERS IN WATERS OF GYM POOL The water in the gym swimming pool contains from 500 to 8000 bacteria per cubic centimeter, according to analyses made by the state water laboratories. The bacteria are introduced by the swimmers. While this number is not remarkably large, and the bacteria are not sufficiently numerous to cause illness, they are deduced according to an expert chemist. The method would be to use hypochlorite of lime as a germicide. Get Extra Copies 50 COUPLES DEFY WEEK NIGHT DATE RULING IN PUBLIC Copies of The Yellow Kansan are for sale, five cents each. A reporter for the Yellow Kansar counted them on Massachusetts street between the hours of 8 and 12 o'clock. The violators include twenty sorority girls and at least thirty non-sorority girls. The men in most cases were fraternity men. This number does not include the various library dates and moonlight sonatas that for various reasons avoided a public appearance. More than fifty couples openly violate rules on Monday and Tuesday nights. This unusual transgression, coming as it does so soon, after the ratifica- Scenes from the Front (Continued on page 4) Struck Down When Crowd Gathered Before Entrance to Carnival----K. U. Men Unarmed The other man arrested was an armed employee of the carnival company, who attacked John Dodge, a sophomore in the College, with a clubbed revolver. Dodge was painfully cut and bruised about the face. The assailant was locked up on a John Doe warrant, on a charge of assault and battery. He was arraigned in police court this morning. Four students who witnessed the attack swore out the warrant. POLICE ASK AID FROM SCHOOL AUTHORITIES IN QUELLING TROUBLE The Chancellor's office was a busy place this morning. First a delegation from down town, composed of the Chief-of-Policie, the City Attorney, the Sheriff, and several other men appeared to会计,要求Chancellor to obtain the Chancellor's aid in keeping students from collecting on the Lawrence streets tonight. The Chancellor then held conferences with members of the Student Council enlisting the aid of the Council toward that end, who were anxious to do anything possible to prevent further trouble. prominent students on the hill said at noon that they had heard of no plan to visit the Carnival again tonight and the consensus of opinion seemed to be that the matter should be dropped. Six University students were painfully wounded, two men were arrested and the manager of the street fair was artistically egged in a clash between a mob of a thousand students, the entire Lawrence police force (all three of them, with the reserve) and armed roustabouts of the carnival company, on Massachusetts street, between nine and eleven o'clock last night. One student was arrested for pulling a street car trolley off the wire. Five minutes later he was released, upon the demand of the entire mob of students. Several students who approached too close to the officers were beaten about the head and shoulders. NOTE! THIS ALL HAPPENS AT NIGHT BUT IT IS HARD TO DRAW NIGHT SO WE MAK 17 DAYTIME YOUNG FILE WHO SAID TICKETS WOW! NOTE! THIS ALL HAPPENS AT NIGHT BUT IT IS HARD TO DRAW NIGHT SO WE MAKE IT DAYTIME A COUPLE OF DRUNKS THROUGH THE MIDA MERRY GO ROUND ALL THEIR OWN YOU VILLE WHO WOULD TICKETS WOW IT STARTED WHEN THE ANGRY MOB RUSHED THE VAUDEVILLE SPAT GET THE MAN WHO WOULD STRIKING ARGUMENTS WERE USED AT THE MONKEY SHOW NOTE ON BELLOW THREW THAT EGG NOTES ON BELLOW THREW THAT EGG NOTES ON BELLOW THREW THAT EGG CHANCELLOR COMES OUT IN STRONG LANGUAGE AGAINST ANY MORE GUICH STUDENTS GUIDE MONSTRACTIONS POPULAR SENTIMENT WAS AGAINST MALE ACQUISITION IN SIDE THE SHOW AT 3 A.M. THE FIGHT STILL PROGRESSED By Staff Photographer BUT I HAVE THOUGHT WHICH ONE IS RIGHT THE ATTENDING CENTER LET ME SAY A NEW WORLD SPAT SHOW OMINEE PUNKS NADA NO OWN OF BRUNKS THEY HADA ROUND HEIR OWN STUDENT MOB WAS HARD TIME TOGET THE COP TO ARREST THE SNOWMAN WHO GLASHED AT STUDENTS WITH ASWORD CHANCELLOR COMES OUT IN STRONG LANGUAGE AGAINST ANY MORE GUCH STUDENT DEMONSTRATIONS MALIN CHANCELLOR COMES OUT IN STRONG LANGUAGE AGAINST ANY MORE SUCH STUDENT DEMONSTRATIONS MALIV - Hostilities began when a hundred students marched to the New Vaudeville theater, where a burlesque show was given. By the time the crowd reached the theater there were three hundred in line at the ticket window, singing and shouting old college yells. The press at the ticket window was so great that part of the students were unable to procure tickets, and crowded past the ticket-taker at the door. When the students were seated in the fifteen cent section, they decided that they were entitled to better seats, and started for the empty rows in front. In four rows of the building, In a short time five hundred University men occupied the reserved section and the curtain went up. The show—, well this is no dramatic criticism—but with the assistance of the audience the actors would be fairly happy with the management was satisfied with the gate receipts. Here came a hitch. The manager tried to put the Washburn man off with $20, alleging a previous agreement. Weston denied any such proposal and accused of five hundred student, collected the disputed five-chaser. The students, who had grounds for belief that they were running the show, objected when the Jap wanted Weston to wear a Nipponese wrestler's jacket. Weston stayed the full fifteen minutes with the Jap, and demanded the money. Yellow Periol Petered Out The feature of the program was a jiu-pitsu wrestling contest. Young Togo, The Jap Demon, through his manager, had offered $25 to any person who could stay with him fifteen minutes. Weston, who said he was the athletic instructor at Washburn, had come down from Topeka to take the money. The students cheered wildly for Washburn and delegated Bob Hemphill, Varsity wrestler, as the referee. On To The Street Fair Then from wrestling fans, the students became carnival "hayrates." They requested admission at the animal show at Innes' corner, but were refused. They marched down Massachusetts to the horse-show, where the management staged an extra act for the benefit of two hundred insistent Oreadites who watched with glee a roustabout on a trick mule. Exhilateral and edified by this experience, the merry roosters returned to the animal show, where they met the Lawrence police force in the act of vandalism. Mr. Lawrence who was yanking from the wire the trolley on a South Massachusetts (Continued on page 4) UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN KAPPAS BAR HUGS AND CASTLE WALK AT SPRING PARTY Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority took official actions, yesterday in support of Mrs. Eustace Brown in regard to the students' need addressed to the students of the University. "The castle walk will not be permitted at the Kappa spring party" The Pi Phis announced a similar decision. The approval of the other sorceries is expected, as soon as this question is brought before them. "I do not put the ban on any one dance as danced at the Prom last week, but I do insist that the positions taken by many of the dancers in this program were composed of pure etiquette" commented Mrs. Brown, on the Prom dances. "I am proud of the action taken by the Kappas in this matter and feel sure that the other sororites will be only too glad to sustain their action when the question is put up to them. We are depending on the sororites to act as a force against it, because they are organized social units an dit is through them we must work. "However, I have firm faith in the moral attitude of the students themselves and I expect to see the adaption of these standards and not, through any official rulings." Following this party a prominent feminist man whose name is withheld by the media. The dancing party recently given by the Mu Phi sorority was the first official disapproval of the popular sorority made by any sorority in America. "I have had the best time tonight I ever did have at a dance, that was one of the cleanest and nicest dances I have attended." "I wish I could get an invitation to something new," he replied. "I just did this one step." Mrs. Brown recommended that the first step toward better regulations be the appointment of a standing floor committee. THEY DO SAY That a certain landlady on the west side of the hill has been so much annoyed this year by her girls getting married that next year she is going That a back porch is no place to gopeen, if neighbors all have back porches. That while the shadows cast on a moonlight night may look extremely That a very young grad and a professor old enough to know better have succumbed to the sweet spring weather, and are engaged. That a popular sorority girl was called up on the carpet for kissing her man on the front porch. (Moral: take him into the house next time.) That a fraternity freshman paid to be beaches through Spanish I, and the beach. That some of the biggest spenders on the hill do it on $7.50 per by living on hamburgers and coke. Ask Brick. That the Sigma Nu dog ran him almost to death chasing cinn and canes, balls, and has been in a rest he hopes to be here for commencement. That the girl seen crawling from a third story window quite early one morning last week was NOT eloping, but merely rescuing the corpse of a mouse she had inadvertently thrown into the drain pipe. That the midnight silence was rudely obscured by a bunch of raindrops and raindrops again. That a girl from the hill scandalized the diners at a down town café Friday night by chatting long and confidentially with one of the waiters. But they were only discussing their last trig quiz. That a senior law was tubed one night for persistently stinging the girls at his boarding club who begged him to dance with them. That a houseful of freshman girls received a letter purporting to come from the Women's Student Council, commanding them to wear green hair ribbons from now till the close of school. And one of them bought a ribbon before it occurred to her to call up the president of the council. That an apparently sane girl actually turned down a bid to the Prom! But she is only a freshman, and will never do it again. If you get sore at something in this issue of the "Yellow" Kansas cool off with a bottle of McNish's soda water. —Adv. If you want something exclusive in stationery, call at Wilson's Drug Store.—Adv. 138-5 Caramel nut ice cream at Wiedemann's-Adv. We Make Our Own Private Hells, Says Prof. Schwegler Yellow Kansans—Extras 5c. K. N. G. Is Ready To Defend Flag In Greaserland!!! War exists. American BLOOD has been spilled in Mexican territory. Yesterday after the American marines had captured the customs house at Vera Cruz they were fired upon by the barbarians on our south. Four marines were killed and 200 Mexicans were sent on a journey to a place where the temperature does not require a red pepper stimulant. The seriousness of the condition is brought home to us when we think of our own brave boys who may be called at any minute. According to Captain Jones, of the local company of the K. N. G., who was in Topeka yesterday, the militiamen expect to be called upon at any time after the bill giving the president power to call out the army passes congress. Dan Hazen, captain of the K. U. track squad, will go tonight to Philadelphia where he will enter the big eastern track meet Saturday afternoon. Hazen is entered in the high burdles and the broad jump. "There is no question but that there will be plenty of volunteers to fill up the company, if volunteers are called," said Captain Jones today. Captain Hazen is in good condition for the meet but at his best the K. U. spinner will have to hustle to get the running with his competitors. "Hell is of your own making; Heaven is largely the same." So declared Prof. R. A. Schwegler in an address last night at a meeting of the University Young Men's Christian Association, at Myers subject of Professor Schwegler's address "The Fundamentals of Religion." Yellow Kansans—Extras 5c. "There is just one fellow to blame for his Heaven or Hell, and he is sitting where you are," and the speaker swiped his hand over the au- "We grow by living and die by refusing to grow. Sin is refusing to live a large life; not saying to God, I hate you. God doesn't care whether we lie, swear, or cheat; if He were consulted about it, He would say that we were sadly in need of something to do. According to Professor Schwegler, the idea has been handed down to present day civilization to scare men into being good. God would certainly have had such helpless punishment as has been pictured in old Italian paintings. "There is a Hell and a Heaven! It equals what the individual makes it. Is wrong, not because it hurts but because it hurts the individual." Like eating fresh pineapples, the pineapple ice at Wiedemann's..*Adv.* Pineapple ice made from the fruit at Wiedemann's."—Adv. Best quality one pound box writin- paper at Headleys—Adv. Yellow Kansans—Extras 5c. EXTRA COPIES 5 CENTS "Good Things to Drink" Ask the Extension Division All kinds of drinks, soft and hard, from the fountain of knowledge. Correspondence Courses, $5 up Lantern Slides, - - express Package Libraries, - - postage Lectures, - - - - $10 Full list, with prices, etc., on application. Address The University Extension Division University of Kansas Lawrence Two Sales In The Suit Room Of Importance To You Kick and howl at the Carnival but for good eats they stop at the OREAD CAFE "Just a Step from the Campus" The Angry Mob Boys, you did fine last night----but if you need more stimulant, get a Coke at 1031 Mass. St. REYNOLDS BROS. Fancy Tailored Suits Early callers will have the advantage of the choicest selection of model, shade and size. Silk Dresses THE SILK DREESSES include the smartest styles and the wanted shades of Crepe, Crepe Imprime, Silk Poplin and Chiffon Taffeta. Silk Dresses, priced earlier at Silk Dresses, priced earlier at Silk Dresses, priced earlier at ... $18.75 $22.50, $25.00, $27.50 at ... $16.50 at ... $10.75 Silk Dresses, priced earlier at Sik Dresses, priced earlier at $18.00 at ... $13.50 Many of these are of very recent purchase and insure the styles that are final for the season. A Tier and Ruffled Models. Suite suited earlier, at $22.50 80s. Every popular Spring shade and material is represented in Panier, Three Time and Duffed Models Suits priced earlier at $18.00 and $20.00 at .at. $13.75 Suits priced earlier at $27.50 CO. Suits priced earlier at $27.50 and $30.00 at . . . $21.75 Suits priced earlier at $22.50 and $25.00 at ... $18.75 Suits priced earlier at $32.50 to $37.50. ... $24.75 Silk Suits that were $30.00 Silk Suits that were $30.00 and $55.00 at.. $24.75 Silk Suits that were $37.50 and $39.75 at ... $27.50 Sikh Suits that were $400.00 $37.50 We show more than 1000 styles of Wash Dresses for every occasion. Many of them pretty enough for party wear. In Crepe, Voile, Tissue, Rice Cloth, in white and color combinations. Prices at . . . . $3.75 to $16.50 Innes, Bullene & Hackman Eat at Lee's And you will tear the rest of the carnival to pieces Full line of McGregor Golf Clubs, Worthington and Goodrich Golf Balls UNIVERSITY BOOK STORE BASE BALL GOODS The Sporting Goods Headquarters KENNEDY & ERNST 826 Mass. St. Phones 341 KENNEDY & ERNST THE NEW YORK TIMES Continual pleasure for the entire household Pleasure is the big thing with all of us. We crave for amusement—we want to share in the music and fun that bring delight to others. With a Victrola in your home you can enjoy the world's best music and entertainment whenever you are in the mood to hear it. We'll gladly demonstrate the Victrola and play any music you wish to hear—stop in any time. Manager Real-earth any day. Victoria's $15 to $200. Victors $10 to $100. Terms to suit. Bell Bros. Music Co. VICTOR THE TRAVELER'S LINE R. D. Krum A GOOD PLACE TO EAT AT Our caramel nut ice cream is different from others. Try it. Wiedemann's—Adv. ANDERSON'S OLD STAND JOHNSON & TUTTLE 715 PROPS. Mass. CITY CAFE 906 Mass. Strictly Home Cooking Ever try our Special 15c Lunch? You'll like it. SPRING SUITINGS FRANK KOCH TAILOR 727 Mass. MARRY REDING. M. D. Eyes, ear, nose. Bell. 513. Bells 513. Phone. 513. Bells 513. PROFESSIONAL CARDS J. F. BROCK, Optomist and Specialist phone: 212-857-6042 Office 602 Mass. Bell phone 605 957-3144 W. C. "MCOONELNY," Phydran and Gerrie. 1985. *Phydran* 342; 360. Novo 1989. *Induction*, 1346. Team Tx. Henderson. 1994. *Induction*. G. A. HAMMAN M. D. E. eye, ear, and Sattva. Guaranteed . Dick Building. Sattva. DR. H. W. HAYNE, Oculist, Lawrenoch, Kanada. J. W. O'BRYON, Dentist, Over Wilson's Drug Store. Belfast Phone 507. J. B BECHIEL, M. D. O. 833 Musa- jacchus Street. Both phone, office and office number. O. W. JONES, A. M. M. D. Disease of the stomach, surgery, and gynecology, suite 1. F, A. B. Aldg. Residence, 1201 Ohte St. Both phones. 35. DB, H. T. JONES, Room 10. A. F. A. Bldg. Residence 130 Tenn. Phases 211. DR. H. L. CHAMHERS. Office over *Squares! Studio*. Both phones. DR. BURT R. WHITE Osteopath, Phones, Bell 938, Home 257, Office, 745 Mass. 8s. Ed. W. Parnas, Engraver, Watchmaker and Jeweler. Master of Jewelry and Jewelry. Bell Phone Man. S. T. GILLISEP, M. D. O'Dowell correr 824. Phones 596. Residence 728 101. Phones 596. CLASSIFIED Plumbers Phone Kennedy Plumbing Co. for, gas phone 655. Mazda lamps. 973. phone 655. Ladies Tailors MRS. ELLISON, Dressmaking and Ladies Vermont, Phone Bohl 2411 West. Queen City College. System and sowing Queen City College. System and sowing school, Mrs. G. Mark Brown, 834 Ky. Hsi- l, Mrs. G. Mark Brown, 834 Ky. Hsi- Hair Dressers Hairdressing, shampooing, scalp and facial massage, shampooing, hair-fits, "Mar- lark" haircuts. Services for men's meals call BAL 872, HOME 51, THE. Saleh Hair Dressing Shop, 927 Mass 84. Barber Shops Go where they all go. J. C. HOUK 918 Mass. Student's Co-op Club. $2.50 to $3.00 used 13kd 143H. Geo.H. Vansell Stewart UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN You Can Earn a Good Living and in a way earns you a promotion from the Lawrence Business College. Enrol at one! get ready and you'll ensure a good position. Write for catalogue to Kansas oldest and best Business College. No vacations. BUSINESS COLLEGE Lawrence, KANSAS Sam S. Shubert MAT. WEDNESDAY & SATURDAY Passing Show of 1913 Return Next Week,"Peg o' My Heart" WATKINS NATIONAL BANK Capital $100,000 Surplus and profits $100,000 The Student Depository Bert Wadham THE COLLEGE BARBER On 14th Street R. E. Protsch TAILOR A. G. ALRICH Printing PRINTING Binding, Copper Plate Printing. Bubber Stamps, Engraving, Steel Die Embossing, Seals, Badges. 744 Mass. Our postals, city views, can't be beaten—bive five cents per dozen at Hoadleys.—Adv. 6 STUDENTS FELLED BY CLUBBED PISTOLS OF ANGRY SHOWMEN (Continued from page 1) street car. The police started toward the station with their victim. The mob, now a thousand in number, objected, vocally and physically. Owing to the congested condition of Massachusetts street at this point, the police halted at the Eastern Star Bakery with their prey. The students passed on, criticizing the officers, until the latter, after some growth hickory. Several "innocent bystanders" were beamed by the excited constabulary, but the prisoner was successfully convoiled inside the bakeshop. Prisoner Was Retaken Five hundred strategists executed a flank movement and swiftly invested the best of their skills in the meantime the rest of the army deployed in front of the citadel and the officers, game to the last, but hopelessly surrounded, yielded up their prisoner, while the triumphant studies excalled to the core of "What's the matter with the cops?" But one of the vanquished generals took his defeat with ill grace, and retreated, angrily murmuring dire threats. The gang took his insulting Want a bathing cap? Large assortment and fresh goods at Wilson's Drug Store...Adv. 138-5 McCOLLOCH'S Drug Store. epithets to heart and pursued him to the stairway south of Weaver's store, where he faced about and began to harangue the enemy. His remarks were ill-timed, and a company of sharpshooters armed with hen grenades, supplied by Commissioners of eggriculture shelled the orator, forcing hi mto beat an albuminous retinue up a stairway. At Sword's Points Flushed with victory, the army of occupation moved to the animal show at Innes' corner, where they had been repulsed previously. Here they met organized resistance. A company of carnival outstautburs, armed with bludgeons, cavalry sabres, six-shoters, and iron tent stakes, were entrenched behind the ticket stand. Twice the crowd advanced, and twice the show gunmen repulsed the attack, wielding their rtw-o-h-fours, clubbed revolvers, and swords with deadly effect. Several students were hurt. The showmen were unscathed, as the students were not armed. 847 Mass. Street THE REXALL STORE. At the third attack, the carnival ruffians fell lapon the students with a savage frenzy, and Dodge was felled by the onslaught of two gunmen. His head and face cut by a clubbed revolver. When assaulted he was standing on the curb, watching the fracas. Paul Dyer, another student, was cut in the back of the neck with a sword, and had to be carried to Dr. Keith's office for treatment. Peace Dove Hovers Two Eggs Peace Dove Hovers Two Eggs The manage of a nearby merry-go-round, offered the boys free rides, but they declined with thanks. Observing the advantages of arbitration over animal cruelty, the manager of the unattributed animal show, sent a hurry call for the diplomat. The plenipotentiary mounted the barker's arena and suave addressed the students. But Colonel Altmann, the proprietor of the row, who had led the troops in the attack, was killed. temperizing measures. He sprang to the rostrum, and emitted exactly sixteen words. On the first syllable of the seventeenth, there was an egg. It failed of its mission, but a second egg did not succeed, its ruddy cheek of the fery Colonel. The sword-slashed students was avenged. The Colonel beat it. Showman in Jail The students were indignant at the spirit of intolerance and resentment shown at the animal show, the murder of the animal, and their opponents did not part the best of friends. The brutal attack of Dodge was too much for undergraduate sense of humor, and a warrant was sworn out for the arrest of the oJoyobleable wwordplay. Four students are named as witnesses. WANT ADS LOST—Last Thursday at Varsity handed a pocket packet of unfit. Call 232-621. Bell. LOST—Y, M. C. A. K book, contain- ual data, data. 2414 Bell 137-* * LOST-A Chi Omega pin, finder please return to Helen Cranle, 1187 Street A, Chicago, IL 60615 FOR RENT—Modern twelve room, house, very desirable for club or fraternity. Bell 1823. 138-6 HAT COLLAR WARWICK Front 3% In. Back 1% In. Warranted Linen Barker Collars only at PECKHAMS PINAFORE MAY BE SHIPWRECKED; CAST HASN'T PRACTISED The "Pinafore" the outdoor air, which was to have been given by the W. S. G. A. April 27 will not be given until May 9. owing to the management not being able to get the cast together for practice. The director of the chorus left town directly after Easter, on business, and did not return until this week. "We are going to give this opera at any cost," said Maudie Lourrey, of the W. S. G. Jr. morning. "Everything is fixed up now and we have arranged to hold several all-night practices, so we can have everything ship-shape by May 7th." STANDISH ARROW COLLAR 2 for 25¢ Cluett Peabody & Co. Inc. Makers This "yellow" Kansan is surely a 'hot' one, but for a "cold" one take a bottle of Mnish's Nisha water.—Adv. ANNOUNCEMENTS Special: Caramel nut ice cream at Wiedemann's—Adv. First rehearsal of the Hawk club will be held Thursday night, April 23, in Room 110, Fraser, at seven o'clock sharp. Final Hawk Club tryout Wednesday night April 22, Room 110, Fraser. Everybody turnout. Seven o'clock sharp. Was Your Head Hurt in the Riot? We have a complete line of anoitments--egg stains easily removed. Raymond's Drug Store 817 Masss. St., our new location PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS PRESCRIBE, AND HOSPITALS USE, OUR WINES AND LIQUORS.ON ACCOUNT OF THEIR SUPERIOR MEDICINAL PROPERTIES AND PURITY. "GOOD THINGS TO DRINK" Direct From the Vineyard and Distillery to You We Specialize in Absolutely Pure WINES and BRANDIES for Cooking Purposes Our Great Premium Offer. Absolutely Free! AS AN INDUCEMENT TO GET YOUR TRADE, WE WILL FROM NOW UNTIL THE FIRST OF JANUARY, GIVE YOU A COUPON WITH EACH PURCHASE. WHEN YOU RETURN US COUPONS, SHOWING PURCHASES AMOUNTING TO TEN DOLLARS ($10.00) YOU CAN HAVE YOUR CHOICE FREE, OF ONE OF OUR FAMOUS DECORATED CHINA OR CLASS SETS. THE RETAIL PRICE OF THESE SETS BEING $3.50. THEY WILL BE A SPLENDID ORNAMENT FOR YOUR SIDEBOARD OR PLATE RACK. THESE SETS ARE CAREFULLY PACKED, AND CAN BE SHIPPED OR DELIVERED ANYWHERE WITHOUT DANGER OF BREAKAGE, AND WILL APPEAL TO YOU BOTH FOR THEIR BEAUTY, AND PRACTICAL USE. We Retail at Wholesale Prices. We Retail at Wholesale Prices. Our Own otting of High Grade Whiskies, Aged in Bond and Purity Gingerbread. These whiskies must not be confused with the ordinary average brands, either in price or quality, they are just the thing for you "side-board" or "medicine chest." Jones Pure Malt Whiskey . . . The Quart $0.75 Our Own Bottling Pure White Corn Whiskey . . . The Quart .75 Our Own Bottling "Pure White Corn Rye Whiskey . . . The Quart .75 J. Monk's Famous Farm Sour Mash Whiskey . . . The Quart .1.25 "Kinsey" Pure Pennsylvania Rye Whiskey . . . The Quart 1.00 "Famous Aristocracy" Rye Whiskey . . . The Quart 1.00 Our Own "Stanley" Whiskey . . . The Quart 1.00 Genuine "Old McBrayer" Whiskey . . . The Quart 1.00 Original "Elk Brook" Whiskey . . . The Quart 1.00 "Pure Springs" Real Whiskey . . . The Quart 1.00 Woolner & Co.'s "Famous Rock Cave" Whiskey . . . The Quart .75 "Old Nelson" Whiskey . . . The Quart .75 "Our Monk's Farm" Whiskey . . . The Quart .75 "Famous Red Elm" Whiskey . . . The Quart .65 Special Bottling. Very Old "Private Stock" Whiskey . . . The Quart 1.50 BOTTLED IN BOND WHISKIES By Uber Under Government Supervision Bottled Especially For Us Under Government Supervision. Good Old Gugenheimer Pure Rye. The Quart 8.100 Clarke's Pure Rye. The Quart* 1.00 Clarke's Pure Mash. The Quart 1.00 Old Belle of Anderson. The Quart 1.00 Extra Old O. F. C. The Quart 1.50 Genuine Old Crow. The Quart 1.50 McBrayer's Famous Cedar Brook. The Quart 1.00 Old Sunny Brook Bourbon. The Quart 1.00 Old Bond and Lillard. The Quart 1.25 We are "Specialists in Pure Drinkables." A Little Wine For "Thy Stomach's Sake" FINE DOLD SCOTCH WHISKIES. "The King" Scotch Whiskey, direct Importation from Glasgow...The Quart 1.50 "Old Smuggler" Scotch Whiskey, direct Importation from Stirling...The Quart 1.50 "SOCIETY BRANDS" COCKTAIES The Ingredients Are Guaranteed Absolutely Pure and Correctly Blended, the Result Being a Perfect "Cocktail" Superfine Quality "Martini" Cocktail. The Quart $1.00 Superfine Quality "Manhattan" Cocktail. The Quart 1.00 BRANDIES—Pure Fruit—Distilled From the Fruit. Genuine Old Abbey Apricot Brandy. The Quart 1.00 Genuine Old Abbey Apricot Brandy. The Pint .50 Genuine Old Abbey Apple Brandy. The Quart 1.00 Genuine Old Abbey Apple Brandy. The Pint .50 Genuine Old Abbey Peach Brandy. The Quart 1.00 Genuine Old Abbey Peach Brandy. The Pint .50 Genuine Old Abbey Blackberry Brandy. The Quart 1.00 Genuine Old Abbey Blackberry Brandy. The Pint .50 Plermont ("The Star") Brandy. The Quart 1.00 J. & P. Martell "Very Old" French Brandy. The Quart 1.50 J. & F. Martell "Very Old" French Brandy. The Pint .75 Eureka California Grape Brandy. The Quart 1.00 Eureka California Grape Brandy. The Pint .50 Eureka California Apple Brandy. The Quart 1.00 Eureka California Apple Brandy. The Pint .50 Eureka California Peach Brandy. The Quart 1.00 Eureka California Peach Brandy ... The Pint .50 "Eureka" Brand Superior "Old Vintage" Wines. Port, Sherry Angelica, Muscatel and Catawba ... The Quart $0.75 Special Bottling California "Fruit Wines." Apricot Wine ... The Quart $0.75 We Call Particular Attention to Our Line of Spanish Ports and Sherries. We Wish to Stimulate You. Not Inbate Beer. Our "Coupons" Are Valuable. Ask for One With Each Purchase. Direct Importation, choice of Spanish or French. The Quart 1.00 Direct Importation, Spanish or Khamba$. Sherry Wine. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . The Quart 1.00 Assorted Brands, Special Bottling, "Scupernong" Wines. Bear's Pure "Scupernong" . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . The Quart .50 Sweet Valley Wine Co's "Puritan Belle" . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . The Quart .50 Garnett & Co's "Virginia Dare" . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . The Quart .50 Grantville Brand's Powder Infused "White Catawbia" Victory Juice, a Genuine Unadulterated Grape Juice. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Grape Juice, a Genuine Unadulterated Grape Juice. The Quart .50 SWEET AND DRY WINES Aged and Bottled in Our Own Wine Cellars. In putting up these wines we use only the highest type of American vintages, especially adapted for wine tasting. "Three Star" Brand Pure California Wines Port, Sherry, Muscat, Angelica and Catawbia . . . The Quart . . . 35 "Gold Label" Brand "Old Vintage" Wines. Port, Sherry, Muscat, Angelica, Catawba, Malaga The Quart . . . 50 DRY (SOUR) WINES These Are Real "Banquet" Wines, Properly Aged and Bottled for That Purpose Extra Old Bottling Fine Table "Sauterne" (White), two ages. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . The Quart $0.75 Extra Old Bottling Fine Table "Sauterne" (White), two ages. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . The Quart 1.00 Special Bottling Fine Table "Burgundy" (Red), two ages. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . The Quart .50 Special Bottling Fine Table "Burgundy" (Red), two ages. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . The Quart .75 "Old Alzheimer" Rhine Wine, Bottled in Germany (White). . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . The Quart 1.00 Extra Bottling California "Riesling" (White). two ages. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . The Quart .50 Extra Bottling California "Riesling" (White), two ages. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . The Quart .75 "Good Digestion Waits on Good Appetite."—We Can Help Your Appetite. We Conform With all "Pure Food Laws" Both State and National. Fine Smooth California "Claret" (Red), two ages. . . The Quart . . . 35 Fine Smooth California "Claret" (Red), two ages. . . The Quart . . . 50 Real Old California "Zinfandel" (Red), two ages. . . The Quart . . . 75 Real Old California "Zinfandel" (Red), two ages. . . The Quart . . . 75 also Your Digestion An Extraordinary Assortment of Very Superior Quality. Extra Old Bottling, Imported Jamaacia Rum. The Quart $1.50 Extra Old Bottling, Imported Jamaacia Rum. The Pint .75 Fine Old New England Rum. The Quart 1.00 Fine Old New England Rum. The Pint .50 Gordon & Co.'s Dry Gin. The Quart 1.00 Sir Richard Bruce Extra Dry Gin. The Quart 1.00 Gauston's Extra Quality London Dry Gin. The Quart 1.00 Acorn Brand Buchu Gin. The Quart 1.00 Superfine Quality Sloe Gin. The Quart 1.00 GINS AND RUMS Bitters, Champagne, etc. Mumm's Extra Dry Imported Champagne . . . The Quart $4.00 Mumm's Extra Dry Imported Champagne . . . The Pint 2.00 Cook's Imperial Champagne . . . The Quart 2.00 Cook's Imperial Champagne . . . The Pint 1.00 Italian Vermouth . . . The Quart 1.00 French Vermouth . . . The Quart 1.00 Pepsin Stomach Bitters . . . The Quart 1.00 Fennet Braun Italian Bitters . . . The Quart 1.00 Dr. Koehler's Magen Bitters . . . The Quart 1.00 Boonekamp Magen Stomach Bitters . . . The Quart 1.00 Pale Pure Distilled Orange Bitters . . . The Quart 1.00 Imported Italian Ferro China Bitters . . . The Quart 1.00 We Believe in Use, Not in Abuse. Temperance in all Things is Always Royal Crown Gin. The Quart .75 Direct Importation Seahorse Holland Gin. The Quart 1.50 Direct Importation Seahorse Holland Gin. The Pint .75 Extra Quality Posthoorn Gin. The Quart 1.00 Extra Quality Posthoorn Gin. The Pint .50 Steinhager German Style Gin. The Quart 1.50 Victoria Brand Extra Distilled Dry Gin. The Quart 1.00 Our Very Complete and Very Choice Assortment of Liauees, Cordials. Temperance in all Things is Always Best. All Goods Are Sold Subject to Inspection, and With Privilege of Return. Germania Getreide Kummel . . . The Quart 1.00 Pernod's French Absinthe . . . The Quart 2.00 Direct Importation, Stockholm "Arraks Punsch" . . . The Quart 1.50 Garnier & Co., Imported French Creme de Menthe . . . The Quart 1.50 Liqueur Benedictine . . . The Quart 1.50 Imported Italian Chiniati Wine. . . The Quart 1.00 Imported Italian Chiniati Wine. . . The Quart 1.00 Goverd Fet & Chardonnay . . . The Quart 2.00 Faust Brand, Large Red Cherries, in 'Marachino' . . . The Quart .75 Faust Brand, Large Red Cherries, in 'Marachino' . . . The Quart .40 Silver Shield Extra Dry Champagne . . . The Quart 1.50 Silver Shield Extra Dry Champagne . . . The Quart .75 Ripin's Special Champagne . . . The Quart 1.50 Ripin's Special Champagne . . . The pint .75 Original Red Label "Sparkling Burgundy" . . . The Quart 1.50 Original Red Label "Sparkling Burgundy" . . . The pint .75 Old California Peach Cordial . . . The Quart .75 Old California Cordial . . . Thequart .75 Old California Apricot Cordial . . . The quart .75 Old Panama Banana Cordial . . . The quart .75 Old California Blackberry Cordial . . . The quart .75 Crystallized "Rock & Rye". . . The quart .50 Crystallized "Peach & Honey" . . . The quart .50 Organs and Rock Candy) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . The Quart. .75 Our Own Bottling "Peach & Honey" (Pure Peach Brandy and Rock Candy). . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . The Quart. .75 Full Proof Pure Grain Alcohol, Bottled Soley for Full Proof Pure Grain Alcohol, Bottled Soley for Medicinal Use. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . The Quart 1.00 Medicinal Use. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . The Pint .50 Absolutely Pure Wine Vinegar (White or Red) Absolutely Pure Wine Vinegar (White or Red) Quality Guaranteed. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . The Quart. .25 Quality Guaranteed. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Per Gal. .75 A splendid "Salad Vinegar," and the only genuine Wine Vinegar on the Market. Remember We Are at the Other End of Your Phone? DREYFUS-JONES.COMPANY WE ARE SITUATED ONE BLOCK SOUTH OF THE CITY MARKET. ALL CARS WILL TRANSFER YOU RIGHT TO OUR DOOR 543-446 WALNUT (INDEPENDENCE AVE. AND WALNUT ST.)—BOTH PHONES, 1654 MAIN-FREE DELIVERIES IN BOTH KANSAS CITIES—SPECIAL ATTENTION GIVEN MAIL AND 'PHONE ORDERS —ASK FOR ONE OF OUR BEAUTIFUL "ART CALENDARS"—WE PREPAY ALL EXPRESS CHARGES ON ALL ORDERS OF $3.00 OR MORE, FOR OUT-OF-TOWN CUSTOMERS. --- UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN HISTORICAL SOCIETY SENIORS! Don't Fail to Have a Cap and Gown Picture Made. SQUIRES STUDIO EXTRA! EXTRA! Surplus Stock Purchase Sale! We have just received a large shipment of High Grade Spring Suits. The surplus stock of one of the foremosts manufacturers of men's ready for service clothes in this country. The styles are the latest, English and semi-English. Hand tailored from stricly all wool worsted—homepuns—cassimeres—serges and flannels. Plain blues, plain grays, shepherd checks, hair line and pin stripe effects in every authentic color. To these we have added all suits carried over from last Spring and Summer. Regular $25, $22.50 and $20 grades. Your choice now Our Advice Come early and make your selection. The styles and patterns are so inviting they will not be here long at the price.Today we have your size.Better hurry. Our tailor will guarantee a fit. EXTRA! SPECIAL! $16.50 and $15 suits go at $10. All suits carried over from last season. This is a great offer for the man who wants first quality in workmanship and fabrics but is not so particular as to the latest fads. They are all wool worsteds, cassimeres and serges. Many beautiful patterns. Regu lar price$15. Your choice now 35 Hundreds of new Spring style by "Hirsch-Wickirey" and "Society-Brand" ready for your selection at $25. Ober's HEAD TO FOOT OUTFITTERS New Spring Styles by "Sty- lephus." The finest clothes made at a medium price. The store exclusive $175. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN 'Yellow' Home Edition EDITORIAL STAFF EDITORIAL STA JOHN C. HAMBERT Editor-in-Chief LION HARMER Associate Editor JOHN GLIMMER Yamaha Editor GABRIEL BURNS High. High. CALVIN LAMBERT Sport Editor BUSINESS STAFF ROWN ARTHUR R.E. KIDDER Joe RUDGORE Joe BISOP. CINDY DAVIS DIV. SUPERVETANT Circulation Manager Manager Advertising Manager Manager Advertising PORTLAND SAM DEGEN HENRY MALOT JEAN MILLER CHARLES GIBSON MARC BALCROIX LUCILIE HULDINSON LORENCE SMITH LORENCE SMITH CLAYTON BURRINGTON RIAL STAFF HILL FRESNO W. F. WERBOROUGH W. F. WERBOROUGH HERBERT FUNT RAT CLAPPER RAY CLAPPER WILLIAM S. CADY WILLIAM S. CADY JOSSEM LARIE JOSSEM LARIE Entered 42 second-class mail matter Laurence, Kansas, under the act of March If you like the pineapple ice, try ours. Wiedemann's...-Adv. PHI DELTAS NOSE OUT PHI GAMS IN A CLOSE PITCHER'S ARGUMENT In a pitcher's battle between Spin Lyman and Red Craig, the Phil Deltis beat the Phi Gams in five innings on freshman field, 4 to 3. Lyman had a little the better of the argument and struck out ten men while Craig whiffed nine. The game was the best of the Pan-Hellenic series. A three base hit by Bluck Friend and Jew Cunnick's fielding featured the game. The score: Phi Delta Phi Gams R. H. E. 031 00—4 5 0 201 00—3 3 2 Batteries: Lyman and Blair; Craig and Wickstrum. Umpires Meadows and Wedell. Baseball goods and tennis balls at Wilson's Drug Store—Adv. 138-5 BOYS! Stock up for the next riot with Spalding's Baseball Bats---Spaldings won't break. CARROLL'S, 709 Mass. Students' Downtown Headquarters for 35 Years 50 COUPLES DEFY WEEK NIGHT DATE RULING IN PUBLIC tion of the mid-week date rule by the girls themselves, is a stinging blow to the W. S. G. A. council and their supporters, as the women members of the faculty. (Continued from page 1). When interviewed concerning this unexpected violation, the Council refused to make public any statement. The members of the faculty, too, begged for time to consider before making public their intentions. It is reported the council will meet in secret session this afternoon to consider the quickest and least embarrassing means of punishing the offenders whose names have been secured. "Will those who attended the dance be suspended?" "Will there be any suspensions following this disclosure?" asked the reporter. "Not before the Engineers' dance," rebled a senior member. be suspended : "No, the mid-week date rule will be the only suspension ordered by the Council." "When will the term of office of the president Council expire?" "May 14 ! ! ! " Doc. "Goodknit" "Doc" says, the garment for you to buy is the nainsook—knee length—no sleeves—the price is—One Dollar—it's worth two. Says it's high time you were putting on that short length athletic union suits—and then you can smile at Old Sol— HA HA! What's in the sun? Goodhua Diseased Outdoor JOHNSON & CARL VARSITY MEETS QUIG'S PETS ON M'COOK FIELD TOMORROW AFTERNOON The Varsity baseball team and St. Marys College will meet on McCook field tomorrow afternoon. The Catholics have a heavy hitting team, this spring. They defeated the Chinese team from Taipei and beat the Norris yesterday after the Teachers had walloped the Kansas Aggies, the day before. The Varyst and freshmen had a good work out yesterday afternoon and McCarty's men are ready for the fray. The batteries probably will be: St. Marys; Gillgallahan and Stack; Kansas: Basshop and Sommers. ENGINEERS DECIDE TO DISREGARD DATE LAW AND DANCE TANGO (Continued from page 1.) at least one hundred women from the school of Fine Arts to attend the dance. The Council of the W. S. G. A., meantime, maintains absolute silence in regard to the matter. Several prominent women of the faculty bitterly opposed such a rash break in the mid-week date rule precedent, but when informed that the Engineers were the complainants, they advised the president of the S. G. A. to cut them entirely, bitterly, seven "moonlight" dances are given, and only the tango and the hesitation are indulged in. "We greatly appreciate the kindness of the women of the faculty in allowing us a private visit," he said, given the laws,"a said a prominent engineer today." we are strong for that W. S. G. A. bunch too," said another "and I for one, am going - to do my part in the race. Now we have a chance to go to that dance." Post cards—all kinds—five cents per dozen up at Roaddales. Adv. So the Studies May Know! Says the Professor to the Student : "Your Mind is as Senseless as that of a Bawling Baby. "You Need Guardians, and Regulations, and Rules, and Restrictions. "Every so often You Require a Grand High Announcement of the Things You Must Not Do. "I will Containmate Myself by Associating With You only in Class. "I Rule, I Govern, I am of a Superior Order of Humanity. "K. U. is for **ME.** YOU are an INCIDENT, an EVIL— Necessary but Regrettable. Did the "Senators" Give The Student Councils More Powers last fall? NO, THEY WERE AFRAID. Instead They almost Snatched Away the Last Scattering Crumbs of Authority Left. Has the Faculty Donated Any Furniture to the Student Union? NO. Even the Merchants—with no connection with K. U., Have Done That. Did The Faculty Attend The Opening of The Student Union? NO. Only Six Professors Were There. Count Them, Six. Does That Show Interest in Student Affairs? Does the Faculty invite the Student's to Visit that House Of Ease, Luxury and Leisure Known as the University Club? NO. It fears criticism of the Faculty's well-known Idleness. Has the faculty committee which is supposed to confer with the Men's Student Council ever attended a meeting? NO. It is too Aristocratic, perhaps. Does the faculty Committee on Chapel Prepare Programs for the Student Body? NO. It is trying to take away the Last Vestige of Pleasure from the Downtrodden Undergraduate. Only Four Assemblies have been held in the last Four Weeks. Last Year There Was One a Day. Has the Student Loan Fund Faculty Committee ever Loaned Any Money to **YOU**, Mr. Individual Student? NO. Why Not? What is a Loan Fund Committee for if not to Loan Money? Steffens Says STRIKE! He Counsels REBELLION! Consider Link Steffens, You Slaves, You Varlets! Wake Up, You Down trodden Peons of a Monarchial Faculty! Read Harper's Weekly for last week—if the Faculty has not Confiscated Your Copy. Link Speaks to Every Weak-Kneed, Faculty-Dominated, So-Called University "MAN." Get Education, he says, but along with it GET SELF-GOVERNMENT and ORIGINALITY. Follow the Lead of the Yellow Kansar Assert Yourself. FIGHT FOR YOUR RIGHTS. Remember the Candies at Wilson's Drug Store are kept in a large refrigerator case. Always fresh and the best makes.-Adv. 138-5 Does the "Yellow" Kansan leave a bad taste in your mouth? Take it out with a drink of our superior soda water. McMish. Phone 198—Adv. Stewed-Dents We don't care a tinkers dam whether you trade with us or not, but we would like to see your cheerful, intelligent faces in ourstore THEY ARE SO DIFFERENT FROM COMMON PEOPLE AND PROFESSORS AT THE AURORA TOMORROW 827 MASS. ST. AT THE AURORA TOMORROW Longfellow's Immortal DON'T MISS THIS GREAT FEATURE "EVANGELINE" COMPLETE IN FIVE REELS BASEBALL----ST. MARYS vs KANSAS THURSDAY, 3 P. M. Tickets 25c. Coupon No. 20 Admits. Grand Stand Cushion Seats 15c extra STATE HISTORICAL SOCIETY UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN VOLUME XI. MAY TAKE 40 MINOR HOURS INSTEAD OF 30 Maximum of 25 Hours Wil Be Allowed in Single Department NUMBER 139 INCREASES GROUP MAXIMUMS Upper-Classmen May Carry Twelve Hours Each Semester in Single Group Instead of Ten Forty hours may now be taken in a minor group instead of thirty as has been the rule heretofore. The change is the result of a favorable action taken by the faculty on a report made, by the sub-committee on the major system. A maximum of twenty-five hours may be taken in a single department of the minor group. In regard to the major group no change was made. The student must complete a course of not less than thirty or more than sixty hours in the group including the major department, Another important change is that juniors and seniors will be allowed to carry twelve hours each semester in a single group. Heretoferon only ten such hours could be carried. In the event of missed the maximum is still ten hours. The third important change from the old system is a means of arranging it so that the graduate cannot get his degree on freshmen and sophomores, but must work in junior and senior years must include a minimum of forty hours, chosen from the courses not open to either freshman or sophomores. BAND CONCERT A HIT WITH SMALL CROWD K.U. Musicians Pleased Ligh Audience in Fraser Last Night A large crowd missed an excellent program of band music last night when the K. U. band gave its annual concert at the Hall. Only three hundred attended. the program consisted of classical selections with the exception of three extras and the pieces were rendered in a manner that pleased the audience, if the applause was any indication. Three selections from Chamminde, Beisigsr's Hungarian Hulgarian Rhapsody by F. Liszt received the most aplause. Other numbers were Eilenberg's "Turque," Garcia's "La Cascade," Tittl's "Serenade," Allen's "Anita," Santelmann's "Heart Message," A. Dovkar's "Slavonic Dance" and several popular pieces as extras. J. C. McCanles, director; cornes, Erroll Welch, Harold Lyle, Oscar Major, Allen Brown, Jesse Capes, Orland Lyle, Clifford Baldwin; bite and piccolo, George Collett, Cargill Sproul; altos, William Harkraker, Feeder, Federal Zappi, Lloyd Potwin; baritones, Charles Baysinger, Olin Daryb; basses, Carl Hicks, Gola Coffelt; clarinets, Fred Leasure, Elian Elliott, Chester Robe, Arthur Nigg, Charles Long, Bruce Shomber, Fritz Hartman, Charles Bayres, Iwain Clark, Earl Metcalf, H. Grutzmann, James, Smith, Hillou and Hoffman; trombones, William James, John Hartman, Harry Evans, Darley James; drums, Arthur Maltby, Joseph Hill. Dan Hazen left Tuesday night for Philadelphia, where he will represent Kansas in the high hurdles in the Twentieth Annual Philadelphia Relay Games held Saturday, April 25th. HAZEN WILL REPRESENT KANSAS AT PHILADELPHIA Hazen will compete with Kelley, the winner of the high hurdles in the Olympic games from Southern California, Nicholson of Missouri, and other record-breakers from the United States. The versatility will be represented in these games. The Philadelphia games are by far the greatest in America. Manager W. O. Hamilton was not able to accompany Hazen, as he expected to do, on account of urgent unexpected business here at home. Send the Daily Kansan home. HASKELL GOSPEL TEAM TO APPEAR BEFORE Y. M. UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS THURSDAY AFTERNOON, APRIL23, 1914. The Haskell Institute Gospel Team will appear before the University Y. M. C. A. Sunday at 4:00 o'clock in Myers Hall. Luther Clements of the Machootha tribe of Oregon, secretary of the Haskell Y. M. C. A. and a basketball and baseball man, William Williams of the Caddo tribe of Oklahoma, captain of the Haskell football team for three years and president of the Haskell Y. M. C. A., and James Smith, of Warm Springs, Oregon, a backfill and a recent Y. M. convert, will speak. An Indian quartet will sing. GIVES ONE VOCATIONAL TALK Small Attendance Causes Curtail ment of Collegiate Alumni Program—Paintings Exhibited Owing to the small attendance at the Vocational lectures given by the Association of Collegiate Alumni yesterday, in Room 101, Fraser Hall, only one lecture, "Opportunities in Applied Design," by Miss Benson of the School of Computer Science, was given on Playground Work by Dr. Margaret L. Johnson was reserved until the lectures could be better advertised. Miss Benson told of the work at the Newcome School of Applied Art, where most of the students are self supporting, and where she plays piano, jugs, scarfs and pottery made by the students in painting and design were exhibited. ENTOMOLOGISTS GET NEW DEMONSTRATION MACHINE Department Will Use Instrument for Pictures, Slides and Living and Dead Animals A machine for use in demonstration with which four different kinds of views may be used has been redeveloped and an entomology for use in class work. MARVIN BUST NOW CERTAINTY The regular pictures from books or other periodicals, the common lantern slides, specimens of fossilized animals and actual living animals, are fun forms that may be used in teaching with the aid of the machine. Receipt of Money Assures Success of Memorial to Dean—Committee Has $880 Enough money has been collected on the Marvin bust fund to make the erection of the bust an absolute certainty. The latest report from the headquarters in New York stated that $880 has been sent to the committee, and contributions are still coming in. Prof. W. A. Griffith, of the committee on art, says there is almost no limit to the amount which can be spent in installing the statue, and that elaborate habitats will develop when the number of contributions received in the future. A number of local faculty and student contributions still remain unpaid. Those who have promised money to the fund should pay immediately as the work of the committee is being retarded by their delay. No definite steps have been taken in regard to the proposed freshman-sophomore tug-of-war across Potter lake. A committee was appointed to find out the sentiment of the members of the two classes in regard to the tug-of-war and submit plans for the affair. It has not reported yet. J. M. Johnson, of the sophomore class, and Donald Harrison, of the freshman class, said today they thought the plan a good one. NO ACTION ON TUG-OF-WAR Committee Does Not Report to Council—Johnson and Harrison Favor Plan Prof. W. H. Twenhofel, of the department of geology, will leave late in May for New York, whence he will sail for Europe. Landing at Bremen, Professor Twenhofel will go to spend some time in Western Russia, southern Norway, and Sweden, and go on a research trip on the rocks of the Silurian age. Professor Twenhofel is making this trip under the auspices of the museum of comparative zoology of Harvard University. PROF. TWENHOFEL TO GO TO EUROPE LATE IN MAY WILL OPEN POTTER LAKE TO BATHERS Work on Platform, Diving Tower and Springing Board Starts Potter lake will be open for swimmers next week. Work on a platform, diving tower and springing boards will start this afternoon. Dr. James Naismith is directing the improvements. The lake will not be opened for the swimmers except at certain hours, when a guard will be placed in charge to keep tah on the bathers. The hours probably will be from 4 to 5:30 in the afternoon. "The regatta will not consist of racing events only but we will have log-rolling, tub races and fancy dividing races which require skill as well a suitronment." "we intend to emphasize water sports at the University this year." With the spring water regatta in mind, the improvements will be MISSOURI AND KANSAS TO DEBATE TUESDAY NIGHT Will Discuss Literacy Test For Im migrants—Smith and Wilson to Defend K. U. The Missouri debate Tuesday night in Fraser Hall promises to be one of the big events of the year. J. Christy Wilson and Harry M. Smith will talk for Kansas on the negative side of the question of adding an edible oil test on present requirements for the admission of immigrants. Two other members of the immigration squad, A. B. Campbell and J. M. Johnson, are giving the team sham-battle practice now-a-days in Green Hall. Professors C. H. Gershner, R. D. O'Leary are working with the team, along with Prof. H. T. Hill, of the department of public speaking. J. T. BOTTS, K. U. '04 OUT FOR 31ST DISTRICT JUDGE The citizens of Comanche county have passed a resolution pledging their hearty support for the candidacy of Jay T. Botts, of Coolwater, for the office of judge-of the 31st judicial district. Mr. Bottis was graduated from the University of Florida and was a member of Pluia Dula Flux. MARY MORIN TO GIVE GRADUATING RECITAL Miss Mary Morin will give her graduating recital this evening in Fraser Hall, 8:15. She will be assisted by Amy Cutler Olsen, soprano, and Mrs. A. J. Anderson, accompanist. A meeting of the Board of Engineering Journal will be held this afternoon at 4:30 to elect officers. Jack Malcolmson is acting secretary. ENGINEERS WILL ELECT OFFICERS FOR JOURNAL Prof. H. A. Mills, of the department of economics, will go to Lindsburg Monday to act as a judge in a debate between Bethany College and Augusta College of Rock Island III institution will be on the recall of judges. The American Society of Mechanical Engineers will meet at the home of Prof. A. H. Slus, 1122 Ohio St., this evening. Papers on Machinery, The Scientific American, The Engineering Record, and Exhaust Steam Turbines will be read by Nelson, Pickering, Rathert, and Feierabend. Millis to Judge Debate Mechanicals to Meet Seniors May be Measured Seniors may have their measurements taken for caps and gowns at chapel time tomorrow in Room 118. Fraser. The price for the apparel this year will be $2 for one week and $2.50 for two weeks. No advance necessary. Bovnton is Better Boynton is better Prof. Arthur J. Boynton, who has been ill with bronchitis, is considerably improved and expects to meet his classes again Monday. He will not be on the hill tomorrow. Seniors May be Measured Wants Seniors For Track Gene Davis wants more seniors to come out and play. So far only three are appeared, and the inter-class meet is Saturday. SIGMA XI SELECTS SIX NEW MEMBERS Honorary Scientific Fraternity Chooses From Faculty, Grads and Undergrads Sigax Xi, the honorary scientific fraternity, elected the following new members last night: Miss Agnes Anderson, from the faculty, Nora Dalbye, John A. Elliot, and Ralph C Hartough, from the Graduate School, and Ittai Luke and Ralph E. Swarts from the undergraduates. The fraternity met last night at the Unitarian church. Short talks by the initiates and discussion of recent articles in the science and engineering bulletins made up the program. PROF. JOHNSON INVITED TO CORNELL UNIVERSITY Asked to Attend Meeting of Employ ment Officials of All State Prof. W. H. Johnson, secretary of the committee on recommendations of high school teachers, has received an invitation from the Cornell University at Ithica, N. Y., to attend a meeting of the employment officials of all the state schools, to be held there May 6. This is the first meeting of the kind ever held in the country and each representative is asked to bring up any question relating to the appointment and employment of high school teachers. Professor Johnson has not yet decided whether he can attend the meeting. K. U. GRAD TO MEXICO Frank Sands, Aboard U. S. S. South Dakota, Salts for Tampico Frank Sands, a former student in the department of journalism, now in the navy, has sailed for Tampico Bay on the battleship South Dakota. Sands left the University last year because he had and joined the navy in the hope that the western climate and sea life would benefit him. ENTOMOLOGICAL CLUB CELEBRATES SNOW Snow Day was held by the Entomological Club in the Museum this month. The Club meets on April 23 every year to discuss the life and works of Dr. F. H. Snow, the founder of the geological department in the University. Addresses were made by Professors S. J. Hunter and H. H. Hungerford. Two hundred and twenty medals to be awarded to the winners in the State High School Track Meet on McCook field, May 4, arrived yesterday and are on exhibition at Manager Hamilton's office. The medals held silver and bronze with the name of the event engraved on the back. MEDALS FOR TRACK MEET SHOWN IN GYMNASIUM The K. U, contingen in and about Boston recently had a dinner in that city. Among those present were: Milton Minor, E. L. Eisley, L. A. Fruerer, D. H. Wenrich, Roy Stockwell Borden, D. H. Wenrich, Roy Herbert Ford, Thomas A. Lee, John Ice Hall, Lyman Rutledge and Fred Fairchild. K. U. GRADS IN BOSTON HAVE DINNER TOGETHER Petitions are being circulated for the nomination of John (Bonnie) Reber for athletic member and Lance Barrett for athletic member of the Athletic Board. THREE WOULD SIT ON KANSAS ATHLETIC BOARD Calvin Lambert, sport editor of The Kansan, later announced his candidacy. Students and Faculty to Meet All young members of Christian church difference will congregate at Myers Hall tomorrow evening at 8 o'clock, to meet University faculty, who are members of that church. The affair will be informal. Parson H. S. Gets K. U. Man H. T. Steeper, '09, was elected president of the high school last week. He has been, at Abilene for the past two years. SPANISH PLAY WILL BE STAGED SATURDAY NIGHT The annual Spanish play, under the direction of the department of Romance languages, will be given in Robinson Gymnasium Saturday evening at 15. One feature of the play is not common to many. Admission is free. The following are in the cast. Maria Madden, Ames Rogers, A. Newton Dilley Jr., Helen Hurst, Vera Weatherhog, Zora Kennedy, C. A. Castle, George Brune, Francis Martin, E. Lee Triece, Frank Hetherington, Ida O'Brien, Robert Reed, and Eary E. Yost. GAME DEPENDS ON WEATHER St. Marys-Varsity Contest Will Come Off as Scheduled if it Doesn't If the rains hold off this afternoon the baseball game between 'St Marys and the Varsity will be played in a contest will be called at 3 o'clock. McCarty's players will meet a tough proposition in the Catholic nine, which has defeated the Normal, Chinese and the Aggies. The Varsity men have had a week of good weather and daily work-outs with the freshmen have sharpened the Jayhawker's batting eyes. The Kansans probably will line-up as foll- owing: 1st, Van der Vries; 2b, McRowl, ss.; Painter, 3b; Wandell, rf.; Smee, cf.; Delongy, lf. QUILL CLUB COMPLETES NATIONALIZATION PLANS Kansas Society Will Be Known as American Association of College Writers. Arrangements have been completed for making the Quill club a National organization to be known as the American Association of College Writers. The Kansas organization will hold the honor of Alpha chapter by order of its prestige as a literary club of fifteen years standing. The Kansas Quill club was organized at the University by a group of faculty and student writers to cause the cause of college writers in '98. WILL DISCUSS UTILITIES J. W. Cable Will Talk About State and Local Control J. W. Cable, a member of the Public Utilities Commission of Kansas, will speak in Snow Hall tomorrow afternoon at 4:00 on "What Shall We Do With the Local Public Utility?" Mr. Cable will take up the question of governing local utilities by a state commission instead of by local government. Mr. Cable will attend to Prof. H. A. Mills, is being seriously discussed in Wisconsin, California, and a campaign is just beginning in Kansas. TWENTY-FOUR ENTER CIRBAGE TOURNAMENT Twenty-four students have entered the cribbage tournament which begins at the Student Union Monday. Dad Gregory has asked for an assessment of ten cents from each entrant to defray expenses of a cribbage board and a deck of cards which will be given as a prize to the winner. Each entrant will play three other determined six games, the winner to be determined on a per centage basis. The entry list closes Saturday night at ten o'clock. A tennis team from the University of Texas has written Manager W. O. Hamilton asking for a match with the Jayhawker net men. The Kanser manager will not arrange Manager Hamilton will not arrange a contest with the Southerners. TEXAS WANTS GAME WITH JAYHAWKER TENNIS TEAM Baptists to Entertain The Young people of the Baptist church will give a literary and musical entertainment at the church Friday evening. About one hundred and Haskell students will be present. University students are invited. Greeks to Argue Tolls The question of Panama tolls exemption will be discussed by the debaters at the Pan-Hellenic contest next month. Each of the eight fraternities have chosen debaters and the talkers will divide into two teams of four men. The date of the debate has not been announced. "STUDENT GOVERNMENT ON TRIAL"--CHANCELLOR Dr. StrongSays That Student Council Has Been A Failure SHOULD PUNISH LAWLESSNESS "Men's Governing Body Shrinks When Called On To Handle An Unpleasant Proposition" "Student government is on trial for its life," said Chancellor Frank Strong this afternoon. He made the announcement that student troubles of Tuesday night. "The students asked for the control of student discipline," he said. "It was turned over to them and all of us would be glad to have them make a success of it, but it seems that the system is breaking down." "Hazing is our worst and basest evil," he said. It is not controlled, student disturbance is a general state of student anarchy in results. If the Student Council cannot control hazing it cannot handle the other matters." The wearing of freshman caps is the most prevalent form of having at the University, and concerning it the university made the following statement: "If the freshmen adopt a cap or other insignia for the sake of college spirit, tradition, and so forth, and I believe the freshmen should be willing to do so, and the Council upholds them it is well and good. But the minute it tries to use force or allows it to go unpunished, it has placed itself in the face of lauwessness. When it puts itself in position, it raises the question of its ability to handle student government. "The trouble is that student government is a very good thing to work for some desirable measure, but it shrinks and stands back when called upon to handle a hard and unpleasant proposition like hazing." The proposed plan of having a freshmen-sophomore tug of war to stop the class fights did not find any favor with Dr. Strong. "Such a contest, I believe, would be nothing more than a semi-lawless encounter which would lead to worse conditions than we have now," declared the Chancellor. "An attempt to reinstate such things is a return to the discarded customs of twenty years ago. We have tried them and they failed. Every other university of any note is working away from such practices while we seem to be going back to them." INTER-CLASS TRACK MEN SWARM M'COOK Scores of Aspirants for Medals and Maybe Ks Work Out Every Day Track men are swarming the McCookinders this week, training for the interclass track meet, which will be held, rain or shine, Saturday afternoon. Manager Hamilton has on exhibition in his office the medals which will be given after each event. First place will receive a gold medal, second silver, third and fourth bronze medals. "Any student in the University is eligible for intercass meet and I hope every class will be well representer and Manager Hamilton this afternoon." The dope on the meet seems to rest with the sophomores, who expect to carry away most of the events. Track fans will watch with interest the vaulting of Russ, a freshman. If a first year man breaks a University record in the meet, Russ is awarded a wooden vault. Russ is after Wooden vault record and stands a good chance of clearing the bar above 11 feet and 6 inches. Russ has vaulted 11 ft, 7 several times this spring. Another interesting event will be the shotput where records are likely to be smashed. Reber and Keeling have recently developed considera- tion forms for men and threaten to break the University record in the class meet. The Y. M. C. A. will give a faculty stag in Myers Hall Saturday, May 2. Send the Daily Kansan home. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Official student paper of the University of Kansas UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN EDITORIAL STAFF EDITORIAL STA CJ. M. MODEN, Lion JOHN BADWELL, John GLEISSNER, Gary LAMBERT, High School Editor CALVIN LAMBERT, Sport Editor BUSINESS STATE REPORTORIAL STAFF BUSINESS EWEN AMERAL...Business Manager RAT BACKUM...Circulation Manager JEW BIRCH...Advertising Manager CHEMISTRY...Advertising CHARL S. STURTEVY...Advertising SAM DUGEN BASQUE GRENDON GLENDON ALLINE CHARLES GIBSON LELIE HUDDERS LUCILIE HUDDERS LAWRENCE SMITH CLAUTON HEUEN HEUEN Subscription price $2.50 per year, h adoption, one term, $1.50 Published in the afternoon, five times a week. In 1938 he left Kansas. From the press of the department of education. garner as second-class mail matter September 17, 1910, at the post Free at Lawrence, Kansas, under the act of March 3, 1879. Phone, Bell K. U. 25. Address all communications to UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN. Lawrence, Kans. The Daily Kansan aims to picture the undergraduate students further in their nearlyprinting news by standing for them. No materiates; to be clean; to be cheerful; to be useful; to be serious; to possess the wuster heads; in all, to inquire about the ability of students of the Community. SENSE THURSDAY, APRIL 23.1914. Students have just as sound judgment, when they take a little time for reflection, as any class of people—notwithstanding frequent assertions to the contrary. Those who want fewest things are nearest to the gods.-Sorates. The fact was again proved last night when the undergraduates followed the sensible request of the Chancellor to stay away from the Carnival shows in crowds of any size. The Lawrence authorities and the street fair followers were certain that further trouble would come, but there was none and there will be none—if the Daily Kansan has the students' good judgment sized up correctly. A hundred dollar stone bench on the campus. Such is the memorial that the class of 1914, departing, would leave behind. The idea is good; the plan is commendable. A MEMORIAL AT LAST? The seniors are to be congratulated (future tense used advisedly). They are to be congratulated when the bench is on the campus. Without disparaging the class of 1914, we are incredulous of class memorials. The seniors who left us last year laid plans for a beautiful triumphal arch on Oread avenue. Do you recall passing under the aforementioned arch? But the fee is so nominal and the favorable sentiment seems to be so universal this year, that the present senior class ought to be able to actually achieve what classes for a number of years have fondly hoped for. On with the celebration. Let the High Cost of Living ascend. Provision has been made for raising the salary schedule of the faculty. The Board of Administration has decided that the best policy to pursue is to raise the salaries of those instructors who have earned an increase. PROSPERITY STRIKES KANSAS No one objects to this policy. We have not heard, nor do we expect, any complaint from the teaching staff. We students are happy; it pleases us to see our instructors prosper. Every friend of the University is delighted, because the best instructors need not leave Kansas in order to obtain what they can earn. ALMOST AN ISLAND The Board of Administration, the Chancellor, the superintendent of grounds, or whoever has the matter in charge should consider Blake Hall. In muddy weather only one dry Kansas is prosperous, thank you. The faculty has a raise. means of approach—or of egress— is available. The engineers are forced to wade through rods of mud—Oread's Best—south of the old Medic Building and east of Fowler Shops. If they desire to stray on the sidewalk these hearty students might follow the main pathway east as far as Green Hall, hence south past Fraser to the ultimate destination. A very brave engineer might venture along the lateral which goes from Snow Hall to the back door of Fraser. He could then wander about the unfamiliar corridors of that revered building until he found the main entrance. Then he could proceed to Blake along the one dry roadway. In either case the foot-weary student might be ten minutes late to class, and one might be fifteen. Then the College student has a grievance. If he is coming up the east hill and tries to edge over to his Physics recitation by the shortest route—along the illac hedge—he must be wonderfully proficient in the gentle art of broad jumping. The stepping stones are often many many feet apart. Reference to the board walks which lead the Kappas and their neighbors from Blake Hall down the south-east hill is further proof of the plainly evident attempt to shut off this building from communication with the outside world, when the elements are at war. Just because the architect who drew the plans for Blake Hall happened to stand the building up on one end rather than let it lie down on its logical foundation, is no reason for this cruel and unusual method of punishment. GREEN CAPS Greener by far than the grass is the crop of green caps that is destined to make its appearance today upon the campus. Tradition demands that today the freshmen should resume the wearing of the green. Let us have a rigid observance of the tradition by the class of 1917! The Student Council will want to spend it in enforcing such action would in fact, transform the tradition into a law. The freshmen themselves should take a pride in its observance, and the upper-classmasters should do all in their power to stimulate this pride. However trivial or disagreeable this tradition may now seem to you, freshmen, there will come a time when most of them will size that you gained something from their experience. You will then see that there is an almost universal tendency upon the part of students, fresh from their high school or prep school careers, to feel and to exhibit a high degree of self-importance. You will then appreciate the need for some device whereby the freshman's bubble of vanity may be punished. The "faging" phrase of the old English boarding school was one tool for our freshmen traditions are another. In this spirit and on this basis, let we have the green cap tradition observed this spring! If it fails, of observance, without constant recourse to the student court, then let us abolish the so-called tradition altogether.-Wisconsin Daily Cardinal. ENDS AND ODDLETS K. U. Hughmoore has been unkind enough to bother the editor with the suggestion that the student who obtained an appointment on a "non-magnetic" ship must have done so without any pull. Wanted: Reporters for the Daily Kansan. Ball players preferred. By living in the outskirts of the town one avoids the bustle of the city. Marrying a girl because her lips are like honey and her waist like a wasp is one way of getting stung. Villa's temper is most vile, With which to do my "sighting." Taking his pen in hand—prison reform by the new-warden. (From C. L. Edson in the Column in the New York Evening Mail). And he loves to display it: That's what we say of him, but we can't do that. AN ALUMNUS EXPOSED (From C. L. Edson's Column I cry for war with Mexico- Please "sight me to the fight- ing" in the police telescope Houston Post. England made friendly advances to Ulster. The shock nigh convulsed 'er when Ulster repulsed 'er. THE STORY OF MY LIFE By Adele Humphrey, '95 On receiving a request from the editor of the Daily Kansan that I be one of fifty "well-known graduates" to submit a biography for publication, I looked suspiciously at the date the letter, for the season was not far removed from April first. (I wonder who the other forty-nine were!) But the postmark was innocent of suggestion. Then L pondered over his statement that these notices are a sort of parallel to the obituaries in the Congressional Record—are we dead ones? I asked myself. But no, so live a paper as the Daily Kansan would not regard as news those who had such oblivion. I concluded therefore, that it was a bright idea cooked up beadily and circulation manager. Of course we shall all want to see who else belongs to the glorious company. Fifty new subscriptions at a postnear stamp each is rather neat! If I had had the slightest warming in my infancy that I was to be biographical matter I should have created events. As it is, I have nothing either to tell or conceal. One thing only in my life differentiates it from any other existence. I claim to be the only person now living who has read Bulwer-Lytton's epic, "King Arthur" through to the end. Arthur strobe. As to feats of "near-scholarship" seasonally several members of my class who were elected to Pbeta Kappa. That is the nearest I ever came to erudition. As for pranks I have played many jokes in my life, but they have all been on myself and wholly unintentional. At present I am training thirty students of journalism in the Los Angeles Polytechnic and supervising the publication of a weekly paper, with now and then an "extra" to keen the intotypes warm. keep the inbreed I read the Graduate Magazine diligently, and shall henceforth pursue the Kansan with an eager eye. STANDARDS FOR FUTURE JOURNALISTS (Miss Humphrey enclosed her sub- scription.) Tentative programs are out for two extremely important conferences pertaining to journalism. One is of the tenth annual convention of Associated Advertising Clubs of America to be held in Toronto, Can. Jan. June. The other is the conference of journalists to be held in Lawrence in May, under the auxuries of the University of Kansas. The first item of uniformity in connection with these gatherings is that they are to open on Sunday, with laymen in the leading churches setting forth desirable standards for the press in the light of tested ethical and spiritual ideals. Fourteen Kansas editors, some of them of national reputation, and to define the newspaper's action alongside the church's powerful agency in the community service, to the call to the conference. At Toronto the lay preschools will be men of national reputation in general or special fields of journalism. At the University of Kansas conference such questions as these are to be discussed: Should not the state protect its citizens from untrained and unscrumpulous men by insisting on the professions of jousting or passing on qualifications? Should not the press protect itself by requiring its members to subscribe to a code of ethics? Why should not the newspaper be compelled by law to guarantee the public against fraudulent advertising? Is the defense of the newspaper, that it is public, what is a good one? What extent is the newspaper responsible for the public's low taste in newspapers? Is not the public so dependent on the press for its civic welfare that newspapers ought to be dealt with as public utilities? Scrutiny of the list of speakers at conference, selected by national reputation and influence, indicates that the theory back of the conference is to make it count for much in defining publicity as the force behind popular freedom. There's something to this yellow peril business after all if the dozen or so "Chinese" who visited us last week are representative of the race. Any students desiring to join the University company of K. N. G. can find Captain Jones in Fowler Shops at all hours of the day. Any citizen who begins to appreciate the place that journalism fills in the modern world, and the power for righteousness which it may exert, must rate as significant the trend toward "publicity about publicity" which these conferences disclose; and he also must welcome with gratitude the new role that ethel as a technical aspect of editorial writing, newsgathering and circulation getting are now being subjected to standards that will bear discussion and survive attack.—Christian Science Monitor. Extra Copies of the K. Book Material —At— "YELLOW" KANSAN Griggs'———Rowland's Oread Cafe Or at The Kansan Office BASE BALL GOODS The Sporting Goods Headquarters KENNEDY & ERNST 826 Mass. St. Phones 341 OLUS OLUS Feel Comfortable All Over in an PAT-JAN.39.1908 OLUS REQ. US PAT.OFK COAT CUT UNION SUIT The OLUS Union Suit is the only one that goes on and off like a coat, that is closed back, that has a real closed crotch and that has only one thickness of material anywhere. See illustrations. Made in sixteen plain and and fancy woven fabrics, also plain and mesh knitted. Price, $1.00 to $2.50. Where you buy interested think of OLUS. Ask your dealer. Write for important booklet. Also—OLUS ONE-PIECE PAJAMAS—Coat Cot. Closed back. No strings to tighten or come loose. Price $1.50 to $8.50. To Dealer—Your wholesale Distributor carries OLUS The Giraard Company, Dept. N 348 Broadway, N. T. OLUS m n t u v w x y z Drink Coca-Cola Drink Coca-Cola 5¢ Drink Coca-Cola Facile Princeps No beverage can approach—has ever even challenged the supremacy of Coca-Cola. It stands first. The drink that will refresh and delight you with its distinctive and delicious flavor—its wonderful thirst-quenching quality. Delicious—Refreshing Thirst-Quenching THE COCA-COLA CO. Albert G. Whenever you see an Arrow think of Coca-Cola A GOOD PLACE TO EAT AT ANDERSON'S OLD STAND JOHNSON & TUTTLE 715 PROPS. Mass. CITY CAFE 906 Mass. Scrietly Home Cooking Ever try our Special 15c Lunch? You'll like it. SPRING SUITINGS FRANK KOCH TAILOR 727 Mass. PROFESSIONAL CARDS F. B. FROCK, Optomatiser and Specialist Institute of Office 802 Mass. St. Paul phone 600-7351 B. Bell phone 600-7351 W. C. McGONNELL, Physician and surgeon, Office 819 Mass, St. Bell 391, Home 9342. Residence, 1346 Tenn. St. St. bell 1023, Home 936. J. K. BECHTEL, M. D. O. 833 Mansfield Street. Both phones, office and library. **MARYR REDING. M. D Eyes ear, nose** Bldge. 112, Phone 053-682-9242 Bldge. 112, Phone 053-682-9242 W. JONES, A. M. M. D. Diaspose of Butee to the Bldg. diaspose, 1200 Butee to the Bldg. diaspose, 1200 G. A. HAMMAN M. D. Eyer, ear, and satisfaction Guaranteed. Dick Building. DR. H. W. HAYNE, Oculist, Lawrenco, Kansas. J. W. O'BRYON, Denist, Over Wilson's Drug Store. Bell Phone 507. DR, H. T. JONES. Room 12. F. A. F. Residence. Residence 130 Tenn. Phone 211. DR. H. L. CHAMBERS. Office over squires Studio. Both phones. DR. BURT R. WHITE Osteopath, Phones, Bell 938, Home 257, Office, 745 Mass. St. Ed. W. Parnes, Engraver, Watchmaker and Jeweler. Armored and Jewelry. Bell Phone Number. CLASSIFIED S. T. GILLISPIE, M. D. O'Dore office Phone 590. Residence 728 Phones 590. Plumbers Phone Kennedy Plumbing Co. for gas goods 655-874-1052. Maxda lamps. 655-874- 1052. Ladies Tailors MISS. MELLION, Dressmaking and Ladies Vermont, Phone Bell 2411 West. 1052 Vermont, Phone Bell 2411 West. 1052 Queen City College. System and sewing Institute. Mrs. G. Mark Brown, 834 K. Mrs. G. Mark Brown, 834 K. Boll Hair Dressers hairdressing, shampooing, scalp and facial massage, shampooing, hair-gifts. Man also shop for baby clothes, accessories call Bell 1572, Home 131. The Select Hair Dress Shop, 927 Mass St. Barber Shops Go where they all go J, G. HOUK 913 Mass. Student's Co-op Club. $2.50 to $3.00 per day, 14KU 8.60. Goe, H.I. Vaneil Stewart. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN ANNOUNCEMENTS The Hash House League Commission will meet tonight at 7:30 in the Student Union. Any team desiring new players should be represented. First rehearsal of the Hawk club will be held Thursday night, April 23, in Room 110, Fraser, at seven o'clock sharp. WANT ADS LOST-Last - Thursday at Varsity knife. Call 2628 Bell. LOST-Y - Y, M. C. A. K book, contain- ual data. Vanderbilt. Finder. 2414 Bail. 137-3* LOST—A Chi Omega pin, finden please return to Helen Crane, 1137 Indiana. WANTED - To rent next year, a room for 12 men. Call Bell 2647. 139-3 FOR RENT-Modern twelve room, house, very desirable for club or fraternity. Bell 1823. 138-6 Want a bathing cap? Large ass- sess and fresh goods at Walmart. Drug Store 138-5 If you want something exclusive in stationery. call at Wilson's Drug Store—Adv. 138-5 Our caramel nut ice cream is different from others. Try it. Wiedemann's.-Adv. Remember the Candies at Wilson's Drug Store are kept in a large refrigerate case. Always fresh and the best makes.-Adv. 138-5 Baseball goods and tennis balls at Wilson's Drug Store.-Adv. 138-5 McCOLLLOCH'S Drug Store. 847 Mass. Street THE REXALL STORE. WARWICK WARWICK Front 3% In, Back 14% In Warranted Linen Barker Collars only at PECKHAMS STANDISH WORK ARROW COLLAR 2for 25¢ Cluett Pabody & Co. Inc. Makers You Can Earn a Good Living and lay up Some money too on graduating from business college. Enroll at once get ready and you'll secure a good position. Free Employment at your service. Best for the best and best Business College. No vacations. LAWRENCE Business College Lawrence, Kansas. Sam S. Shubert MAT. WEDNESDAY & SATURDAY Passing Show of 1913 Return Next Week, "Peg o' My Heart" WATKINS NATIONAL BANK Capital $100,000 Surplus and profits $100,000 The Student Depository R. E. Protsch TAILOR Bert Wadham THE COLLEGE BARBER On 14th Street A. G. ALRICH Printing Binding, Copper, Stainless Printing, Bubber, Stamping, Engraving, Steel Die Embossing, Seals, Badges. 744 Mass. Pittsburgh, Kans., April 23—Proe. E. M. Wollank, of the school of languages at the Pittsburgh Normal, who may be the richest school teacher in the United States, will stay in the school room and work in spite of his wealth. Professor Wollank and his son will soon get a $25,000-000 estate in Berlin, according to advises just received by the professor. The estate is that if a great incumbent whose will预估 that it go to the male descentors of the Wollank line comes certain time. The time has expired and the professor and his son, who is a banker at Lehli, La., are the only heirs. WORTH 12 MILLIONS WILL TEACH SCHOOL Prof. Wollank of Pittsburg Normal Will Not Leave Classroom to Spend Fortune The possession of at least twelve and a half million dollars will not mean the retirement of the professor, he asserts. He intends in the school to soon until age retires. He couldn't be happy elsewhere, he says. "I couldn't say that I will not be glad to get it but it won't make any difference in my manner of living. I suppose that I'll have some things I haven't had before but I've always had all a reasonable man could ask. And I want to work as long as I live." Professor Wollank has been at the Normal five years. He is a widower. Read your own KANSAN that dandelion colored Kansan extras—5c buy them in the Kansan office Medic Building Additional instruction and information for fish farmers of Kansas is available in the latest bulletin on fish culture just issued by Prof. L. L. Lyche, state fish and game warden, and curator of birds, fishes and mammals at the University of Kansas. Professor Dyche believes it possible for every farmer in Kansas to cultivate natural ponds on his farm, as he would chickens or hogs, with a little care and attention to improving natural conditions. WOULD HELP FARMERS KANSAS TOWNS MAY RAISE CROP OF FISH MAKE THEIR OWN ICE The bulletin on Pond Fish Culture, in Kansas, which is the latest one published, contains information regarding the habits and environments of the varieties of fish that commonly live in the pond. The pond fish that are especially adapted to domesticity and scientific culture. The fish treated in this bulletin are all native to Kansas, and are of the varieties which experimentation at the state hatcheries at Pike County that most readily respond to artificial care and treatment. They are: large-mouthed black bass, crappie, sunfish, bullhead, German carp, goldfish and minnow; these are commonly used principally as food for the other varieties of carnivorous fish. The vegetation which makes the best pasture for Kansas fish is also determined, and devices for securing a good growth of aquatic vegetation in ponds are presented. Natural enemies that prey on fish, their eggs and young, are fully utilized and methods for their termination set forth. The most important of these are turtles, snakes, bullfrogs, kiffenshires, ospreys, herons, ducks, mudhens, grebes, gulls, terns, muskrats, minks, gophers, crayfish. There also are special articles on various other subjects connected with fish culture and the stocking of private ponds. CARRY SCHOOL TO PEOPLF Prof. L. L. Dyche of K. U. State Game Warden, Issues Bulletin on Pond Culture Pittsburgh State Normal Professors Organize Classes in Nearby Cities Pittsburgh, Kans., April 23—Personal extension work is being organized throughout this section of the state by members of the faculty of the Pittsburgh Normal. Members of the faculty go to cities in this section and conduct classes once every two weeks. In one city there is a class twelve teachers taking the work offered by the Normal. And a large number of teachers come to the Normal on Saturdays for classes. In addition to this class work that has been organized, lecture courses have been arranged and faculty members are furnishing the numbers. Copies of The Yellow Kansan are for sale, five cents each. Get Extra Copies Student Plays Student Dances Student Mixers PAY When they are advertised in the Daily Kansan. 3,000 Students Faculty and Alumni read it every day. League of Kansas Municipalities Will Try to Get Enabling Law From Legislature City ownership of ice plants by towns will be possible if the legislature acts favorably on the proposed recommendation of the league of Kansas Municipalities which meets at the University of Kansas next fall. C. H. Talbot, head of the municipal reference bureau, and secretary of the league of Kansas Municipalities, and the needs of the league in the April number of the National Municipal League Magazine. Attorney General Dawson has ruled that no Kansas city may operate ice plants unless the legislature passes an enabling Threat of last summer when many places suffered severely from lack of ice. Ice manufactured by the city in connection with the water or gas supply to the consumer much less than ice shipped in or privately manufactured. K. U. STUDENTS GET JOBS AS SCHOOL INSTRUCTORS Prof. W. H. Johnson this morning announced the appointment of the following high school teachers: Charles I. Smith, "14, superintendent; Charles E. Smith, "14, superintendent on Onaqa; Patti Sankee, "11, teacher of Latin at Pittsburg; E. C. Bechold, "14, principal of high school at Hoisington. The committee on appointments has been busy filling the requests for teachers and this is only a partial list of those appointed. STUDENTS WORK TO PAY WAY AT STATE SCHOOL Pittsburg, Kan., April 23—Actual trade work now is being done in the machine and blacksmith shops and the foundry at the Pittsburg Normal. And many students study to help their expenses by repair work. One student, who had no money, brought in enough jobs to pay his expenses. ENGINEERS TO GO INTO CAMP AT CLOSE OF YEAR The mining and civil engineers will go into summer camp as soon as possible after the final examinations. The plans are to make a typical survey of the Robinson Estate, giving special attention to drainage. K. U. Calendar Thursday. 7:00 Amer. Soc. Mech. Eng., (1607 Tenn.) 7:30 Civil Engineering Society, (Marvin.) 8:15 Graduating Piano Recital Miss Morin, (Chapel.) Friday. 11:00 Assembly. 4:00 Economics 'Lecture. Mr. J. W. Cable of Kansas State Utilities Commission. "What Should Be Done with the Local Public Utility?" (Snow Lecture Room.) Saturday 1:30 Outdoor Interclass meet (Mc- Cook.) 8:15 Spanish Play, (Robinson Gymnasium.) 4:00 Haskell Institute Gospel Team. (Myers Hall.) Sunday May 1—Nebraska-Kansas dual track meet, McCook. May 2—Eleventh Annual Interscholastic track meet, McCook. May 1-2—Seventh Interscholastic tennis tournament, McCook. May 6-7—Baseball, Missouri at Lawrence. May 8-10—A. C.-K. U. dual track meet at Manhattan. May 14-15-Baseball, Missouri at Columbia. May 16—M. U.-K. U. dual track meet at Columbia. May 21-22-Baseball, Ames at Ames, Iowa. May 23-Advanced invitation H. S. meet at Lawrence. May 27-28-Baseball, K. S. A. C. at Manhattan. May 29-Baseball, St. Marys at St. Marys. May 30-Missouri Valley track meet at St Louis. June6-Western Conference track meet at Chicago. *Future Events* April 1—M. U.-K. U. debate (Fra.) May 1—M.“Pinafore” University campus. May 1—Interscholastic High School Debating League. May 5-7—Merchants’ Week. May 11-14—Kansas Newspaper Week State and National Newspaper Conference. SARA D. BURT New Parasols for Summer Price $1.00 to $25.00 The new Parasols are wonderfully clever. The shapes are all new—Tango, Palm Beach, Minaret and Arcadia. Materials are linen, pongee, messaline, chiffon and moire. Weaver's K. U. FINDS OUT HOW CHILD'S MIND WORKS Experiments on Rats, Chickencs, Children and Adults Reveal Mental Processes How we learn a task, how children learn to think, and how animals learn "tricks," is the subject of a comparative study of psychological processes in the laboratories of the University of Kansas under the direction of Prof. F. C. Dockery, of the department of psychology. The purpose of the study is to get data on how tasks are learned in order to throw new light on the relative qualities of animal and child human mental processes. Incidentally, new ideas may be developed upon the control of the processes of thought, habits and tasks. Chicken, monkeys, rats and cats are used to uphold the reputation of the four-footed kingdom, and several children of University professors are used as subjects by advanced students in the department of psychology. Students in the department also act as subjects. The mental task performed is a simple one, and consists of finding the way out of a ladder if it is placed in an inner room, and the pathway to the food among numerous blind alleys and cul-de-sac is left to the rats to determine. Chickens also are taught to find the floor of the labyrinth. Human subjects trace out with a pencil on a chart of the labyrinth, the path to the inner room. Send the Daily Kansan home. An Expanding Vocation that merits the investigation of the high school student who is attracted towards science is that of Chemical Engineering The demand for experts in this line is as keen as the desire of manufacturers for better processes and for the utilization of by-products. The pecuniary rewards include both large salaries and liberal percentages of the saving which the chemist brings about. The course in the University is complete, and after the necessary practical experience and work in research, leads to the degree of chemical engineer. Address Vocation Editor UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Lawrence, Kansas UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN 14th Annual Inter-Class Track and Field-Meet Saturday, Apr. 25, 2:30 o'clock A Real Meet with Red Hot Competition. Come out and root for your Team. Rain Coats Rain Coats For Ladies For Gentlemen For Misses For Boys All sizes from age two up to size forty eight. We feature a double texture coat at May we show you? Johnson & Carl KANSAS MERCHANTS TO HEAR RETAIL EXPERTS Convention at University in May Will Be Addressed by Trade Authorities Kansas merchants will hear some of the best known business experts in the country Merchants' Week at the University of Kansas May 5, 6, and 7. W. J. Pilkington, of Des Moines, editor of the "Merchant Trade Journal"; Wheeler Sammons, editor of the "System", Chicago; Robert B. Scheffler, editor of the Dry Goods Reporter" Chicago C. Dr. Goods publisher of the "Merchants Journal," at Topea, will be on the program for lectures on advertising, salesmanship and auditing. These men are authorities on the subjects they will handle. Talks also will be made by Kansas merchants who have built up their bysiness under remarkable circumcum- lences. L. C. Jones of Ottawa, will tell about the co-operative system of the Ottawa Commercial club in its campaign to get the farmers of Franklin county interested in city affairs. Mr. Jones is a clothing merchant and through his efforts the retailmen of his city have formed a commercial club, which now has 277 farmers among its numbers. Ottawa does not turn up its nose at being called a country town. It has organized as a country town, but Mr. Jones is going to tell the retailers from other towns of the state how to do it. C. C. Brown's "iowa Store" at Cawker City, probably is the best known store in the state, through Mr. Brown's unique and original advertising methods. Mr. Brown will speak at the convention on the subject of advertising in the small store. W. L. Friend of Niles, Mich., and George D. Wolfe, of Benton Harbor, Mich., manufacturers of store furnishing and appliances will speak on the modern outfitting of stores, but will not advertise their firms' ware. "Advertising" will be a topic discussed on the first day of the conference. Accounting and store management will occupy the program the second day and the third day will be given over to a study of salesmanship. Prof. D. C. Croissant, of the Extension division of the University is in charge of the program, and expects to secure several more experienced Kansas retail men to take part. TICKETS 25c. Student tickets admit This meeting is the second of the kind attempted in the country. A short course for retail men was given last month at the University of Minnesota at Minneapolis, under the direction of R. R. Price, formerly head of the extension division of the University of Kansas. The University of Minnesota course charged a fee of $3, and was attended by 135 retail men, only six of whom were from the Twin Cities. The course for merchants at the University of Kansas May 5-7, will be free to the retail merchants of Kansas, and to all others interested in the retail business. No fee of any kind will be charged. Director Croissant expects an attendance of 500 retail merchants. DEFEATS KANSAN Student Solons More Successful at Baseball Than Ousting Editor —Score 12 to 5 K. U. KEEPS AN EYE ON THE FOOD KANSAS EATS The Men's Student Council, a sad failure at ousting editors, was vastly more successful in a baseball encounter with the editorial talent on McCook field yesterday afternoon. The score stood 12 to 8 in the second and four tip broke up the game at the end of the sixth innning. The Crowd was at the Music Festival Lawrence Smith, who writes verses, also pitched excellent ball for two innings when he blew up and walked several. From then on the Council had a walk-away. The swattest continued until the game came to an abrupt close when he fouled of it, and the foul which caught the finger of catcher Henry and disabled him for further service. Webster Holloway, arch enemy of the Daily Kansan, and chief instructor of the recent impeachment proceedings against its editor, occupied the Senate floor with the legislative body and surprised everybody with an effective inshoot. The Council got 11 hits and made Advertise it in the Kansan The Crowd reads the Daily Kansan Experts in University Laboratory Test All Suspected Material for Poison In a small well-lighted room, in the chemistry building of the University of Kansas, benches and shelves filled with cans, bottles, packages, and chemical appliances, the food of a warehouse wakes up care it is to see that no poisonous or adulterated food is eaten by 1,700-000 Kansans. In this laboratory fifty samples of food is tested each month, food gathered by three inspectors from shelves of grocery stores, food collected half the samples examined are passed. The rest are condemned or marked below standard. Just now the laboratory is making a series of analyses on baking powder. Twelve varieties have been gathered and tests are being made for carbonic acid gas content. So far all of the specimens have been passed, but an analysis will be made soon for poisonous derivatives of lead, which are usually found in baking powders. Ice cream from all of the Lawrence makers has been examined by the elaborate recently. Three of the samples were deficient but one was the best. The rest are all right. Another test is the test of edulcoral. Seven samples sold at Kansas grocery stores have been found to contain from 6 to 10 percent of alcohol; which brings the cider within the definition of prohibited liniments. Peanuts, canned goods, orangeade, olive oil, vinegar, and honey are a few of the food materials that have been tested recently under the direction of Professor Long, chief of Research and Miss Anderson, assistant. Most of the condemned food was declared to be misbranded, but some contained poisonous matter. Some added damaged material is destroyed by the inspector. CAPT, JONES, OF K. N. G. EXPECTS SERVICE IN WAR "Recent developments in Mexico lead me to believe that there will be war," said Captain Jones, of the local guards today. "As we web search for orders to attack such orders may be expected at any time now." four errors. The Kansan garnered two hits and was responsible for five errors. THREE HASH-HOUSE GAMES TO BE PLAYED TOMORROW Send the Daily Kansan home. Another round of the series of games of baseball to be played by the Hash House League will take place tomorrow afternoon on the freshman and Woodland fields. The following teams will contest: Ellis vs. Co-op, freshman, 4:30; Columbus vs. Gillespie, Woodland, 4:30; and K. K. vs. Martin, freshman, 4:30. HAMLET WILL ESCAPE TRIAL BY K. U. LAWYERS The trial of Hamlet will not occur this year in the School of Law,OWO to the fact that data and plans for conducting this study are available from Prof. R. F. Rice who is substituting in the school for the current year. Seven Former K. U. Students Have Scholarships in American Universities HOLD ZOOLOGY FELLOWSHIPS Seven former students who have majored in the department of zoology at the University of Kannas are members of the United States Universities of the United States. E. C. Schmitt has a fellowship in the department of anatomy at the University of Chicago; Grace Medes is at Bryn Mawr; Irene McCullough, University of California; Eleanor Carothers, University of Pennsylvania; W. R. Green, University of Chicago; David Wendrich, Harvard; and Inez Smith, University of Kansas. Send the Daily Kansan home. EMPORIA PIRATES TO PRACTICE AT VARSITY Ira Bidwell and a squad of professional baseball players, who will form the New Emporia team in the Kansas State League will arrive in Lawrence this week to establish training quarters. The Emporians probably will work out in Woodland park and play practice games with the Varsity. Bidwell will have with him players from the last year's Cheyenne Indian队 and the Clay Center Club. The Emporia manager expects to work with the Varsity team here, Coach Carty. Carry all the leagues. The practice not only help the Emporia team get ready for the season but the practice will be a great help to the Jayhawkers. Send the Daily Kansan home. HASH HOUSE LEAGUE SCHEDULE—First Division. The Ellis Gillespie Co-op Columbus Ko-op Martin Marks K K Ellis Daily Apr. 18 F 10:15 Apr. 24 F 4:30 May 2 F 8:30 May 9 F 8:30 May 16 F 1:30 May 23 F 8:30 May 30 F 1:30 Gillespie Apr. 18 F 10:15 Kansan May 30 F 10:15 Apr. 24 W 4:30 May 16 F 10:15 May 9 W 10:15 May 2 F 10:15 May 23 F 1:30 Co-op Apr. 24 F 4:30 May 30 F 10:15 Prints Apr. 18 W 10:15 May 23 W 8:30 May 2 F 10:15 May 9 F 10:15 May 15 W 4:30 Columbus May 2 F 8:30 Apr. 24 W 4:30 Apr. 18 W 10:15 All. May 30 W 10:15 May 23 F 8:30 May 16 W 8:30 May 9 F 1:30 Ko-op May 9 F 8:30 May 16 F 10:15 May 23 W 8:30 May 30 W 10:15 Hash Apr. 18 F 10:15 Apr. 25 W 8:30 May 2 F 1:30 Martin May 16 F 1:30 May 9 W 10:15 May 2 F 10:15 May 23 F 8:30 Apr. 18 F 10:15 House May 30 F 8:30 Apr. 24 F 4:30 Marks May 23 F 8:30 May 2 F 10:15 May 9 F 10:15 May 16 W 8:30 Apr. 25 W 8:30 May 30 F 8:30 League Apr. 18 F 1:30 K K May 30 F 1:30 May 23 F 1:30 May 15 W 4:30 May 9 F 1:30 May 2 F 1:30 Apr. 24 F 4:30 Apr. 18 F 1:30 News SECOND DIVISION The Babb Daniels Wouldst Hope Stevenson Nutting Midway Daily Apr. 18 W 1:30 Apr. 25 F 1:30 May 2 W 1:30 May 9 F 1:30 May 16 W 1:30 May 23 W 1:30 May 30 F 1:30 Daniels Apr. 18 W 1:30 Kansas Apr. 25 W 4:30 Apr. 25 F 8:30 May 16 F 8:30 May 8 W 4:30 May 2 W 10:15 May 22 F 4:30 May 22 F 4:30 May 9 W 8:30 May 16 F 8:30 Wouldst Apr. 25 F 1:30 May 29 W 4:30 Apr. 18 W 8:30 May 22 F 4:30 May 2 W 8:30 May 9 W 8:30 May 16 F 8:30 1221 May 2 W 1:30 Apr. 25 F 8:30 Apr. 18 W 8:30 May 22 F 4:30 Hash May 22 W 4:30 May 16 W 10:15 May 9 F 8:30 May 9 F 1:30 May 16 F 8:30 May 22 F 4:30 Apr. 18 F 8:30 Apr. 25 F 10:15 May 2 F 8:30 Hope May 9 F 1:30 May 16 F 8:30 May 22 F 4:30 Hash May 22 F 8:30 House May 30 W 8:30 Apr. 25 F 8:30 Nutting May 23 W 1:30 May 2 W 10:15 May 9 W 8:30 May 16 W 10:15 May 30 W 8:30 League Apr. 18 F 8:30 Midway May 30 F 1:30 May 22 F 4:30 May 16 F 8:30 May 9 F 8:30 May 2 F 8:30 Apr. 25 F 8:30 Apr. 18 F 8:30 News INTER-FRATERNITY LEAGUE SEASON OF 1914
SIGMA DELTA PHIPI UPSILONKELTZPHI BETA PISIGMA PHI SIGMAPHI ALPHA DELTA
Pi Upsilon April 18Sigma Delta Phi April 18Phi Alpha Delta April 17Sigma Phi Sigma April 18Phi Beta Pi April 18Keltz April 17
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AT THE AURORA TODAY AT THE AURORA TODAY DON'T MISS THIS GREAT FEATURE Longfellow's Immortal "EVANGELINE" COMPLETE IN FIVE REELS CALE HISTORICAL SOCIETY TOPEKA KAN UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN VOLUME XI. PURCHASING AGENT TO AUDIT STUDENT BOOKS NUMBER 140. James T. Lardner Will Check Organization Accounts for the Board WILL BE HERE WEDNESDAY Registrar George O. Foster Issue General Call for Officers to Produce Complete Records James T. Lardner, general purchasing agent for the Board of Administration, will audit the accounts of all student organizations Wednes- Registrar G. O. Foster issued the notices and to officers of student organizations; "General Purchasing Agent, James. T. Lardner, will be in Lawrence Wednesday of next week. April 29, for events and guest contributions of all University organizations. "Will you kindly hand in to this office on or before Tuesday, April 28, a report of your receipts and disbursements covering the period since last report was made? If the financial affairs of your organization will require additional expenditures or receipts before the close of the school year, a statement may be sent in (and a report made up complete and handed in before Commencement or before you leave Lawrence for the vacation.) 3. Expenditures from date of last 1. Balance of cash on hand at date of last report. 2. Receipts up to close of school year. "This record should show: report to close of school year. 4. Balance cash on hand at date of report. ANOTHER PROFESSOR TO TAKE BETTER POST "This should be signed by you with a certificate, as the connectness of the sensors to the customer UNIVERSITY OF KANSASFRIDAY AFTERNOON, APRIL 24, 1914. D. C. Rogers, of Psychology Department, to Smith College As Professor "In order that your accounts may be properly audited please submit all books, voucher checks and check stubs, receipts and receipts stubs, bank book and all other papers necessary to make a complete audit." Prof. D. C. Rogers has just accepted the chair of psychology at Smith College, Northampton, Mass., where he will have the rank of pro-fessor in the university's women's school in the United States. It has an enrollment of over 1,500. EXTENDS TIME ON PETITIONS For some time Professor Rogers has been considering another position, but when the Board of Administration recently raised him to the associate professor, it was thought that he would remain at the University. Professor Rogers has been at K U. since 1909. He received his A. B in 1899 from Princeton, his A. M. in 1902 from Harvard, and his Ph. D. the following year from the same school. President of Student Council WILL Receive Petitions Up To Monday Leslie Dudd has extended the time for filing petitions for the Athletic Board election Tuesday to Monday night. Pittsburg Saves Monev Pittsburgh, Kans., April 23—The Pittsburg Normal will save a useful little fund from its appropriation of $60,000 made by the legislature for the New Industrial Arts building. Students of the college of Prof. J. A. Shirk are now wiring the electric lights. They have installed the 40 motors that are used in the building, the switches, wiring and other things in connection. The material which they have used cost $1,800. It is estimate that their work has produced a labor amounting approximately to $1,200. The time for filling petitions expired today, with but four candidates dates in the field for the five positions, Landon Laird and Cal Lam-Emery. Donna Sperling and Bonny Reber and Lefty Sproull for athletic members. CHANCELLOR NAILS CRITICISM OF K. U. Send the Daily Kansan home. Y MINISTER DISAGREES Denies Absurd Attack onStu dents and Daily Kansan in a City Paper Says University Community is Exceptionally High in Morals—Student Gives Interview Chancellor Strong this morning branded as utterly false and absurd certain charges reflecting on moral conditions at the University, accredited to Chancellor Roth of a small university in the city and published in the Topoka Capitan. Roth was a graduate student at the University last year. Says Chancellor Roth: "Card games are played on the opening day of the semester at K. U. under the sce of University officials." Sue, Corps: Geocellon Skye; "The charge that card playing is done in University buildings is manifestly absurd." Savs Chancellor Roth: 'Slys Chancellor Born: "The University newspaper, (The Daily Kansas publishes articles containing profanity and other language that would not be printed in any decent newspaper in the state." Kansan is "Clean and Decent" Sara Choncolle Strong "The Daily Kansan is as clean and decent a newspaper as is published in Kansas, and for honest constructive journalism might well be emulated by any newspaper anywhere." Saev Chancellor Roth. "Proficiency is continually blended in college yells in chapel, and I have heard but one professor make a protest against such conditions." "Occasional 'jay' outbursts of proscribed words give the ground for Mr. Roth's assertion that 'proafinity' is 'continually blended' with college yells. No faculty member approves of this, and if our crudely wants to do so, he situation all he needs to do is to ask specific information before me." Continuing Dr. Strong said: Continuing Dr. Strong said: "This outbreak of the gentleman from Oklahoma is but one of divers such annoyances that I have elicited on in the interests of truth to deny all such stories." Lawrence Minister Speaks Rev. Eugene T. McFarland who is a member of the same denomination as Chancellor Roth said, when shown the statement of Chancellor Roth: "I have seen nothing to justify the remarks. The moral tone of the town and University is far above the average, and I couldn't think of a finer community into which to send students. I have never seen any profinity in the Daily Kansan and have, with its high standards and moral tone. It is a mistake to pick exceptions in judging the University." Prof. F. Wellman a graduate of Chancellor Ruth's school, who is now attending K. U., has the following to say concerning the statements: "I have been here a year and have seen nothing of the conditions which Chancellor Mell reports as being common with students I had worked that contained profanity and the Daily Kan斯 has been entirely free from it as far as I have seen. The good qualities of the University easily counteract the bad." MEDICS ORGANIZE SOCIETY A meeting of the students of the School of Medicine was held this morning during chapel hour in the medic rooms to organize a student medical society. Meetings will be held regularly for the discussion of medical topics that have to do with the various phases of the practice of medicine. Elect Lester A. Smith President of New Student Organization The seismograph recorded a slight earth disturbance thought to be near the mouth of the Mississippi river early this morning. The disturbance began at 2:43 and continued twelve minutes. Lester A. Smith was elected president and Horace R. Boone, secretary-treasurer. A committee will decide time for the first regular meeting. Mississippi Disturbed Hamilton in Cimarron Manager W. O. Hamilton is in Cimarron today, conducting a high school track meet. These Men Will Debate Against Missouri C. W. H. HARRY M. SMITH These men will argue for Kansas s in the debate with Missouri next Tuesday night in Fraser Hall on the negative side of the question, "Resolved, that immigration into the U united States should be further regulated." Mr. Kruse asserts the ability to read ordinary prose in at least one language or dialect." J. CHRISTY WILSON "DON'T REVIVE CLASS FIGHTS"-CHANCELLOR The debate will begin at 8. Ad mission is twenty-five cents or a student ticket. Dr. Strong Advises Student to Drop Plans for a Tug-of-War Chancellor Frank Strong issued a second statement today concerning the proposed plan of having a freshman-sophomore tug-of-war or similar event as a remedy for interclass disturbances. "I hope that those concerned in the matter will consider very seriously the question of breaking over a rule against student disturbances that has prevailed for the last nine years," said the Chancellor. "All of us seem to be very desirous of traditions and we now have one that is grounded on good sense and experience." We already placed the mark of distinction on the University in the minds of other Universities of the country." **Chancellor** **Strong** also issued a **warning** about possible disturbance **day** day. "I wish to call attention to the fact that the holiday on May 1 that has become a tradition, is based on refraining from interclass disturbances and to enable the student understanding and agreement. In my opinion no sane man could desire the return of the old-fashioned student disturbances from which all universities of standing are making desperate attempts to get away." Prof. W. H. Johnson has decided that he cannot attend the meeting of university employment officials at Cornell University. He says the budget is not large enough to cover such a trip. Johnson Can't Go. Prof. E. H. S. Bailey went to Rosedale this morning to lecture before his University class in Toxicology. The Y. M. C. A quartet composed of Messrs. Herron, McKean, Smith, and Guise will repeat their concert in the M. E. church. Friday the 24th. Y. M. Quartet To Sing Send the Daily Kansan home. Send the Daily Kansan home. 'EL SENOR CURA' TO SHOW ON MT. OREAL Play by Romance Language Department Will Be Given Tomorrow Night The fourteenth annual play by the students in the department of Romance languages will be given Saturday evening at 8:15 in Robinson gymnasium. The play, *El Senor Cura* is composed with appropriate and up-to-date scenery. It is a real comedy with a laugh in every line. DR. STRONG URGES STUDENTS TO MAINTAIN ORDER IN CITY For more than six weeks the Spanish students have been hard at work, and according to Miss NeuenSchwander, who is managing the play, everything is in readiness for the presentation of the play. With the best team, the Spanish students and drilled cast, Spanish students are promised a real treat. The Calderon club of Westport high school, under the leadership of Prof. F. L. Phillips, will come to the University to witness the play. The students enrolled in the Spanish department of Westport. Special music has been arranged for by the department. Miss Madeline Nachtmann will sing "Alma de Dios" a Spanish love song, by Serrano. John M. Martin will play Barcarell (Contes d'Hoffman) on (Continued on page 4) Another Saturday-full of Hash- House Baseball League games will be played on the freshman and Woodland fields tomorrow. Five games will be staged from 8:30 until the end of the 1:30 contests in the afternoon. To the Students of the University: The following teams will play: Ko-op vs. Marks, Woodland, 8:30; Stevenson vs. Midway freshman, 8:30; Babb vs. Wouldst, freshman, 1:30; Nutting vs. Hope, freshman, 10:15. TEN HASH-HOUSE TEAMS WILL PLAY TOMORROW The meeting of the Civil Engineering Society which was announced for this evening has been postponed to Thursday, April 30. I wish to repeat my request of Wednesday that all students refrain from any disturbance of any sort. No loyal son of the University, I am sure, will think of jeopardizing its interests in any way. Postpone C. E. Meeting Frank Strong, Chancellor Strong issued the above statement today as the result of a rumor that some students were planning to hold a disturbance on the street tonight, similar to that of Tuesday. Chancellor CATHOLICS COULDN'T FIND PITCHER SMEE St. Marys Players Unable to Hit Kansas Twirler; Score 9 to 1 VARSITY STRONG AT BAT Amass Triple, Four Doubles, and Five Singles From Gillahan and O'Leary—Opponents 1 Hit Pitcher George Snee had things his own way yesterday afternoon and took the chestiness out of the St. Marys baseball team on McCook field, 9 to 1. Snee did most of the work but his teammates knocked two Catholic pitchers all over the play and played fast ball. Twelve Catholics fanned before the Kansas pitcher. For the first time this season, McCarty's men got their bats in front of the ball and did some real hitting. A triple, four doubles and five singles was the amount collected off Gillahan and O'Leary. Kansas sewed up the game in the first session when Wandell grounded to short and Dillon let the ball slide through his glove. Snee's second Wandell out to second, DeLongoy walked, Canary missed Painter's fly and Wandel chased home. Then Chinmery swat-ted a two base blow, scoring DeLongoy and Painter. In Wandel grounded second and third game home on Stack's error. McCarty's pupils scored twice more in the sixth stanza. Painter led off with a single, Chinney laid one down and Painter anchored on second. Van der Vries walked. Sproul snugled, scoring Painter. Togo Somers sluggled the ball for two bases, bringing in two runs. The Jayhawkers humiliated Peter O'Leary in the eightth andDer Vries lobbed the fence and rested on third base. Sproul singled and scored Van. Bishop broke into the limelight with a two bagger sending Sproul home. The Irishmen made their home tally in the ninth. Dillon got a scratch single and Soldoni hit a Texas league back of失误. Dillon fanned and Rozier ended the agony, Painter to Sproull. **SCORE.** St. Mary. McSweney, bs. Dillon, 1b. Soloni, rf. Collins, 3b. Stack, c. (capt.) Barry, 2b. Razier, br. Cayman, lf. Gillgahan, p. L'O'leary, p. AB R H PO A E 4 0 0 1 2 0 4 1 3 12 0 4 1 0 1 0 4 0 0 2 1 3 0 2 3 1 1 4 0 1 3 0 4 0 1 3 0 4 0 3 0 0 2 0 0 0 3 0 2 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 Total, . . . . . . . . . 32 1 7 24 10 Kansas AB R B PO A E Sommers, c. Wandel, cf. Smee, p. DeLongy, 2b. Painter, b. Rf. rf. Van der Vries, ss 2 2 1 0 30 Sproull, lb. Bishop, lb. Ih, lf. 4 2 3 6 00 Ih, lf. 4 2 1 0 1 0 Totals. . . . . . 33 9 10 27 7 Score by innings: St. Marys 000 000 001—1 7 3 Kansas 301 003 02* — 9 10 4 Score by innings: R. H. E. Summary: Three base hit, van Der Vries; two base hit, Sommers 2, Bishop, Chinney, Barry; stolen bases, Sodoni, Stack 2, Wandel 2. Struck out by Smee 12, by Gillgahan 3; base on balls, off Smee 1, off Gillgahan 2, off Storm 3; on bases, Kansas 6, St. Marys 6; wild pitch, Gillgahan, Umurey Wedell. BOWS AND ARROWS GO ASTRAY IN SHIPMENT Where are the bows and arrows which Dr. James Naismith ordered two months ago for the physical training department? This is a question which neither the doctor or the arrow makers can answer. The archery goods have been shipped but the shipment has gone astray. Unless the equipment arrives soon the University women will have to postpone their target shooting until next fall. Boynton Will Meet Classes Boyton Will Meet Classes Prof. A. J. Boyton's classes will be expected to meet again next week Building Professor Boyton is somewhat better and will meet his classes after a week's absence. CAPTAIN JONES ISSUES CALL FOR VOLUNTEERS Wants Seventy-Five Recruits to Fill Company M to Fighting Strength NO ORDERS YET FOR GUARDS Electrical Engineers Can Get Commissioned Officer in Signal Corps Jones Offered Post There is also a call for electrical engineers for signal corps service as commissioned officers. Any electrical engineer who is qualified and has demonstrated the required service should report to Captain Jones at Fowler Shops at once. Captain Jones received a long distance call from Missouri this morning asking him to take a commissioned office in a volunteer bathtub men. He refused the offer and will remain with the local guards. A call for volunteers to fill Company M of the K. N. G. up to fighting strength was issued by Captain F. E. Jones this morning. Any student on the Hill who is physically able for service is eligible to enlist. "There have been no orders for mobilization of the militia as yet," said Captain Jones this morning. "The orders will come from Adjutant-General Martin at Topeka when they are sent out." ON TO ESTES PARK! SAY Y. W. WOMEN Organization Wants Thirty Girls to Attend Conference During Summer The campaign for the Estes Park Summer Conference is now on and all loyal Y. W. C. A. girls are echoing the watchword of the Estes Park committee, "We are going to send thirty girls to Estes." At a meeting of the committee yesterday, plans were discussed for the Estes Park meeting on Tuesday afternoon at Myers Hall. At this meeting, some of the girls who attended last summer will speak on the different phases of the conference, carrying out College Day at Estes Park. After the meeting indoors the girls will adjourn to golf links, where the girls to last summer's delegation gave the give the deans gave on Stunt Day at the last conference, and where refreshments will be served. The following have already agreed to go: Florence Whitcher, Marie Russ, Juliet Snidrger, Lulla Corey, Spencer Spencer, Eater Burke, Medhulton Matheson, Christa Freak, Merritt Carr, Stella Simmons, Evelyn Strong. SNOW ZOLOGY CLUB ELECTS NEW MEMBERS Seven new members were elected to the Snow Zoology club at its last meeting. They are: Alice Brown, Olive Brown, Evelyn Enbstein, Myrtle Larabee, Dora Luper, Frank Ackers and W. W. Swingle. Clarence Turner gave an interesting and instructive talk on the evolution of the human mind at the meeting. He traced the development of the form from its beginnings and covered the subject in an exhaustive manner. The next meeting will be devoted to a program provided by members who made the zoology trip to the Pacific coast last summer under the direction of Dr. I. Baskin. A week-end camping out party for the purpose of collecting some field and stream specimens is being planned by the club. Chemists Get Charts Charts and samples of products were received by the department of chemistry this week from the Washburn-Crosby Milling Co., makers of Gold Medal flour. The different stages in the manufacture of flour are shown together with the waste products and brans. Playing Robin Hood Tennis The Robin Hood tennis tournament is under way on the Varsity tennis courts now. The matches will be played off before Thursday, when the Varsity team will be picked. Send the Daily Kansan home. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Official student paper of the University of Kansas UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN EDITORIAL STAFF John C. MADDEN Editor-in-Chief LION HARRIS Associate Editor JOHN GILLMERMAN Managing Editor JOHN GILMERMAN High School CALVIN LAMERT Sport Editor BENNAINE EVIDA RAYNE Business Manager RAY EDOREORC Circulation Manager JOB BIBERO Advertising Manager ADVERTISING AARONA AARONA GULAN S. STERNVANT Advertising REPORTORI SAM DEENEN BROOKLYN ALLISON GALVIN ALLISON RUBE BURNER RUBE BURNER LUCILE HILDINGER LAWRENCE SMITH LAWRENCE SMITH GILBERT-CLAYTON GILBERT-CLAYTON LUCY BABOER W. W. FERGUSON BAY GUYSCHYNER BAY LAPPE HAYFIELD WILLIAM S. CADY WILLIAM L. CAIRD LANDSON LAIBR Published in the afternoon five times a week, by students of the University of Kansas, from the press of the department of Journalism. sentered in second-class mail matter laid down by the Governor of fourteenth, Kansas, under the act of March Subscription price $2.50 per year, in advance, one term, $1.50 The Daily Kansan aims to picture the undergraduate students further and then merely print the news by standing for them. For favorites, to be clean; to be cheerful; to be careful; to be more serious problems to wiser heads; to more serious problems to wiser heads; to authentically identify the students of the University. The mildest manners and the gentlest heart.—Homer. Phone, Bell K. U. 25. Address all communications to UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN. Lawrence, Kans. GREATER FREEDOM FRIDAY, APRIL 24, 1914. Two concessions and one added restriction are the net results of the deliberations of the faculty on the present group system and major work regulations. The most important change, from the student point of view, is the greater freedom allowed in minor departments. A maximum of forty hours is now permitted in a group other than the major group. Thirty hours were allowed formerly. An additional bit of freedom—granting juniors and seniors the right to take twelve rather than ten hours in a single department—will prove advantageous to the undergraduate in many cases. The additional restriction—that at least forty hours offered by a senior for graduation must be in courses numbered higher than fifty--looks fair enough. Certainly a graduate of a University should take a large number of advanced courses before he really earns the A. B. degree. Our own cap is one of the cherished reminders of our first year at K. U. It calls up interesting memories of severe paddlings. It is one of our prized possessions which we shall cherish in years to come. The suggestion to commemorate the end of the University year by an all-class parade and love feast is praiseworthy except for one thing—burning freshman caps. This objection is not vital, however, and can be circumvented merely by asking the first year classmates to make some sacrifice, their caps if they desire, or something else equally suggestive of the first year at college. More changes are looked for when a sub-committee makes another report; and after all the changes announced are not as many or as important as were generally expected. SAVE THE CAPS But no freshman would object to destroying his accumulated quiz books, a hated notebook, or the program of an unenjoyable party. Let those who object contribute some other freshman possession; but above all, let the custom begin. Freshmen like those caps.. Not one man burned his little headpiece when such an order was issued by the Student Council last year. It's a mighty good thing when you are whooping against the umpire's decision on some close play to pause and consider. This arbitrator has in all probability been drafted into service against his wishes and against the wishes of his family, if he has THE UMPIRE one. His job is about as pleasant as fighting a mad bull with bids parasal; yet he makes his will, bids his friends goodby, and takes up this unpleasant job because he loves his country and the good old game. He is the sacrificing hero of every contest, and all the thanks he gets are numerous invitations to move to Hallafu, Canada, or some other health resort. Out of a thousand and twenty-one decisions he slips up on a couple, while his mind has momentarily wandered off to thoughts of the dinner that he is missing. But, the fans roar and the players roar and he almost wishes that he had taken the advice of his accident insurance company and stayed at home. How a pitcher who is as wild as an aborigine or an infielder who is making as many errors as Coin's Financial School, has the nerve to stand up and talk to the perspiring "ump" is hard to imagine; yet he does. And the fan who can see perfectly from his seat a half mile or so away from the plate challenges the decision of the official who is not ten yards away. Alice Nielsen was paid something like eight dollars a minute while singing here not long ago but her job was a midsummer night's dream compared to the work of an ampire. SOME FAIRY TALES MISSED BY ANDERSON. "Yes, father has an automobile." "You took perfectly natural in that dress suit." "If you are not satisfied bring them back." "I'm sorry that I cannot go to night; I have a lot of work to do." "You'll make a hundred a month easily selling this book." "A singe will keep your hair from coming out." "We are selling this to you almost at cost." "I have not made any preparation for this address." "Yes, mother, I go to church every Sunday." "I'll pay you back Saturday." "I'll pay you back Saturday." "The festivities will begin right on the dot." "I'd rather walk than ride." NEW WORK FOR UNIVERSITIES Briefcase Blackmar, head of the department of sociology at Kansas university, has outlined a new work for the colleges. It is the training of men in the government of cities He believes that the city of the future will be governed by trained superintendents and that this training can best be given by the recent universities, that the next step after the commission form of government will be, logically, the city superintendent, or manager, responsible to the people through an elected board of governors. The board of governors would serve without pay, their principal business being to select the city manager, under the plan outlined in the greatest problems that is before us today is government of cities," said Professor Blackmar. "The ancient and cumbersome, bicameral system has fallen into disrepute in progressive communities, and as a remedy, the commission form of government is proposed. It is only a half remedy though it could be made by men that gain office largely through their vote-getting capacities, not by their abilities as governing officials. So here is where the university steps in. It should train men to govern cities as it now trains men to build bridges, teach high schools and cure bodily ailments. The time is bound, the opportunity will be considered a profession. It is the business now, in some cities, but it is the business of the professional politician, who in no wise considers himself responsible to the people—Lincoln (Neb.) News. The best way to intimidate Huerta would be for President Wilson to send to Mexico a bunch of college men in full dress suits. "Mellen escapes trial." headline. So have strawberries so far at the average boarding club. ENDS AND ODDLETS CAMPUS OPINION The degree granted volunteers from the University who may go to war will undoubtedly be M. A., standing for Mexican Army. WANTS SPECTATORS TO PAY To the Editor of the Daily Kansan; While I have no direct interest in the sophomore class I do have a strong desire to see their coming sophomore "hop" not be the cause of nervous breakdown of the manager because there has not been enough paid in to stand the useless expense incurred by the presence of our students as quality members, "housemothers" and the administrative officers of the school. The prom managers had to pay out in good hard money at least seventy-five cents for every person who attended the prom, whether he paid his three and a half or not. Including the various office employees and administrative officers with their escorts there were at least a hundred such "dead heads" present. This cost the managers approximately seventy-five dollars. The excuse which is offered for their presence by some people, is that they lend dignity and stability to the occasion. The reason for them doing so is the tradition. Now it seems that the question that confronts future "hop" and prom managers is this. Are the seats which these people occupy till a late hour and the criticism which they offer about our social functions worth such a high price? The prom lasted seven hours and the cost of this outside dignity, stability and customary seventy-five dollars or ten dollars and fifty cents per hour. Rather high priced dignity I should say. The very people who had a chance to settle the dance question last fall when feeling was high are not consistent in digging up those skeletons now. Of course every fellow says what he would do, but no one wronger so I don't propose to be the exception to the rule. Let me suggest that if the faculty and the administrative officers want to come to our social functions in the future I would make them pay the stipulated admission fee at the door. THE STORY OF MY LIFE Bv Bill Caldwell, '11. "It it was back in the 'eighties'" my parents will tell you when I announced myself as a prospective harvest hand one bright sunny May morning. The troubles of growing childhood mother knows. As she was the "fun, I had" playing around the old home on father's homestead. I passed through many recapitulating days. Mimicry came a chair into a harvester header; a grindstone sufficed for a thrashing-machine. "Oh, oh, oh," the bibman those days when idle yet useful play filled my wailing hours. A little later, Mr. Tail, the overseer of the farm took me in as an apprentice. Mr. Tail was a brother of the one spoken about in the second reader. He and his relatives have spoiled many a fishing day for boys. He soon fell into the hands of his teachers. It was then that his jobs were not too big nor his days too long. Thus under these disguised blessings I grew. The time came for a new epoch in my life when I went away to school. Little did I know then of the outcome. My "Prep" days at Cooper College, Sterling, Kansas, were full of fun, books and work. As I remember it, lessons never came so easily, nor fun so spontaneously. After two short years at Cooper, began to assume some responsibilities by teaching a district school, home, and I got a different view of fun. Four years of teaching, however, had its successes and ripening influence. The desire for a college degree lead me to Kansas University. Here, the muscles that Mr. Toll took so much pride in, came into use on the gridron. By training, will-power, and using my head, I was able to maintain my position on the team during my undergraduate days. The experience of school-teaching left a comeonor about me that took little interest in college frivolities and society. I broke into work with enough grace to be companionable with enough grace to be shared many experiences. The studies assigned me were not always easy. The unlearning of some things makes progress difficult. I will not say that I obtained much of the steep hill of knowledge at the University, but I did learn a little about climbing. At the close of the fifth year, I was given a degree of B. S. The University authorities gave me privilege to face the world in the hope that; I might add to the fame and honor to my Alma Mater. I began at Muskungum College in Ohio. He was a beginning of epiphany. This the event that has happened thus far, was my marriage to Addie M. Jackson, the "One" of the fair daughters of K. U. She has now resided peacefully with me for nearly two years and a half. At the present writing I am growing in the duties of an Association Secretary at Adelbert College, Western Reserve U. What Your Tailor? SPRING and Summer clothes we tailor to your order fit your purse and your personality as well as your body. S. G. CLARKE 707 Mass. St. Eldridge Hotel Bldg. our exclusive local dealer, will show you our newest styles and fabrics,and measure you for clothes that are distinctive. Invest ten minutes today E. V. Price C Largest tailors in the world of GOOD made-to-order clothes Price Building Chicago, U. S. A. K. Book Material Extra Copies of the "YELLOW" KANSAN 5 c. —At— Griggs'————Rowland's Oread Cafe Or at The Kansan Office 1. (1) $x=2$ is the solution of the equation $3x^2-4x+1=0$. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN SOPHOMORE H O P One Week From Tonight ANNOUNCEMENTS All junior and senior women who wish to swim are invited to come to the pool Tuesday and Thursday at 4:30 for advanced swimming. Monday and Wednesday 4:30 for beginners in swimming. This is to accommodate those who were conditioned in swimming, also all College women who care to learn to swim. Dr. Margaret L. Johnson. New shipment of bathing caps just in. Carroll's—Adv. Individual moulds; roses, grapes hearts, etc., for dinner or evening parties. Reynolds Bros. Bell 645.— Adv. Sunday evening at 8.00 p. m. at the First Baptist church the chorous will give the cantata "Olivet to Calvary." Reverend Brown's sermor theme will be, "A Layman on the Frontier." - Adv. WANT ADS We will deliver your cream to dinners and parties. Just call Bell 645 Reynolds Bros.-Adv. LOST—A Chi Omega pin, finder please return to Helen Crane, 1137 Indiana. FOR RENT-Modern twelve room, house, very desirable for club or fraternity. Bell 1823. 138-6 WANTED - To rent next year, a furnished house on Rue de la Call Bell 2647. 189-3 Michael Town The University of Chicago in addition to resident work, offers also instruction by correspondence. FOR dental treatment Dad Year U. of C. (Biv.) B. Chicago, Ill. CITY CAFE 906 Mass. Strictly Home Cooking Ever try our Special 15c Lunch? You'll like it. SPRING SUITINGS FRANK KOCH TAILOR 727 Mass. PROFESSIONAL CARDS W. A. COOMELL, Phydrase and surgeon, ODONNELLE, Bell 302, Henry 834, Mosquito Residence, 1346 Tenn. Tm. J. P. BROCK, Optometrist and Specialist in Scientific Glass Fitting, Bell 862 Mast. St. Bell phone 990. MARRY REDING, M. D. Rye, ear, earring, A. G. HAMMAN, M. D. Eye, ear, earring, A. A. Blidg, Phone, Bell 513, Home 512 A. G. HAMMAN, M. D. Eye, ear, earring, Battalion Grassland. Dick Building. DR. H. W. HAYNE, Oculist, Lawrence, Kansas. J. W. O'BRYAN, Dentist, Over Wilson's Drug Store. Bell Phone 507. J. B. ROCHETT, M. D. E. O. 833 Mass Street. Both phone, office and residence. J. W. GONES, M. A. M. D. Disease of old stomach, surgery, and gynecology. Residence, 1301 Ole St. both phone, 353. DR. H. T. JONES, Room 12 F. A. N. Aldg. Residence 1380 Tenn. Phones 211. DR. H. T. JONES, Office over Squire's Store. Both phone, 353. DR. BUET R. WHITE Oceopath, Phones, Hall 265 Office, 745 Mast. St. Ed. W. Parsons, Engraver, Watchmaker and Jeweler. Diamonds and Jewelry. Bell Phone A. T. GILLIPISSE, M. D. Office corner Vermont and Warren St. Residence 723 Ind. Phones 506. CLASSIFIED Plumbers Phone Kennedy Plumbing For, gas goods and Masda lamps. 875. Madda. Mt. BELL LISLON Dressmaking and Ladies Tallining. Evegingown specializes. 1032 Tallining Ladies Tailors Quinn O'Keefe. Program and sewing Managers, Coordination. Dr. Mrs. O. M. Bardman, 834 Rd., Holi- dale. Meir, M. G. Marken, 834 Rd., Holi- dale. Hair Dressers Hired dressing, shampooing, scalp and facial massage, shampooing, hair-noods. "Marilyn's house," Pall Bell 1948. None of the above. Hired Dressing shop, 097 Mansse St. Barber Shops Go where we all go J. C. NOU 918 Road Students' Oo-op Club. $25.00 at 8:30 per week. 13k49 MK. Geo, H. Vansell Sawyer. TWENTY-FOUR TO PLAY CRIB Sharks at 15-2, 14- Meet at Union and Contest for Championship of School Twenty-four have entered the cribbage tournament at the Student Union. Some of the games have been played. Rutherford has the record so far for winning the most games from a single opponent having beaten Marshall six games straight. Orton has the record for winning the largest percentage of all games having been in twenty-four of thirty-six. Rutherford is second with twenty-one one of thirty-eight. Fifty-nine holes is the record for the worst beating that any player has received. Following are the names of all the contestants entered: Laird, Ritter, Jackson; Orton, Larimore, Martin. Rutherford, Merilette, Gibbon, Plow Reynolds Bros., special, banana nut ice cream. Bell 645..Adv. More reputable heritics Romans II John Wesley, Plymouth Church, Sun day, 8:00.-Adv. that dandelion colored Kansan man, Nicolay, Baker, Campbell, Hayes, McKay, Elmore, Doran, Bell, Lambert, Harrison, Pegus, Porter, Degen, and Marshall. extras—5c buy them in the Kansan office Medic Building The contest is still open and anyone who wishes to enter may do so before Saturday evening at 10 o'clock. All the games are played according to Hoyle's revised rules and some house rules which are written at the bottom of the score board. The house rules prohibit all coaching or interference of players by out-stands. Sheets of cards are printed and each individual score is kept as well as the tournament score. Today Only A nice cribbage board and pack of cards. The winner of the "gamble" or a prize "Evangeline," Longfellow's immortal masterpiece in five reels and produced in the Land of Evangeline. At the Aurora today.—Adv. More reputable heritics Romans II, John Wesley, Plymouth Church Sunday, 8:00.—Adv. Individual moulds; roses, grapes, hearts, etc. for dinners or evening parties. Reynolds Bros. Bell 645.— Adv. Baseball game and tennis balls at Wilson's Drug Store.—Adv. 138-5 Spalding and Reach official ball. Carroll's.-Ady. John Wesley, Plymouth Church, Sunday 8:00...Adv. Jesus, the Hero of the Ages. Presbyterian Church, Sunday, 8 p. m.- Adv. WARWICK Send the Daily Kansan home. THIRD Front 3% In. Back 1% In. Warranted Linen Barker Collars only at PECKHAMS Bert Wadham THE COLLEGE BARBER On 14th Street Student Plays Student Dances Student Mixers Printing When they are advertised in the Daily Kansan. Binding, Copper Plate Printing, Bubber Stamps, Engraving, Steel Die Embossing, Seals, Badges. A. G. ALRICH 744 Mass. PAY K. U. Calendar 3,000 Students, Faculty and Alumni read it every day. 4:00 Economics Lecture. Mr. J. W. Cable, of Kansas State Utilities Commission. "What Should Be Done with the Local Public Utility?" (Snow Lecture Room.) 1:30 Outdoor Interclass meet (Mc 8:15 Spanish Play, (Robinson Gymnasium.) Sunday 4:00 Haskell Institute Gospel Team. (Myers Hall.) May 1—Nebraska-Kansas dual track meet. MoCook Athletics May 2-Eleventh Annual Interscholastic track meet, McCook. May 1-2—Seventh Interscolastic aunt town McGoohy tennis tournament, McCook. BOLLINGTON, N.Y. May 6-7 - Baseball, Missouri at Law- sey - Roseau May 8—K. S. A. C. K. U. dual track at Manhattan May 14-15-Baseball, Missouri at Columbia May 16—M. U.-K. U. dual track meet at Columbia May 21-22-Baseball, Ames at Ames, Iowa May 23—Annual invitation H. S. scholarly lectures meet at Lawrence. May 27, 2013. Rockwell K. S. A. C. at May 27-28-Baseball, K. S. A. C. at Manhattan. May 29—Baseball, St. Marys at St. May 30—Missouri Valley track meet at St. Louis June 6—Western Conference track meet at Chicago. Future Events April 28—M. I. P. K. U. debate (Fra.) 1 May “Pina-1” University cam* May 1—Interscholastic High School Debate League. Debating League. May 5-7 - Merchants' Week. May 11-14-Kansas Newspaper Week National News- Paper Conference Mary Pickford In "Hearts Adrift" at the Aurora Monday and Tuesday at Five Reels— We will deliver your cream to din- ney premises—actually Call bell 485. Reynoldsha Remember the Candies at Wilson's Drug Store are kept in a large refrigerator case. Always fresh and the best makes...Adv. 138-5 More reputable heritics Romans II John Wesley, Plymouth Church Sunday, 8:00.—Adv. Jesus, the Hero of the Ages. Press byterian Church, Sunday, 8 p. m.- Adv. John Wesley, Plymouth Church, Sunday 8:00..Adv. Reynolds Bells, special, banana nut ice cream. Bell 645—Adv. John Wesley, Plymouth Church, Sunday 8:00—Adv. Want a bathing cap? Large assortment and fresh goods at Wilson's Drug Store.—Adv. 138-5 John Wesley, Plymouth Church, Sunday 8:00...Adv. Sam S. Shubert MAT. WEDNESDAY & SATURDAY Passing Show of 1913 Return Next Week, "Peg o' My Heart" Sam S. Shubert You Can Earn a Good Living and lay up some money you can graduating from. College. Enroll at once. get ready and you'll secure a good position. Free Employment Bureau as your service. Free Business College. No vacations. LAWRENCE Business College Lawrence, Kansas. WATKINS NATIONAL BANK Capital $100,000 Surplus and profits $100,000 The Student Depository A GOOD PLACE TO EAT AT Typewriting Done By Alvin L. Babb 334 Ohio St. Bell Phone 1574 ANDERSON'S OLD STAND OHNSON & TUTTLE 15 PROPS. Mass. R. E. Protsch TAILOR STANDISH WORLD ARROW COLLAR 2for 25¢ Cluett Peabody & Co. Inc. Makers STANDISHAKU REYNOLDS BROS. Ices--that merits the investigation of the high school student who is attracted towards science is that of Ice Creams--- Chocolate Vanilla Strawberry Banana Nut Brown Bread Apricot Lemon Individual Molds, Roses, Grapes, We Will Deliver Your Cream to Dinners and Parties Bell 645 Order for Sunday now. Home 358 BASE BALL GOODS The Sporting Goods Headquarters KENNEDY & ERNST KENNEDY & ERNST 826 Mass. St. Phones 341 An Expanding Vocation Chemical Engineering The demand for experts in this line is as keen as the desire of manufacturers for better processes and for the utilization of by-products. The pecuniary rewards include both large salaries and liberal percentages of the saving which the chemist brings about. The course in the University is complete, and after the necessary practical experience and work in research, leads to the degree of chemical engineer. Address Vocation Editor UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Lawrence, Kansas UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN 14th Annual Inter-Class Track and Field-Meet Saturday, Apr. 25, 2:30 o'clock A Real Meet with Red Hot Competition. Come out and root for your Team. The Olympic Vest One of the many exclusive features of Society Brand clothes. Insures absolute comfort during warm weather. The Coat that goes over it is unlined-naturalshoulders,nopads. The trousers are straight and narrow. See it in our window. The suit is stricty English--priced at $25. Ober's HEAD TO FOOT OUTFITTERS TAYLOR'S CITY HOSPITAL. TICKETS 25c. Student tickets admit DOPE FAVORS SOPHS IN INTER CLASS TRACK Second-Year Men Have Fas Representatives Entered-Juniors Will Place Manager Hamilton's office has been crowded with track men today and the entries for the interclass track meet tomorrow are larger than usual, this year. Each class has representatives in all events. The judges and officials were chosen this afternoon. Manager Hamilton will return from Cimarron tomorrow morning and everything will be ready when the first pistol cracks at 2:30 tomorrow afternoon. The dope still favors the sophomores, who have a big entry sheet crowded with fast track man. The juniors turned in a speedy bunch of athletes this morning and are expected to make a creditable showing. The freshmen entries are of almost unknown quality with a few exceptions. Russ is a sure point in the pole vault and several first year sprinters have been showing good form this week. The senior entry sheet was not in at noon, today but a few seniors have been working on McCook and several fast men are in the squad. At The Aurora Today, Evangeline. Mary Pickford in "Hearts, Adrift" Dayton…Adv. If you want something exclusive in stationery, call at Wilson's Drug Store—Adv. 138-5 More reputable heritics Romans II. John Wesley, Plymouth Church Sunday, 8:00—Adv. Jesus, the Hero of the Ages. Presbyterian Church, Sunday, 8 p. m.. Adv. Tennis balls, all standard makes 2 for 80c. "Carroll's."-Adv. John Wesley, Plymouth Church Sunday 8:00:- Adv. Notes on St. Mary's Game She safely, safely, the third, stole first, swiped second and, safe at home, when Stack fumbled the ball. Lefty Sproll got three singles out of four journeys to the plate. Togo Sommers landed on Gillgman fortwo two-baggers, one in the fifth and the other i nthe sixth. The bleachers had lots of fun with the Catholics. Collins got excited in the seventh and tried to coach from the first base line. Umpire Wedell escorted the angry Irishman to the greenesward and showed him the coachers' box while the fans howled for the umps. Dillon was the leading batsman for the Irish nine. He made three singles in four trips. The last single "Evangeline" The Flower Shop Longfellow's immortal masterpiece at the Aurora today only .- Adv. Jesus, the Hero of the Ages. Pres byterian Church, Sunday, 8 p. m.- Adv. Into the heart of the secret, Plymouth Church, Sunday, 10:30—Adv Jesus, the Hero of the Ages. Presbyterian Church, Sunday, 8 p.m.- Adv. We sometimes think it would be a good plan if all men's garments were sold inside out. For that's about the best way we know to show the difference between good clothes and clothes that are just good looking. Kuppenheimer Clothes Turning Clothes Inside Out are tailored honestly through and through with just as much care in the unseen as in the seen places. That's why they're full-value clothes at $18 to $28. J. House & Son Rob't. E. House, Prop. Copyright 1914 The House of Kuppenhuisen was a little pop-up which fell to the ground unmolested while Sproull and Smee did the Alphonse-Gaston act. DeLongy cracked the ball to sight field in the seventh but the sphere bounded straight into the hands of Soldoni who threw Dee out at first. It would have been a clean single. Paul Carl Visits Oread Mr. Paul Carl, a graduate of the School of Pharmacy, now located at Cherryvale, Kans., was in Lawrence this week visiting friends. While at the University, Mr. Carl worked with the Environmental State Department to the inspection of the roller towels used in hotels and other public places. Into the heart of the secret, Plymouth Church, Sunday, 10:30—Adv. Girls, get your bathing cap here; new goods. Carroll's-Adv. John Wesley, Plymouth Church, Sunday 8:00:-Adv. Bathing caps just in, new goods 50, 60 and 80c. Carroll's—Adv. John Wesley, Plymouth Church, Sunday 8:00—Adv. Into the heart of the secret, Plymouth Church, Sunday, 10:30—Adv. See our $1.00 racket, for the girls. Carroll's.—Adv. John Wesley, Plymouth Church, Sunday 8:00—Adv. -Fischer's Shoes are Good Shoes Yes— Those White Satin MARY JANE Pumps are here. They are beauties—per pair— $3.50 "EL SENOR CURA" ON MOUNT OREAD (Continued from page 1.) the violin, accompanied by Claire L.Dietrich on the piano. The cast of the play is as follows: Dona Nicasia, who keeps a boarding house in Madrid ... Maria Madden Don Cèlestino, a boarder at Nicasia's. ... Ames Rogers Menendez, an介门atamine tonet-payer, also a boarder at Nicasia's. . . . . Carlos, nephew of D. Feliciano, who has just successfully passed his examination for the doctorate...C. A. Castle Rafael, a student, Carlos's chum...Francis I. Martin Juanito, in love with Pura...George P. Bunn Dona Petronila, aunt of Pura and Clotilde, D. Ruperto's deserted wife. . . Zora M. Kennedy Pura, niece of Da Petronila, in love with Juanita. Heilen Hurst Clotilde, niece of Da Petronila. Vera Weatherhogg Don Feliciano, a parish priest, uncle of Carlos...E. Lee Treece Don Ruperto, a village doctor, $ \mathrm{D}^{a} $ Petronila's Don Rupero, a village doctor, $ ^{a} $ Petronila's long-lost husband. . . . . . Frank Hetherington Don Ruperro, a viking doctor, D. Feliciano's long-lost husband... Frank Hetherington Escolastica, D. Feliciano's housekeeper... Ida O'Brien Policarpo, D. Feliciano's man of all work... Robert H. Reed The Condiator, a writer... The Coadjutor, a new assistant in D. Feliciano's parish. . . . . . . . . . . . . Harold E. Yost Act I $ ^{1-} $ $ ^{14} $ Nicaea's boarding house in Madrid. Act II $ ^{-} $ Before the house of D. Feliciana in Villuela, a country village. MUSIC. Alma de Dios. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Serrano Madeline Nachtmann Barcarolle (Contes d'Hoffman) ... Offenbach John M. Martin Claire L. Dietrich Scenery by courtesy of the management of the Bowersock Theatre and the New Vaudeville Theatre.
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GillespieApr. 18 F 10:15KansanMay 30 F 10:15Apr. 24 W 4:30May 16 F 10:15May 9 W 10:15May 2 F 10:15May 23 F 1:30
Co-opApr. 24 F 4:30May 30 F 10:15PrintsApr. 18 W 10:15May 23 W 8:30May 2 F 10:15May 9 F 10:15May 15 W 4:30
ColumbusMay 2 F 8:30Apr. 24 F 4:30Apr. 18 W 10:15AllMay 30 W 10:15May 23 F 8:30May 16 W 8:30May 9 F 1:30
Ko-opMay 9 F 8:30May 16 F 10:15May 23 W 8:30May 30 W 10:15HashApr. 18 F 10:15Apr. 25 W 8:30May 2 F 1:30
MartinMay 16 F 1:30May 9 W 10:15May 2 F 10:15May 23 F 8:30Apr. 18 F 10:15HouseMay 30 F 8:30Apr. 24 F 4:30
MarksMay 23 F 8:30May 2 F 10:15May 9 F 10:15May 16 W 8:30Apr. 25 W 8:30May 30 F 8:30LeagueApr. 18 F 1:30
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HASH HOUSE LEAGUE SCHEDULE—First Division. SECOND DIVISION
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BabbDailyApr. 18 W 1:30Apr. 25 F 1:30May 2 W 1:30May 9 F 1:30May 16 W 1:30May 23 W 1:30May 30 F 1:30
DanielsApr. 18 W 1:30KansanMay 29 W 4:30Apr. 25 F 8:30May 16 F 8:30May 8 W 4:30May 2 W 10:15May 22 F 4:30
WouldstApr. 25 F 1:30May 29 W 4:30PrintsApr. 18 W 8:30May 22 F 4:30May 2 W 8:30May 9 W 8:30May 16 F 8:30
1221May 2 W 1:30Apr. 25 F 8:30Apr. 18 W 8:30AllMay 29 F 4:30May 22 W 4:30May 16 W 10:15May 9 F 8:30
HopeMay 9 F 1:30May 16 F 8:30May 22 F 4:30May 29 F 4:30HashApr. 18 F 8:30Apr. 25 F 10:15May 2 F 8:30
StevensonMay 16 W 1:30May 8 W 4:30May 2 W 8:30May 22 W 4:30Apr. 18 F 8:30HouseMay 30 W 8:30Apr. 25 F 8:30
NuttingMay 23 W 1:30May 2 W 10:15May 9 W 8:30May 16 W 10:15Apr. 25 F 10:15May 30 W 8:30LeagueApr. 18 F 8:30
MidwayMay 30 F 1:30May 22 F 4:30May 16 F 8:30May 9 F 8:30May 2 F 8:30Apr. 25 F 8:30Apr. 18 F 8:30News
STATE HISTORICAL SOCIETY TOMEKA KAN UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN VOLUME XI. NUMBER 141. SOPHOMORES WIN INTER-CLASS MEET Second Year Men Take Contest by 3-7 of a Point TWO K. U. RECORDS BROKEN Reber Puts Shot 42 Feet, Three Inches—Rodkey Lowers Half Mile Two Seconds. The sophomore won the fourteenth annual inter-class track and field games on McCook field, Saturday afternoon by scoring 50 4-7 points. The freshmen came second with 49 4-7 points, a more 3-7 of a point seperated them from the junior. The juniors scored 30 points, while the seniors were last with 23 3-7. Two Kansas records were shattered at the equest. Bonnie Broke broke the shotput record when he hurled the iron ball 42 feet and 3 inches. Rodkey, a freshman, clipped two seconds off the half mile record by reaching the tape in 2 minutes and 2-5 seconds. Rodkey will receive his letter and sweater for breaking the record. The meet was pulled off without interruption and was fast for an interclass event. Bonnie Reber, the sophomore giant, was the individual star. Reber won the shotpot, discus win, and the hammer win. Perry scored ten points for the seniors by winning the low and high hurdles. Several races were close and the small crowd saw a few fast finishes. The prettiest race was the two mile event when Malcolmson nosed out Harriet, the freshman runner, and won by a foot. Russ, the freshman vaulter, cleared the bar at 11 feet but failed to break the University record. Russ raised the bar to 11 feet 7½ inches but tipped the stick off each time. He divided the event with Campbell. The Summaries: The last event was the broad jump and this event was thought to decide the meet. Hamilton, a sophomore, won third place and apparently raised the sophomore score 3-7 of a point ahead of the freshmen. Later it developed, a mistake had been made in the pole vault results. K. E. Jones, a freshman, took fourth in the vault but this position was held by junior Jones. When the mistake was given to the point was given to the freshman and this pont won the meet for the first year men. Final score: sophomore 50 4-7, sophomores 50. Shot put: Rebeer, sophomore, first; Keeling, junior, second; Ziegler, freshman, third; Chawson, freshman, fourth. 6 in New Kansas record. 120 yard hurdles: Perry, senior; first; Heath, freshman, second; Eliot, freshman, third; Sproull, junior, fourth. Time 16-15 seconds. Pole vault: Russ, freshman, and Campbell, sophomore, tied for first and second; Pauley, senior, third; Jones, freshman, fourth. Height 11 One Mile Run: Grady, sophomore, first; Poos, junior, second; Thompson, freshman, third; Holland, freshman, fourth. Time 4 min. 48.25 100 yards dash: O'Neil, sophomore, first; Hilton, junior, second; Lindsey, sophomore, third; Heath, freshman. fourth. Time 10 2-5 seconds. Quarter Mile Run: Cissna, senior, first; Edwards, junior, second; Elswick, sophomore, third; Henderson, sophomore, fourth. Time 53 seconds. Half-mile run: Rodkey, freshman first; Fisk, sophomore, second; Metcalf, freshman, third; Hirsch, freshman, fourth; 2 min, 3.5 seconds. New Kansas record. 220 yards dash: Hilton, junior, first; O'Neil, sophomore, second; Diver, freshman, third; Yoekum, freshman. fourth. Time 23 2-5 see. 220 yards hurdles: Perry, senior, first; Reber, sophomore, second; Mcalf, freshman, third; Elliot, freshman, fourth. Time 26 4-5 seconds. Two mile run: Malcolmson, senior, first; Harriet, freshman, second; Deewall, sophomore, third; Vermilion, fourth. Term 10 min. 28 seconds. High Jump; McKay, sophomore, first; Gratzmacher, freshman, second; Pattinson, freshman; Nelson, freshman; Johnson, freshman; Miller, freshman; Street, freshman; Davis, senior; Ziegler, freshman, tied for third and fourth places. Height 5 ft. and 5 in. Broad jump: Johnson, freshman, first; Grutzmacher, freshman, second; Hamilton, junior, third; Cissma, senior, fourth. Distance, 20 ft. 4½ in. Discus: Reber, sophomore, first; Keeling, junior, second; Sproull, junior, third; Ziegler, freshman, fourth. Distress. 112 ft. and 10 in. Relay: juniors, first; sophomores second; freshmen, third. Time, 2 min. 45 3-5 sec. Junior team: Hilton edin. Sorenson, Ross. Officials: Judges of the finish Profs. Van der Vries, Briggs, Crois sant, Wheeler, Becker, Timers H. R. Faircliffe, Prof. R. Faircliffe, C. Faircliffe, Prof. F. C. Dockey. Judges of field events; J. Bond, Prof. L. McCarty, Prof. H. A. Rice, Prof. A. H. Sluss, Prof. G. E. Putman, Prof. D. Weidelin. Inspectors, Proffs. Mills. Robertson, Dykstra, T. S. Smith. Oustonian, T. S. Smith. Ortley Force Babb. Clerk of the course, Arthur Mosse, Referee and starter, O. H. Hamilton. UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS MONDAY AFTERNOON, APRIL 27, 1914. GERMAN CLUB MAKES REPORT TO AUDITOR Der Verein First Organization to Turn Over Books to Purchasing Avent Lardner Madeline Ashton was the first officer of a University organization to turn in a report for the adulator of the school enterprises. Her report was for Der Deutsche Dramatische Verein. All of the reports are due tomorrow. They will be audited Wednesday by General Purchasing Agent, James T. Lardner, of Manhattan. The records should show the balance of cash on hand at date of last report, receipts up to the close of the school year, expenditures from date of last report to close of school year; the balance of cash on hand at date of report K. N. G. PRACTICE SHOOTING Captain Jones took a party to tar get practice Saturday at Six Corners When they marched down Massa chusets street the phones in news paper offices were kept busy while staff members went to work and the boys were only on their way to target practice instead of departing for Mexico. Captain Jones Takes K. U. Soldiers to Six Cormans for Rifle Practice The Mexican situation is not so critical, and, according to military authorities, the state militia may not be called into service. In case the guards are called out, they will probably be sent to garrison the posts which are left vacant by the departed regulars. GOOD AFTERNOON. HAVE YOU BEEN PINAFORED? Tags are on sale on the campus this morning for "Pinafore," the opera which will be given in Robinson Gymnasium. May 9. Two performances, one in the afternoon and the other in the evening. The tags will be sold at twenty-five cents each and will entitle the bearer to any seat in the house. Preceeding the afternoon presentation the Queen of May, will be crowned on the decr of mārewa. 'Our lord,' he said, by the power of pārism, classes at, each performance "We are expecting a big crowd out of out town," said Maude Lourey, president of the W. S. G. A., this morning, "May 9 and 10 will be celebrated as 'Mother's Day' by several fraternities and we hope the students will make the week-end a universal 'Mothers' Day' for K. U." The "hazing" proposition will be solved at the meeting of the University Debating Society tonight in Fraser Hall. The question for debate is, Resolved: That a tug of war should be held between the freshman and the senior. The debate will be in the form of a general discussion. The affirmative will be lead by E. M. Johnson and the negative by Walter Rockwell. Members of the W. S. G. A. council will supply the crowd with ice cream and lemonade, popcorn, and during the afternoon and evening. DEBATERS WILL ARGUE ON FROSH-SOHP WAR TUG At the close of the debate, officers will be elected for the remainder of the term. Bill Brown, a junior Engineer, has announced his candidacy for vicepresident of the Men's Student Council. Engineering Society Elects The Associated Engineers' Society elected the following officers at the 1986 meeting: M. L. English; vice-president, O. T. Potter; secretary-treasurer, W. J. Malcolmson. Would Be Vice-President Engineering Society Elects STUDENTS DEPLORE CRITICISM BY ROTH Christian Church Members K. U. Object to Southern Educator's Remarks Resolutions deploring the recent utterances of Chancellor O. N. Roth, head of Phillips University, Enid, Oklahoma, have been prepared by Christian Union of Lawrence, composed of 200 students, and will be sent to the parents of all students. A copy was also forwarded to Chancellor Roth, and the newspapers that printed the story. Wheras, an address was recently made by Chancellor Roth of Phillips University, Enid, Oklahoma, at a convention of the Christian Church at Anthony, Kansas, in which he declared that "the University of Kansas was morally unfit for the education of our young men and women," and The resolution: and in no way adequately represent the moral atmosphere maintaining at the University of Kansas, therefor Be It Resolved. That we, the members of the Disciples of Christ Union of said University, in meeting assembled representing 200 young students from all areas of our students in the University of Kansas, deeply deplore the impression created through the address of Chancellor Roth, and take this opportunity of expressing our confidence in the University of Kansas and in its attitude toward the moral and religious life Whereas, his charges were base upon isolated instances of moral laxity on the part of individual students, and in no way adequately represents the moral atmosphere maintaining at the University of Kansas, therefore Brett Garrison Smith, President. Glayd Saunders, Secretary. EDITORS WILL GO TO SCHOOL IN MAY Kansas Newspaper Men t Attend University and National Conference Indians Visit Y. M. C. A. Read your own KANSAN. The program of the University Y. M. C. A. given Sunday in Myers Hall was not only original but aboriginal as well. Three braves, James Smith, William Williams, and Arthur James of Haskell Institute Y. M. C. A., told, what, in their minds, the Y. M. C. A. is doing for the Indian. A feature of the program was a song sung by Arthur James in the original tongue and music of the Greek Indians. Beginning the second Monday of May the editors of the state of Kansas will lock their office desks, turn up the lights and enroll as students at the University. May 11 to 14 is the date of Kansas Newspaper Week. A systematic course of lectures has been arranged covering news, advertising, circulation and cost-finding and efficiency, along with a series of addresses and discussions on national newspaper problems. After the conference in Lawrence the editors will go to Manhattan to attend the Annual Kansas Editorial Conference, Friday and Saturday, May 15 and 16. Some of the conference speakers are: Mark Sullivan, editor of Collier's; Oswald Garrison Villard, president of the New York Evening Post and The Nation; Henry King, editor of St. Louis Globe-Docecrot; Charles H. Grast, publisher Baltimore Sun; James Melvin Lee, head of the department of journalism of New York university; William Morrow, vice manager Burroughs Adding Machine Company; Frank Le Roy Blanchard, editor of The Editor and Publisher; Wilbur D. Nesbit, humorist, writer of verse and advertising man; B. B. Herbert, editor of National-Printer Journalist; J. C. Morrison, Morris, Minnesota Tribune; Barrett O'Hara, lieutenant-governor of Illinois; Roy W. Howard, manager United Press; Marco Morrow, advertising director Capper Publications; George Hough Perry, advertising man, San Francisco Edgar, Edgar Ralph Tennal, Burlington, Hamilton Holt, editor independent; Richard W. Waldo, advertising manager Good Housekeeping; F. M. Ball, circulation expert; Chicago; Will Irwin, magazine writer; Washington Gladden, author and clergyman, Columbus, Ohio. ENGINEERS PUT BAN ON NEW-FANGLED DANCES Following a meeting of the Engineers Friday, President Dingman announced that the program for the Engineer's annual dance would include only the old fashioned dances. The Engineers took this action following a request by Mrs. Brown, that students of the School of Engineering take a stand for better dances and cleaner dancing. Marvinites Will Adhere to the Old-Time Steps, Dingman Proclaims "It will be too bad, just now, if the sophomores do not come up to the standard set by other organizations," said Mrs. Brown, when asked what was the stand taken by the Sophomore Hop committee in the matter. "In deciding the question of ruling, out some of the dances I do not ask the students to take a stand against any one dance, but against the positions taken by many of the dancers which is unpardonable and is a violation of polite etiquette," said Mrs. Brown. AGGIES AND KANSAS TO MIX ON M'COOK Farmers Here for Two Games With the Varsity, Today and Tomorrow The Kansas Aggies are here today and will meet McCarty's Varsity team this afternoon on McCoack field. The Farmers are here for two games, the second encounter scheduled for tomorrow afternoon. Just what the Aggies will do with the Varsity this afternoon is uncertain, but it looks like a victory for K. U. The Aggies have been defeated by the Chinese, State Normals and St. Marys. The Emporians won decisively and in turn were walloped by the Catholics. The Varsity practice was not interrupted last week and the St. Marys game showed Bishop's ministers at their best. The line-up probably will be: Sommers; c., Wandel; If, Smee; cf.; Delongy, 2b.; Van der Vries, ss.; Painter, 3b.; Sproull, 1b.; Bishop, s.; Chinery, rf. "EL SENOR CURA_ A COMEDY 'lay Given in Gym Alleged to Have Had Humorous Nature The leads were carried well by Prof. Mark Skidmore as Cura, A Newton Dilley as Menendez and Miss Marie Madden as Nicasia. All three behaved as real Spanishists. The remainder of the cast was good. The fourteenth annual play of the Spanish department -was presented Saturday night in the Gym. The play El Elsen Cura, according to the department, was a comedy. The students in Spanish II declared in class this morning that they couldn't tell whether it was a comedy or tracedy. The Spanish song sung by Miss Madeline Nachtmann was well received. John Hoffman played Barcarrallie (Conte's D'honton) on the violin, accompanied by Olaire L. Deitrich on the piano. The students of the department of entomology went to Vinland Saturday on its eighteenth annual field visit to Vinland. We were the稻的 W, E, B. Barns. Twenty students of the Spanish department of Westport high school attend a summer program. ENTOMOLOGISTS CHASE BUGS AND PLAY BALL The morning was spent in collecting specimens and in the study of orchard and forest insect lift after which a bountiful dinner was served. In the afternoon a base-ball game and other field sports were indulged in. Y. W. C. A. WILL HOLD ESTES PARK MEETING The Y. W. C. A. will hold a meeting at 4:30 tomorrow afternoon in Myers Hall for the purpose of getting women to attend the conference to be held at Estes Park this summer. Miss Stella Simons will lead the meeting and talks will be made by women who attended the conference last year. If the weather permits a part of the meeting tomorrow will be held out GOING TO THE SOPH HOP? If so Turn in Your Name to Management Before Thursday Seniors who are invited, to the sophomore hop and faculty members who intend to be present should turn in their names to the management at the check stand in Fraser not later than Thursday. This will assist the management in making arrangements for the entertainment of the crowd Sophomores may pay their dues anytime up to Friday at the check "Arrangements for the hop are practically complete," said Clyde Vanderlip, one of the managers, today. "All that remains to be done is the payment of dues by the class members." APPOINTS COMMITTEE TO CARE FOR MEMORIAL Senior Class Names Members to Lay Plans for Construction of Concrete Seat A senior committee has been appointed to look after the plans and construction of the memorial which this year's graduating class has decided to place on the campus. The members of the committee are: C. O. Buckles, chairman. Oscar Dingman, Auckland, Dustan, and Marguerite Villeguire. The fifty cents due on the memorial fund from each senior may be paid to the presidents of the various schools where these presidents are seniors. In the School of Law payment may be made to C. O. Buckles, in the School of Engineering to Oscar Dingman, and in the College to Arthur Dustan, C. E. Strickland, Leila M. Nevin, or Helen L. Allinph It has not been decided definitely just where the stone bench will be placed, but this matter will be set teddy and work begin on it. WILL REPORT FAVORABLY ON CLASS TUG--OF--WAR Committee Favors Proposed Contest —Chancellor and Faculty Members Think Plan Would Not Succeed The committee which was appointed to investigate the matter of a proposed tu-for-war between the sophomore and freshman classes will make a favorable report to the Student Senate in favor of both classes and the big majority of the students to be in favor of the event. ANOTHER TEACHER LEAVES Adolphine B. Ernst, German Instruc tor. Will go to Wisconsin With a Bigger Salary The Board of Administration offerer Miss Ersta an position at the University as assistant professor but she decided to go to the larger institu- tion. Her salary at Wisconsin is almost double what she received at K. U. Adolphine B. Ernst, an instructor in the department of German, has accepted a position at the University of Wisconsin. She will have charge of the correspondence work in German with the rank of assistant professor, and will teach advanced courses in modern German literature exclusively, succeeding Prof. A. Reinbard, who died last month. APPOINTS COMMITTEEES FOR ENGINEERS' DAY Oscar A. Dingman, president of the Engineers, has announced the following appointments to committees for Engineers' Day: Parade, Ute Smith, Bolt Bolinger, Floyd Nutting, Erroll Welch; social, deane Dearks, Bill Brown, P. K. Bunn, Paul Dyer, Leon Bocker; afternoon, Joe Berwick, Sam Fairchild, Lloyd Jackson, Gonzola Bayles, Barber Bertell. Pi U's Celebrate Pi Upsilion celebrated the fifth annual Founder's Day with a banquet at the chapter house Saturday night. The alumni present were Roy Dietrich, Flavel Robertson, P. V. Farrarage, Tiny Smith, Sam Roberts, Bill Ollis, Ham Finney, F. W. Bruckmiller, and Frank Carson. Last Chance to be Measured Tomorrow at chapel time will be the last chance for the seniors to be measured for caps and gowns. Measurements may be taken in Room 118, Measurements for two weeks. $2.50. No advance is necessary. AGAINST ABOLISHING STUDENTS' CONTROL Chancellor Does Not Favor Doing Away With Popular Government RULE INVOLVES SELF-DENIAL Things Council Must Be Willing to Come up to Rack On the Unpleasant "Young men must remember that fundamentally student government is not different from any other government. If it is perpetrated on the one hand, you take care of these cases of student discipline better 'han anything else.' "I would hate very much indeed to see student government break down," declared Chancellor Frank Strong this morning. "Student government will not work unless the Student Council and the students are willing to come up on the rack on the unpleasant things. Staff denial is necessary for any government must practice it, too." "They must be willing to put aside personal feeling and personal advantage. It is absolutely fatal for someone恶意 the person you stand contrary to law and order. "Student government must be tolerated and supported by the most influential members of the student body. They must be strong enough to have their decisions absolutely complied with. "For myself, I hope that our experience this year will bring us to a realizing sense of what student government means, and a willingness to put law and order and the best interests of the University before any personal or class feeling and advantage. "If this could be done I, for one, "would be willing to see that decisions of the Student Council that are based on law and order, and that are fund- amentally justifiable, have the back- ground of the entire University authori- ty." ATHLETIC ELECTION THURSDAY Student Council Advances Date Because Candidates Are Slow In Announcing Themselves The date of election of members to the Athletic Board was moved ahead to Thursday at a special meeting of the Men's Student Council held Saturday morning. Petitions for nominations may be turned in to President Leslie Dodd up to Tuesday evening at 6 o'clock. The reason for such action was the small number of candidates that had been nominated. President Dodd also wishes to call attention to the fact that nothing has been done about the freshman candidates for the Student Council from the College. He suggests that either the freshman class or the College hold a caucus and select one of the candidates. WILL ARGUE IMMIGRATION Missouri and Kansas Debaters Will Decide on Literacy Test For Prospective Citizens The question of whether or not the United States should require foreign immigrants to read some language is to be settled for all time in Fraser Hall tomorrow night when Harry Smith and I will meet on the opposite side of the question against the University of Missouri debaters. FAVORS CITY OWNERSHIP J. W. Cable Speaks in Favor of City Light and Water Plants "I very much prefer municipal ownership of the local water and light plants," said J. W. Cable, formerly a commissioner of Kansas City, Kansas, and now a member of the Kansas public utilities commission, in the economic lecture held in Snow Hall Friday afternoon. Hazen Didn't Place Dan Hasek, captain of the Varsity track squad, failed to place in the big Philadelphia meet, Saturday. Hasek had a second-place finish and the hurdles. The meet was fast and the Kansas captain did not reach any of the four places in either event. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Official student paper of the University of Kansas EDITORIAL STAFF UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN EDITORIAL STUDIO JOHN C. LAMBERT JOHN C. MADISON Associate Editor in-Chief JOHN GLEIMANN JOHN GLEIMANN High School Editor CALVIN LAMBERT Sport Editor BUSINESS CLARR BUSINESS MANAGERS EWIN ARLEN BETHELMAN RAY EUDORSE JOHN BIRDSPUG ADVERTISING MANAGER ADVERTISING MANAGER CHRISTA S. SHURVE Advertising REPORTORIAL STAFF PORTLAND SAM DAGEN HENRY MALEY JOHN BECKER CHARLES GIBSON MICHAEL MORRIS LUCILE HIDDEN LAWRENCE SMITH GLENNIE CRAFTON GILBERT CALVAN ALIF STARF LISAL STARF W. F. WERGEBON W. F. WERGEBON GY GRYSHNER RAY ALPHEM RAY ALPHEM WILLIAM S. CADY WILLIAM S. CADY LANDSON LAIRD LANDSON LAIRD Entered *2* second-class mail matter in Lawrence, Kansas, under the order of March Published in the afternoon five times in the New York Times. Published in the Kansas. From the press of the department of Education. Subscription price $2.50 per year, advance required. Phone, Bell K. U. 25, Address all communications to UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS, Lawrence, we the Daily Kannon aims to picture the future of our students by going further; more printing the news by standing in front of no faceless; to be clean; to be cheerful; to be helpful; to be more, various problems to user heads; to be more, diversity to be ability of the students of the University. MONDAY, APRIL 27, 1914. The same vices which are huge and insupportable in others we do not feel in ourselves...La Bruyere. STUDENT GOVERNMENT STUDENT GOVERNMENT. Critics of student government at the University should consider, before they condemn the system: (1) That the exercise of disciplinary authority was always a difficult faculty problem before the Student Councils were given any such power. (2) That conditions at the University during the four years that students have had some authority, probably will compare favorably with any other four years in the history of the school. (3) That no sort of government will be perfect until the class that is governed is perfect—and then government is unnecessary. A LONG RUN POLICY. The basic idea—that students are able to solve some of their own problems—ought to prevail. However both Councils undoubtedly realize their shortcomings under present conditions and each would welcome suggestions intended to construct improved instruments of authority. Let's give the Union for next fall a flying start by paying up all delinquent dues and by bringing students to the club room who have not joined so they can realize the many advantages of the house. With a successful half year behind, the Union committee ought to be in a position to attempt better things next year—besides laying definite plans for the permanent building of the future. THE CARNIVAL Each individual had his own opinion of the militant reception given the street carnival on its opening night but the fact remains that such entertainment is not a blessing for a college town. No riots follow plays at the theater and no eggs are ever thrown during the annual music festival. Even the movies, after the free shows on the evening of the "night-shirt" parade, have a peaceful and profitable season. But the street carnival, with all its cheapness, is an insult to the people of Lawrence and particularly the students of the University. It should either be abandoned altogether or confined to Woodland Park, where it could be avoided with ease. SCORE BOARDS ARE LACKING Were you ever so fortunate as to be late to a ball game played on McCook field? If so, you know what a nuisance it is to arrive in the middle of an inning and to inquire of a lot of excited fans-intent on the progress of the game-what the inning is, the score, how many men are out, and all the other necessary statistics. You soon realize the absence of that important piece of furniture known as a score board. Of course the board doesn't tell you everything you want to know, but it is mighty handy anyway. If the Athletic Association whose financial status was set forth in these columns not many months ago, has lost its money, some patriotic (and economical) class in search of an idea for a memorial, easily could do worse than erect a large, handsome, score board. The name of that class would be blessed forever. THE TUG-OF-WAR If the proposed tug-of-war between the freshman and sophomore classes would accentuate any ill-feeling which may exist between these groups, few students would favor the plan. If, on the other hand, the contestants would enter the tourney in a spirit of good-natured fun, and come out of the affair with a better feeling toward their opponents, the scheme would be successful. In this event the chance for such fraccasses as the one in the student district a week or so ago would be lessened. It was with a hope that this second result would be attained that the plan was proposed by a group of undergraduates and pushed to the point that it was receiving consider- A RIVAL TO FOOTBALL Time was when football at one of the big universities, not then winning many games, was lampooned by a stage representation of a team in dress suits which never made a move without courteous advice to his coach because it is the day coming when the ballroom will be actually rougher than the football field? A crack Yale track athlete is announced as lost to the team because he wrenched his knee while dancing. Boys whose fond parents imagined that their child would play for fouled baseball because of their precious fingers; things are getting reversed in these days—Springfield Republican. KEEP KICKIN! Spring is here at last—Spring with all her fancies, wiles and maladies. Being human, we can hardly expect to escape the wiles and fancies, but we must look out for the maladies. Spring Fever is a disease as old creation and few there are that have ever been able to evade the ravages thereof. None are immune. And yet—and yet— We are on the home stretch of the semester. It will take every ounce of energy we can summon up to make this last lap the success it should be. Now is the time to begin fighting down that pestiferous malady, the fever of the Springtime. If you are already infected, don't let on. Languorous afternoons and mellow moonlight nights we must yield to sometimes in seashells or other studies and all other wise laborious--keep up that old pop! Don't let your fancies slip too far into the realm of Springtime's fancies. Don't let yourself slip back one single cog in energy, even if you have got the Spring Fever. KEEP KICKIN'!-De Pauw Daily. To the Editor of the Daily Kansan: The Castle Walk and the One-step has been barred by the Board of Administration through the agency of Mrs. Brown, the Advisor of Women. At the Junior Prom last week the members of the Board were in attendance and were horribly shocked at the Castle Walk and the One-step, E.W. Hoch stating that he couldn't sleep all night as a result of the sights he had witnessed. I would like to ask the Board individually and collectively, do you know what the sights are and the One-step? If she said dances as done at the Prom shocked them, then I am willing to wager that their conception of the dances is badly twisted. CAMPUS OPINION DEFENDS NEW DANCES The Castle Walk and the One-step properly done are recognized by fair and impartial critics as the most graceful and prettiest dances that have been before the public for a long time and that there is nothing objectionable in any of them. I was at the Prom 'and am free to admit that there was room and plenty of it, for criticism in a great many cases, but in these cases the couples were not even dancing and what they were trying to do was more than I could figure out, it resembled the forsaken Boston more than anything else. These curiosities have been among, for three years, the most long dances, and we have seen them every week-end at the class dances as long as I can remember. it is not the dance but the dancers, and if they are going to dance in an objectionable way, they are going to it regardless of what dance it is. It is possible to make anything immoral and vulgar; all depends on how it is done. A vulgar man or woman betrays lack of breeding even in walking across the room; sliding down may be performed in a vulgary manner or any other evil act. The modern dancer properly danced are not vulgar on the contrary, they enjoy grace and refinement; and seventy-five per cent of the people today, young and old, have taken up dancing in the last year because they recognized the beauty and innocent pleasure derived from them. They are, then, not immoral, not against any religious creed. A great deal more might be said, but I merely make this plea in behalf of the great majority of students who recognize the virtues of the dance and make it one such as it should be. It seems to me also that it is rather hard on the sororites that have placed the ban on at the request of Mrs. Brown, his sister, only works a hardship because concerned. The proposal should either investigate the proposition thoroughly and not jump at hasty conclusions, and then either stop the dance for good and all or let it be danced. No half way measures should be resorted to. THE STORY OF MY LIFE E. Z. A. By Kate Stephens, '75. "The trouble with you is." said Dr. Jimmie Canfield—we were standing by the Ionic columns of Columbia University. Library—"the trouble with you is that you take life seriouly." "Why, yes, I do," I answered a bit thrown off my base. "Don't you?" He laughed lightly and turned back to his study as I started down town. Yes, I have taken life seriously since college. I love it and I enjoy it, for I chose the best of parents, and an ancestry Puritan with enough of the opposite to make one love song and laughter. But the facts that concern this sketch are that, in my pigtail and pincafore stage of evolution, when the sweet, dry airs of the West had cured my father of consumption, a family council decreed we should mount the seaboard to remote state, We came. And oh! that April morning the train bore us from Kansas City to Lawrence. A river gleaming like silver ran upon our left, and all the woods through which we sped burned with redbud—I never see the emplured beauty of that tree that I do not hear; and calling me to look from the car window at its flowering mode. Seven years of study followed. What immortal jokes were made (in reaction from taking life seriously) while I was a student, the delightful "Reminiscences" of our Professor Robinson, and also files of our Graduate Magazine may, to any seeker, bear witness. After undergraduate years time again passed, and I stood for appointment to the Professorship of Greek. "But," it was said, for this was the first time a product of the University's training had come forward for appointment to a full chair and people laughed at the notion that such an appointer did not have to be imported—certain laughed that you could be a woman. "But we want some one who has had advantages the ripe, not so raw, more cultivated colleges give," "Oh!" I answered, "it is that? You distrust your own work? You have little faith in what you turn out that you are unwilling to endorse it?" My argument, backed by certain facts, won, and since that day no K. U. graduate, I think, has ever had to meet the prejudice then laid against me in the Alma Mater. Math, Greek, and held it six years. Why I left it is another story, which I purpose some day to tell. Here, Mr. Editor, please ring down the curtain. Already I have passed the minimum mark you set for my space. And yet I may say that since I left the University of Kansas I have been a diligent worker, mainly as constructive editor of many books and series of books, as critical and annotating editor of many, and as writer of our book of the Men and Women, "A Woman's Heart," etc. The last to be published, "The Greek Spirit," a general survey of the evolution of the old-time Hellenes' racial spirit, came out last month, March, 1914. PROFILE Scarf slide space and lock front Lion Collars Global Brand in America UNITED SHIRT & COLLAR CO. TROY N.Y. After all, it is not so bad—to take life seriously and to "bear witness unto the truth." Scarf slide space and lock front Lion Collars Oldest Brand in America UNITED SHIRT & COLLAR CO. TROY N.Y. Lion Collars Ocean Brand in America UNITED SHIRT & COLLAR CO. TROY N.Y. A GOOD PLACE TO EAT AT ANDERSON'S OLD STAND JOHNSON & TUTTLE 715 PROPS. Mass. R. E. Protsch TAILOR WARWICK Front 3% In. Back 14% In. Warranted Linen Barker Collars only at PECKHAMS WARWICK Bert Wadham THE COLLEGE BARBER On 14th Street A. G. ALRICH Printing Binding, Copper Plate Printing, Bubber Stamps, Engraving, Steel Die Embossing, Seals, Badges. 744 Mass. Typewriting Done By Alvin L. Babb 834 Ohio St. Bell 'Phone 574 94 An Expanding Vocation that merits the investigation of the high school student who is attracted towards science is that of Chemical Engineering The demand for experts in this line is as keen as the desire of manufacturers for better processes and for the utilization of by-products. The pecuniary rewards include both large salaries and liberal percentages of the saving which the chemist brings about. The course in the University is complete, and]after the necessary practical experience and work in research, leads to the degree of chemical engineer. Address Vocation Editor UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Lawrence, Kansas K. Book Material Extra Copies of the "YELLOW" KANSAN 5 c. —At— Griggs'———Rowland's Carroll's Oread Cafe Or at The Kansan Office UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN ANNOUNCEMENTS All junior and senior women who wish to swim are invited to come to the pool Tuesday and Thursday at 4:30 for advanced swimming. Monday and Wednesday 4:30 for beginners in swimming. This is to accommodate those who were conditioned in swimming, also all College women who care to learn to swim. Dr. Margaret L. Johnson. The Engineers' Band will practice at 7:30 this evening at Dick's Hall. All engineer musicians should turn out and practice for Engineers' Day. WANT ADS FOR RENT—Modern twelve room. FOR RENT—Modern twelve room. fraternity. Bell hall 186. WANTED - To rent next year 15 and 16 of 12聘 Call Bell 2647, 1993-9 LOST—Lace baby cap between court house and Ohio state. Phone Bell 212-568-7900. Want a bathing cap? Large assortment and fresh goods at Wilson's Drug Store—Adv. 138-5 Make US Your Drug Store McCOLLOCH'S Drug Store. You Can Earn a Good Living and lay up some money too on graduation fees. Pay your tuition, and enroll at once get ready and you'll secure a good position Free Employment. Bureau at your service Write for catalog of jobs and best offers No Vacations. LAWRENCE Business College Lawrence, Kansas WATKINS NATIONAL BANK Capital $100,000 Surplus and profits $100,000 The Student Depository The University of Chicago HOME work, offers also instruction by correspondence. STUDY For dedicated students. 2nd Year U. of C. (Oh.) Chicago, I. Michigan Park The Um HOME STUDY SPRING SUITINGS FRANK KOCH TAILOR 727 Mass. CITY CAFE 906 Mass. Strictly Home Cooking Ever try our Special 15c Lunch? You'll like it. J. F. BROCK, Opnistrist and Specialist 126 W. 45th St., Office 802 Mass Phone: 800-733-9833 PROFESSIONAL CARDS W. O. M'CONNELL, Physician and surgist. Ohio, 810 Mass. Bell, 391. Ohio, 810 Muskegan, 1346 Tenn. Bell, 1023. Horn, 893. DR. H. W. HAYNE, Ocullat, Lawrence, Kansas. 6. A. HAMMAN M. D. Eye, ear, or nose. 7. B. The product is guaranteed. Dick Building. BARRY REDING. M. D. Byn. ear, nose lip. Phones 813, Home 613. B phones, Phone 813, Home 613. J. W. O'BRYON, Dentist. Over Wilson's Drug Store. Belfast Phone 507. J. R. BECHTEL, M. D. D. O. 833 Mass- room Street. Both phones, office and phone numbers. G. W JONES, A. M. M. D. Diasseas of Bates T. I., A. Blds. Residence, 1201 W. JONES, A. M. M. D. Diasseas of Bates T. I., A. Blds. Residence, 1201 DR. H. T. JONES, Room 12 F. A. K. Residence 1300 Tenn. Phone 2115. DR. H. L. CHAMHERS Office over Studio. Both phones DR. BURT R. WHITE Osteopath Phones, Bell 938, Home 257, Office, 745 Mass. St. Ed. W. Parsons, Engrave, Watchmaker and Diamonds and Jewelry, Bell Phone 8. T GILLISEP, M. D. D. Office corp gommon St. Residence 728 Phone 596 Website www.gommonstresidence.com CLASSIFIED Plumbera MRS. MELLISON, Dressmaking and Ladies Vernons, Phone Bell 2411 West. 1652 Vermont. Phone Bell 2411 West. Phone Kennedy Plumbing Co. for goods and Masda lamps. 697 Mass Ladies Tailors Hair Dressers Queen City College. System and sewing machines, textiles, apparel, merchandise. Mrs. G. Mark Brown, 824 KY, Hail Barber Shops Go where all you go J. G. HOUK 918 Moss Hairdressing, shampooing, scalp and facial massage, shampooing, hair-foams, "Marital baths," nail polish, hair extensions, call Ball 871, Home 81, The Select Hair Dress Shop, 927 Mass St. Student's Co-op Club. H. $30.00 to $30.00 1349 KJ. Gso, H. Bancolli Steward NOTES FROM THE GERMAN BULLETIN Six hundred German bulletins have been sent by the University to all the German newspapers and the high schools of the state during the past week. The bulletin contains a number of German stories and humorous sketches. Several orders for extra copies have come in. Parts of the bulletin are reproduced elsewhere in this issue. The following are extracts from the bulletin: DIE SONNENBLUMENSAGE Die Götter lassen sich durch Verbin dung mit Kansas verehren Legende von der Sonnenblume. The Legend of the Sunflower. by Elmer Franklin Engel Fritz Kellermann, Lector at the University of Kansas. 1912-1913 Vor langen, langen Jahren, als noch kein Mensech auf der Erde whote, lebten die Geister aller Blumen in dem fernen Lande "Blutenhane", wo sie einer edien und amnütigen Könign dienten. Die Erde trug Bäume, frucht-tragende Pflanzen, dichtes grunes Gras und rieselnde Bäiche, so dass die Tiere Schatten, Nahrung und Wasser beakam, aber keine Blumen. Als nun Gott den Menchen schuf, der auf der Erde lebten solle, berief die gute Könign von "Blutenheim" all ihre treuen Dienner an ihrem Hof und sagte: „Liebe Kinder, ich habe euch etwas zu sagen, das eich vieleiicht traurig machen wird. Ihr hirt hier immer glücklich mit einander gelebit; ihr hirt mir immer gern gedient und ich habe euch lieb, aber nun ist die Zeit gekommen und ich muss euch Lebewohl sagen“. Die Augen der Königinnen waren voll Tränen und auch die zarten Geister der Blumen waren von ihren Worten so betroffen, dass sie nur seutzen und schluchzen konnten. Da sagte die Königin wieder mit zitternd Stimme:“Ich habe euch oft von der Erde erzählt mit ihren hohen Bergen and weiten Ländern und tiefen, blauen Seen und von den Vögeln berufen und fischen die Hellen und ohne Herrn die Hellen.” Aber Blumen gibt es dort nillt, wellnand a dem, ist sich über sie freuen und für sie sorgen würde. Aber nun soll der Mensch der Herr der Erde werden, und er wird der leuchtenden Farben und des süssen Duftes von Blumen bedürfen, die ihn sanft und gutig und glücklich machen sollen. Darum wünsche ich.,dass ihr zu den Menschen der Erde geht und dort heimisch werdet, um ihr lebener heter und freundlich zu machen. Sie werden sich über euch freuen und ist anlösen, worin ihr beunken konnt, undigkeit Wind einbehrt, damit keiner Wasser Wind einbehrt. Ihr könnt irgendwelche Farbe und Gestalt wahlen, die ihr haben wollt, und ich will kleben laden, woimmer ihr wunscht. Die Blumen waren traurig, dass sie ihre König veränken sollten, aber sie sagten, wenn ihre Gewerzent die Menschen frohlich machen wurde, so wollen sie wohl gehen, und so wahnten alle nacheinander ihre Liebingsfarbe und Gestalt, wie sie sie im Regenbogen oder am Abendhmel auf auf ihren Reisen mit ihrer König gesehen hatten. Eine weileweise sein und wie ein Stern aussehen, eine andere und Nachts blumen und der Meissenschaft leiten, eine andere und den Bergen zu wohnen, wieder eine andere wollte im Wasser lebend, und bis weiter, alle ausser einer gesprochen hatten. Diese hatte die König immer am lieben gebaht und sie liebte die König innig, und "Blutenheim" war ihr ein Paradies. Alte warteten darauf, dass sie spraie und endlich sagte sie mit dem wütiguter, liebler Stimme; „Meine nägigste Konigin, bis zuletzt habe ich mit dem Wahlen gewertet, da dieses herrliche Land mir loeb ist; der Gedanken dich und dein林 Verlassen zu müssen, tut mir wen, ich furcht euch, dass ich zu viel von der fordere bei meiner Wahl. Du weisst, wie sehr ich die Sonneliebe und ihren Aufgang und Untergang immer beobachte. Durum möchte ich die Farbe, Gestalt und Pracht der leuchtenden Sonnen haben und möchte in einem Lande wachsen, die wo Sonne immer schimmt und bei Menschen, die treu und gut sind und immer freundlich von mir reden." Und so verlass beim Anbruch eines warmen, sonnigen Frihnungsmierden the Sonnbümlen ihre Königin und begleitet die Sonne, bis sie zu den weiten Ebenen eines grossen States im Westen kam. Dort wurde sie heimlich, und auf allen Feldern, am Wegrand und an Flussern erhebt sie ihr strähraendes Antiloch. Im Mallen lassen und die Menschen freuten sich so sehr über sie, dass sie ihren Staat nach benannten und heute kennt man den großen Staat Kanaas am besten unter dem Namen: DER SONNENBLUMEN-MTAAT. ..Liebes Kind," sagte die Königin, ...du hast zwar viel gewünscht, aber ich will es erfüllen. Es gibt nur Ein Lind und Ein Volk auf der ganzen Welt, wo beschrieben sind. Ich schreibt wirst du willkommen sein und mein reichter Segen soll dich begleiten." Unsere besten Schüler können Korres pondenten im Vaterland DEUTSCHER BRIEFWECHSEL Manche Deutschlernden in unseren Schulen haben den lobenwerten Wunsch in Briefwechsel mit deutschen Schüllern zu treten, und etiliche Lehrer haben sich während des Jahres bei uns erkundigt, wie man das zu standle bringt. Es wäre also wohl ein eutiger Dienst, wenn eine kurze Mittelung veroffentlichen wurden. Wir hoffen mit der Zeit den Briefwechsel von hier aus zu vermitteln, aber der Plan ist noch nicht fertig. Mitterwelle hat man sich an die centralsteile in Deutschland zu wenden, namilich an Prof. Dr. K. A. M. Hartmann, Fechnerstrasse 6, Leipzig, Deutschland. Die Namen sammeltlicher Schüler, die korrespondierden wollen, müssen von dem Lehrer angemeld werden. Von Nornane, Beruf des Vaters, Lebensalter, Vorname, Addresse in deutscher Schrift anzugeben. Die Namen von Knaben und Mädchen sollten getrennt werden. Die Namen der besonders empfiehlen Schuler soll man mit einem oder zwei Sternen versuchen. Und für jeden Schuler ist endlich eine Einschreibegebühr von 6 Cents zu entrichten. **Goethe oder Göthe:** In einer Besprechung von „Jean Pauls Briewiesel mit seiner Frau und Christian Otto, herausgegeben von Paul Nerlich” wird diese Frage in der „Voss. Ztg.“ wie folgt beantwortet.贝LAiligung er wiewhatt, dass Jean Paul die Namenform „Goethe“ nur dann gebraucht, wenn er sie, wie vorstehend, mit latinischen Buchstaben schreibt, was er aber nur selten tu; für gewohnlich schreibt er, „Göthe.” Es ist zweifellos, dass die erstere Schreibweite nur für die lateinische Schrift, für die deutsche Schrift nur dei Form „Göthe“ berechtigt it. Im Deutschen hat es keinen Sinn, das ö in o und a aufzufalten. Lassen wir in Namen einen Satz, o stehen, so wenfalls er den O-Laut, wie denn die Stimme Anesent Soen und Coefelsant kanntlich „Soßt“ und „Kohlen“ zu sprechen sind, so dass Goethe “eigenlich wie „Göthe” muste. Die Schreibweise „Goethe“ ist erst einigen Jahrzehnten akademic for deutsche Sprache haben, settzt sie die Form „Göthe“ hoffentlich wieder in ihre Rechte ein. Einzelne mutige Leute waven auch jetzt schon wiedern, „Göthe“ zu schreiben, so George Keben in seinem 1901 erscheinten sehr 'esenswerten, Fackelzug durch Kunst und Kultur'. Ein Vater sagte zu seinem Sohne: , Vermogen kann ich dir nicht mitgeben über eine wichtige Lehre will ichdir herdenthalten." Dann fuhr erfort; Wer im zwanzigsten Jahre noch nichts gelent hat, im dreissigsten noch nichts ist, und im vierzigsten noch nichts hat, der lert nichts, nichts nichts und bekommts auch nichts. Trost im Trauner. Was wir bergen in den Sargen ist das Erdenkeld. Was wir lieben ist geblieben, Lebt und bleibt in Ewigkeit. Johannes Kellermann. Die Berichte, die dieses Jahr von den Lehrern des Deutschen in unseren Sehulen gegeben worden sind, seisen einen sehr erfreulichen Fortschritt im deutschen Unterricht auf. Die Zahl der Schulen wo Deutschunterricht betrigt, 235 gegen 205 im Jahre 1912-13 und 95 im Jahre 1906-06. Die Deutscherländen haben sich von 3017 in 1905-06 auf 7606 in 1913-14 vermert. Voriges Jahr zahlen sie 6231. Sehr bedeutend ist die ausderdentliche Zunahme in der Zahl der Schüler, das dritte Jahr Deutsch treiben. Im Jahre 1905-06 waren es nur 133, in diesem Jahr aber 592, gegen 557 in 1912-13. Was das Verhältnis der Zahlen von Knaben und Mädchen betrifft, so zeigen die Bieriche, dass die Mädchen ungefähr 60 Prozent der Gesamtsatz ausmachen. Zum Beispiel in diesem Jahre, 4525 Mädchen zu 3081 Knaben. imritten Jahre 362 Mädchen zu 230 Knaben. Moge die Qualität sowohl die Quantität im deutschen Unterricht sich immer verbessern! Trost im Trauern. Lehrer; „Ein Betrug ist etwas seh Schlimmes; ich will euch das an einem Beispiel klar machen. Hins, den Vater ist Kaufmann, nicht wahr “? — Hans; „Ja.“ Lehrer; „Nun, wenn dein Vater seinen Zucker mit Sand vermisch, so wurde er einen Betrug begehen und Unrecht tun“ — Hans; „Das sagt Mutter aus immer, aber Vater mein, es makt's ja keiner. Deutscher Verein an der Universität hat mit Ernst und Spass viel geleistet VERNUGEN UND KULTUR Das Ziel de des deutschen Voreins in diesem Jahre wie in den früheren „Jahren, war, solche Seiten der deutschen Kultur zu plegen, welche in den überbürderten Klassen nicht genug berücksichtigt werden können. Besonders aber den Schulern der vorgeschrittenen Kurs und sochen, die später seiten Deutschen ausbauen, sind zu bewertigen. Deutschland und seine Eigentümlichkeiten von anderer Seiten kennen zulernen, als es beim Studium der Klassiker möglich ist. Mit Recht solle der Gesang, besonders die Volkslieder an erstelle Ststehen. Die Konversation war schwierig zu leiten, den dervere Vizard mehr als 30 Mitglieder, so mussten Gesellschaftsappel veranstalten werden, die Gesichter in einer Mats eingelöst hatte, sich in die fremde Sprache hinzuwagent. Nach einem bestimten Plane, besondersLScherLander zu beschreiben die in den Lesestücken der ersten Jahre vorkommen, hießen the Lehrer der deutschen Abteilung folgende Vorträge: Tellegend, der Rhein, Weimar, der Schwarzwald, die Wartburg, Bayern, Berlin. Weitere Vorträge behandelten das Hohenzellmanns, den Humor Deutschen, die Schüler und Universitäten und dargleichen. Solche Vorträge fanden zweimal im Monat Oktavril 2018 wurden. Die Studenten Gelegenheit geboten, kleine sorgfältig einstudierende Stucke zu geben. Die Stücke waren leicht aufzuführende Lustspiele mit wangler Rollen, in denen gutes Konversationadeschrift erländen konnte. Ausderum Puppenpiel,Dr. Drau", welches wiederholt wurde,gaben die Schüler das Fasnachtspiel "Der Fahrene Schüler" von Hans Sachs,beide Beispiele der historischen Schauspiel. "Frau Direktor, frau inspektor wurde gegeben als Beispiel eines kleinen komischen Duets, worin die Titelschul der deutschen Frauen um kritisiert wird. Zevel Lustvoll "Einer muss wird" und "Die Hochzeits-masse" von Benedix vertragen die so beliebten Gesellschaftsplisse, Stücke, die sich besonders für Liebebäuertheater undkleine Hochschulvortstellung gern eiren. Wenn man zu diesen Programmen noch die echt deutsche Weihnachtsfeier, mit Lichtesbaum, Apfeln, Nüssen, und Kuchen, Weihnachtsliedern und komischen Geschenken hinzufuft, so hat man das in kurzen Zuten entworfen Blder der Tätigkeit des Vereins. Es hat manchem Interesse und Anwesen geben, einen gleicher Zugriff auf den Lebensraum Masstabe zu gründen. Wir als Ersatz einer lebenden Sprache ja alle dasselbe Ziel, nicht nur eine Fremsprache zu lehren, sondern unseren Schiltern die Kultur, die diese Sprache entwickelt, naher zu bringen und ihr Interesse dafür zu erweisen. Der erhlliche Junge. Herr (der einem ihnbekannten Knaben mit der Schultasche auf der Strasse beegnet): Nun Franzl, gehst du schon in die Schule ? — Franzl: Ja. — Herr: Wass machst du denn in der Schule ? — Franzl: Ich ? ich warte, sie bis aus ist. Am ersten Schultage nach den Weihnachtserien fracht der Lehrer einzelnsechs jahrage Schuler, was sie zu Weihnachtern geschickt bekommten haben. Ein blicher betriber Bube zur tragt kurz;Nun, was bekann denn du zu Warhnagen?"" Der Die Kleine antwortet trocken darauf;...Die Masern!" Professor: „Warum dreht sich die Erde um ihre Achse?“ — Schüler: „Weil sie irgend etwas haben muss, um das sie sich dreht, sonst könnte sie sich nicht drehen.“ Willy: ``Vater, sagtst du nicht neu- lis, es sei unrechte, wenn man jemand schlägt, der kleiner ist, als man selbst ist "? " - Vater: ``Jawohl, wir, das habe ich gesagt." Willy: ``Bitte, Vater, schreibe das doch einmal meinem Vater, ich glaube, der weiss es nie." Lehrer; Warum steigt das Queckslier in die Hobe, wenn man das Thermometer in heisses Wassler stelt? - Schüler: Weil es unten zu heiess wird. Aus der biblischen Geschichte erzählt Lieschen … „da reichte Rebekka ihm den Krug und sprach: Trinkt, Herr. Ich die danken Kamie auch tränken.” Lehrer; „Warumig Hammibal über die Alpen?” Schüler; „Well der Tunnel noch nicht fertig war.” HUMOR Was eine Braut ist. Der kleine Walter weiter gefracht, ob er wisse, was eine Braut sei. Nach einigem Überlegen antwortete ite; „Eine Braut ist eine Frau, die noch keinen Mann hat, aber schon einen weiss“. Lehrer: „Wenn du einen Auszught-test und jemand gabe dir noch einen, wie viele würdest du dann haben !“ —Willie: „Einen.“ — Lehrer: „Aber, Willie, wie rechtest den durm das ?“ Willie: „Mein kleiner Bruder würden anderen kriegen.“ Inspjekt bei der Prüfung: ,,Nun, Kleiner, sage mir nun einmal ein der durchsichten Gegenstand!'' Schuler, ,,Das Schlüsselloch!'' Warum aus Lehm? Lehrer; .Woraus hat der lieber Gott den Menschen geschaffen? — Der kleine Erich; .Aus Lehm? — Lehrer; Warum den gerade aus Lehm? — Der kleine Erich; .Nun, Sand back doch nicht* Auf einer Lehrsammlung in Ber- lern erhob sich ein Schülerkrektor, um einen Toast auf die Lehrer ausbringen. .Lang leben die Lehrer," began er. ,Wovon ?" klang plötzich die hohle Stimme eines mageren, bleichen, jungen Hülseflüssen dazwischen. Bei der Feier des Reformationstes erhöht der Lehrer auf seine Frage: „Warum trat dann Luther eigentlich in das Augustinerkloster zu Erfurt?“ die Antwort; “wes reit wegre.” SPRICHWERTER Es ertrinken im glas als in allen Wassgrn. Junge son man tenren. Weise soll man frazen. Narren vertragen. Alte soil man enhren, Lunge soll man lehren Junge soll man lehren. Der Abend rot, der Morgen grau Bringt das schönste Tagesblau. Wer ein gläsernes Dach hat, muss nicht mit Steinen werfen. Alte soll man ehren, The Flower Shop Strecke dich nach der Decke. Wenn die Kuh gestohlen ist, sperrt man den Stall. Music Festival This Week Second Concert Wednesday, April 29, 8:15 p.m. ELSIE BAKER, Contralto ALBERT BORROFF, Bass Third Concert Thursday, April 30, 2:30 p. m. THE ST. PAUL SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA Walter Rothwell, Conductor Frederick Wheeler, Baritone Edmund Foerstel, Violinist Anna Sweeney, Pianist Third Concert Thursday, April 30, 8:15 p. m. Fourth Concert THE ST. PAUL SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA Walter Rothwell, Conductor Elizabeth Rothwell-Wolfe, Soprano Albert Lindouest, Tenor Paul Morgan, Violoncellist Student course tickets, $1.50—Registrar's Single admission. $1 & 75c—Woodward's Aurora=Today Mary Pickford in "HeartsAdrift" BASE BALL GOODS The Sporting Goods Headquarters KENNEDY & ERNST 826 Mass. St. Phones 341 A Mere Veneer for a Union Suit 1925 Did you ever see a Union Suit that was Coat Cut, with actual closed crotch and a closed back? Well, here's one, and the only one— PAT. JAN. 5TH 1909 OLUS COAT CUT UNION SUITS OLUS Union Suits open all the way down—have no flaps, no bunching and only one thickness of material anywhere—no opening in back, fit perfectly from shoulder to crochet—all fabrics, including knitted. Price from $1.00 to $3.00. At your dealer, Important Booklet on request. OLUS one-piece PAJAMAS for lounging, resting and comfortable sleep. Made on the same principle as OLUS Union Suits. No strings to tighten or come loose. $1.50 to $3.50. To Buy Online at Distributor OLUS. BUREAU DE COMMERCE BROADWAY NEW YORK Dept. N...349 Broadway, New York UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN --- ATLANTIC BROAD OLUS REUSE AT UK "Olus" one piece Shirt and Drawers. Introducing Our store's now the happy home of OLUS one-piece shirt and drawers. In OLUS being one-piece, you have the practical preventative of shirts working up and drawers working down. Made with a closed crotch and a closed back. In all materials. Johnson & Carl $1.50 up Reports Due Tomorrow Registrar G. O. Foster issued the following statement today to officers of student organizations: "General Purchasing Agent, James T. Lardner, will be in Lawrence Wednesday of noon for a period of auditing accounts of all University organizations. "Will you kindly hand in to this office on or before Tuesday, April 28, a report of your receipts and disbursements covering the period since last report was made? The official affairs of your organization will require you to make expenditures or receipts before the close of the school year, a statement to this effect should be sent in (and a report made up complete and handed in before Commencement or before you leave Lawrence for the vacation.) 1. Balance of cash on hand at date of last report. "This record should show: 2. Receipts up to close of school year. 3. Expenditures from date of last report to close of school year. 4. Balance cash on hand at date of report. "This should be signed by you with a certificate as to the correctness and completeness of the statement. Offer that your accounts may be properly audited please submit all books, voucher checks and check stubs, receipts and receipts stubs, bank book and all other papers necessary to make a complete audit." Baseball goods and tennis balls at Wilson's Drug Store.—Adv. 138-5 Debate. Literacy Test For Immigrants, Missouri vs. Kansas, Fraser Hall; Tuesday; 8:00 O'clock--Adv. Spalding and Reach official balls. Carroll's.-Adv. New Vaudeville Theatre Wrestling Match Catch-as-catch-can WEDNESDAY NIGHT, APRIL 29 WEDNESDAY NIGHT, APRIL 29 PROF. WESTMAN, Physical Culture Instructor at Washburn College vs. HERMAN STROH, Champion of Lawrence Two Falls Out of 3—To a Finish. This Will Be a Fast Go DON'T MISS IT. Good Preliminaries Prices 35c and 50c Ringside Seats 75a There Will Be No Show Monday Or Tuesday At This Theatre Monday K. U. Calendar 7:30 University Debating Society, (119 Fraser). Tuesday 11:00 Assembly. 3-4 Chancellor's open hour to faculty. 4:30 Y. W. C. A. Estes Park, Stella Simmons, (Myers Hall). 7:30 Glee Club practice, (Fra). 7:30 Y.M.C.A. Prof. R. A. Schweger, (Myers Hall). 8:00 M. U.-K. U. debate, (Fra). Wednesday. 4:30 Cercle Francais, (306 Fra). 4:30 Mining Journal, (201 Ha). 4:30 Practice Teachers' Meeting, (Myers Hall). 7:30 Rural Concert, (Fra). 8:15 Second Concert, Spring Music Festival, Robinson Gym. Thursday 11:00 Entomological Club. (Mu). 2:30 Third Concert, Music Festival, St. Paul Symphony Orchestra, (Robinson Gymnasium). 4:00 Economics Lecture, Mr. Samuel T. Howe, Chairman State Tax Commission, "The State Tax Commission and Tax Reform," (201 Adm). 7:00 Amer. Soc. Mech. Eng. (130 Ohio). 7:30 City Engineering Society, (Marvin). 8:15 Fourth Concert, Music Festival, St. Paul Symphony Orchestra, (Robinson Gym). Friday. 11:00 Assembly. 1:30 K. U.-N. U. dual track meet (McCook). 3:00 Seventh Interscholastic tennis tournament, (McCook). 7:30 Interscholastic H. S. Debating League. Saturday. Seventh Interscholastic tennis tournament, (McCook). Eleventh annual interscholastic track meet. (McCook). 8:15 Faculty stag. Y. M. C. A. (Myers Hall). Athletics May 6-7-Baseball, Missouri at Lawrence. May 8—K. S. A. C.-K. U. dual track meet at Manhattan. May 14-15-Baseball, Missouri at Columbia. May 16-18-K. U. K. dual track meet at Columbia. May 21-22-Baseball, Ames at Ames, Iowa. May 23-Annual invitation H. S. meet at Lawrence. May 27-28-Baseball, K. S. A. C. at Manhattan. May 29-Baseball, St. Marys at St. Marys. May 30-Baseball Valley track meet at St. Louis. June 6-Western Conference track meet at Chicago. Future Events May 5-7-Merchants' Week. PLAY SEVEN MORE H. H. LEAFUE GAMES Boarding House Ball Teams Meet in Second Week Slugging Contests Standing of the Teams W. L. Pct. Columbus 2 0 1000 Babb 2 0 1000 Ellis 2 0 1000 K. K. 2 0 1000 Ko-op 1 0 1000 1221 1 0 1000 Nutting 1 1 500 Midway 1 1 500 Stevenson 1 1 500 Martin 0 1 000 Hope 0 2 000 Co-op 0 2 000 Wouldst 0 2 000 Gillespie 0 2 000 Marks 0 2 000 Seven more Hash House League games were played Friday and Saturday. Columbus 15, Gillespie 1 The feature of the Columbus Gillespie game was the club club. It was 11, was the three home runs secured by the victors—one from each of the three pitchers the Gillespie team used. The game was loose most of the time, and was marked by many errors on both sides. Batteries (Hampton, Mackenzie, MacArthur, Lynch; Gillespie, Poierer, Hartshaupt, Hust, Ust, and Emery. Columbus 15, Gillespie 11 Midway 6. Stevenson 4 May 11-14-Kansas Newspaper Week State and National Newspaper Conference. The superior pitching of Wedell enabled the Midway nine to win from the Stevenson Club 6 to 4. The game was well-played and interesting;unting, hitting, driving, Wing and Potwin; Stevenson, Grady and Jones; the Stevenson battery starred. Babb 12. Wouldst 3 In a one-sided inning game, the Babb House defeated the Wouldst club Saturday by a score of 12 to 3. The Babbs found Elliot and Blincoe easily while the Wouldn't Club had trouble in connecting up with what Taylor presented. The team won, but were the errorless field and the heavy hitting of the Babbs, especially Dingman and Lyles. The score by inimings H. R. E. Bates 401 4x - 18 Wouldst 000 21 - 6 3 7 Wouldst 000 21 - 6 3 7 Batteries: Babb; Taylor and Barret; Wouldst: Elliot, Blincoe and Sloan. McLaughlin, ampire. Fierabend, Schmeffer, Watkins, Wallingdorf, Smart, Devil, Earley, Fligerger, Glenn, Gulloff, Chinnery, Kitchen, Guillefoy, Chinnery (captain), McMeel (manager) Ellis 15. Co-od 11 By nosing out a larger score in an extra inning in the ball game Saturday with the Co-ops the Ellis ball club was able to maintain its one-thousand per cent average. At the end of the seventh, which was the agreed number of innings played, but in the eighth the Ellis club ran in five men and the Co-op one ending the game with a score of 15 to 11. Midway: Fisk (manager), Travis (captain), Barnard, Crow, Paul, Daub, Arnold, Williams, McCafferty. Apple, Wedell, Potwin. Apple, Yokumk. Co-Op; Bost, Boyington Parker, Kincaid, Milner, Hunsinger, McKenney, Pattison. Outside play. Hunter, Cluster, Brown Grey Cooper, Jones. Thompson tied the score in the seventh by bringing in two men on a two base hit. Thomann, who pitched the first innning for the Ellis club, got a home run on a three base hit. The score by innings: R. H. E. 040 633 011 Coy-op. 102 333 35= 15. 6 102 333 35= 15. 6 Batteries: Co-op. Hughes and Aller Ellis, Thomann, Thompson and Palumbras. The game between Ko-op and Marks was interesting, though loose in spots, both sides making several costly errors. The Ko-op gained the lead in the second and held it until the first of the seventh, when Marks by combining hits with errors secured a win. Marks then played back strong in their half and pushed over two runs winning the game with one out and the bases full. Ko-op 8, Marks K. K.: George Humes (captain), H. H, Wentworth, A. T.Cowan, H. F. Fuppenthal, H. W. Dixon, Walter Hart, Clarence Richter, Roy Kent, H. N.Thien, J. P. Caffery, Robt. Brooks, E. L. Treece, M. K. Beverage, Black Bighal, G. W. Coffelt, Jack Greenstreet, Harry Henderson, H. W. Hanson, W. P. Barnes (manager). Stevenson: S. M. Haag (manager), G. Q. Grady (captain), C. W Goldwin, F. B. Campbell, C. S. DeHouin, R. H. Pevens, E. E. Gates, W. V Hatcher, G. P. Hinshaw, C. A Huffman, L. H. Howden, W. Janes, W. Wischling, M. Morgan McLaren, W. R. Pickerling, R. D Teasley, E. L. Vermillion, B. P Bixby, L. E. Helvem and E. C Mowry. Score by innings: Koop 4 02 140 2-8 Oak 5 01 113 003-7 Batteries; Ko-op, McLoughlin and Wallack; Marks, McFadden, Henderson, and Allen, Umpire, Berwick. In a well-played game, which was forced into an extra innning, K. K. defeated Martin 5 to 4. Coffelt, inserted as a pinch hitter, won the game with a single when two were down and third was occupied. Babb House; Jo D. Berwick (manager), Ray Bartell (captain), Roy Norrick, Will F. Rau, B. L. McKenzie, Matt Gulfoyle, James Nelson, Otto Fair, O. A. Dingman, Leo Les, A. M. Cmullough, Frea锤, H. E. Day, Martin Taylor, W. J. Crowley. K. H. E. K. K. 8 4 4 Margin 8 4 4 Nutting 14, Hope 11 Nutting defeated Hope 14 to 11. Wouldst: E. Blincoe (captain), F, E. Bill, B. Will (blair manager), L. A. Curry, J. A. Elliott, I. R. Elswick, D. S. Miles, J. H. E. Nottingham, C. F. Sloan, C. Yager. Outside players: L. Weibel, Benson. Trimmer. Here Is the Official Nutting: Andy Groft (captain), C. Conkey, R. Weaver, E. Kerau, L. Harsha, L. Harsh, J. P. Buckkenh c, Cory, A. Boman, F. Nutting. Outside players: Orin Ruth, C. Baer, and H. King. Here Is the Official List of H.H. Leaguers 1221: Harry Willson, Pau Pyer, Miles Vaughan, William W. Ferguson, Landon Laird $ Sam H. Ferguson. Outside players: Clarence Williams- herbert Flint, C. August Ritter, C. S. Sturtevant, C. L. Gibson, Ross Busebark, J. A. Greenless. Ko-op: J. Hunt, J. Klewer, E. Coffey, C. Dimithem H. L. Osborn, C. C. Ober, A. M. Durbon, H. M. Tompkins, J. Hostinksy, J. MeLoughlin (captain), E. Lindaner L. Meisner, F. O. Blaylock, R. W. MacGregor, Moore, Ute Simeh, A. H. Wallack (manager). Daniels; O. M. Larimore, V. J. Bowersock, H. N. Baugher, George Smee (captain), S. E. Campbell, Herbert Howland, E. C. Arnold (manager), Milton Baker, J. E. Jones, Carl Jones, John E. Bussel Russell, Harvey Dales, Glen Gamber, Arnold Nordstrom, and William Cady. Columbus: Joe Lynch, Hainbach, Gillespie: Arlin, A. Johnson, X. Johnson, Poier (manager), McClure, Dyke, McGinnis, Yust (captain), Warren, Emery, Fitzsimmons, Treussell, Gardner, Frank, Foote, Campbell, Wood, Bearg, Coffman, C. Jones, Rummel, Clark, Edwards, Dubac, Hartshough, F. E. Jones Gamber, Keefer, Allen, Malla, Malona, Merriell, Steinhauler, Walters, Yost, Spurrier, Clark, Terry, Riggs, Sperry, Clark, Norse, Nordstrom, Jally, and Vansell The following members will represent the Ellis Club in the Hash League: Ropy Thompson, mgr, Toots Thoman, Togo Palmer, Lim Chitten, captain, Debashish Ghattu,黛比亚, Graham, Gene Davis, Tilly Tillotson, Ikkie Baker, Tiny Morrill, Heine Hennigh, Stone Lindsay. Marks: H. P. McFadden (manager), Hall, Wickert, Hughes, Lambert, Allen, Henderson, Bond, Pedro-jerke, Parker, Darby, Bugher, Willett. Co-op: Parker Miller (manager and captain), Parker, Long, Russ, Indians Celebrate The Haskell Institute braves were in full dress last night in celebration of the thirty-fifth anniversary of the M.C.A. in 1985; M. C. A. among the Indian tribes. Debate. Literacy Test For Immigrants, Frazer Hall, Tuesday, 8:00 OClock— Wednesday, 8:00 OClock New shipment bathing caps just in, Carroll's—Adv. Girls get your bathing cap here; new goods. Carroll's—Adv. Bathing caps just in, new goods: 50, 60 and 80c. Carroll's—Adv. See our $1.50 racket for the girls. *Carroll's.*—Adv. Tennis balls, all standard makes, 2 for 80c. Caroll's—Adv. STANDISH LTD. ARROW COLLAR 2for 25¢ Cluett Peabody & Co. Inc. Makers Debate. Moving Picture Plays Wanted $10 to $100 each. Big demand! Send twenty-five cents for alphabetally arranged list of names and addresses of prominent film producing companies. The Aytzeue Producers' List, Box 347, Pueble, Colorado—Adv. Remember the Candies at Wilson's Drug Store are kept in a large refrigerate case. Always fresh and the best makes. - Adv. 138-5 If you want something exclusive in stationery, call at Wilson's Drug Store—Adv. 138-5 Literacy Test For Immigrants, Park Hall, Pahranagua Tuesday, 8:00 Oddock — Ariz. Student Plays Student Dances Student Mixers PAY 一 When they are advertised in the Daily Kansan. 3,000 Students Faculty and Alumni read it every day. HASH HOUSE LEAGUE SCHEDULE—First Division.
TheEllisGillespieCo-opColumbusKo-opMartinMarksK K
EllisDailyApr. 18 F 10:15Apr. 24 F 4:30May 2 F 8:30May 9 F 8:30May 16 F 1:30May 23 F 8:30May 30 F 1:30
GillespieApr. 18 F 10:15KansanMay 30 F 10:15Apr. 24 W 4:30May 16 F 10:15May 9 W 10:15May 2 F 10:15May 23 F 1:30
Co-opApr. 24 F 4:30May 30 F 10:15PrintsApr. 18 W 10:15May 23 W 8:30May 2 F 10:15May 9 F 10:15May 15 W 4:30
ColumbusMay 2 F 8:30Apr. 24 F 4:30Apr. 18 W 10:15AllMay 30 W 10:15May 23 F 8:30May 16 W 8:30May 9 F 1:30
Ko-opMay 9 F 8:30May 16 F 10:15May 23 W 8:30May 30 W 10:15HashApr. 18 F 10:15Apr. 25 W 8:30May 2 F 1:30
MartinMay 16 F 1:30May 9 W 10:15May 2 F 10:15May 23 F 8:30Apr. 18 F 10:15HouseMay 30 F 8:30Apr. 24 F 4:30
MarksMay 23 F 8:30May 2 F 10:15May 9 F 10:15May 16 W 8:30Apr. 25 W 8:30May 30 F 8:30LeagueApr. 18 F 1:30
K KMay 30 F 1:30May 23 F 1:30May 15 W 4:30May 9 F 1:30May 2 F 1:30Apr. 24 F 4:30Apr. 18 F 1:30News
SECOND DIVISION
TheBabbDanielsWouldst1221HopeStevensonNuttingMidway
BabbDailyApr. 18 W 1:30Apr. 25 F 1:30May 2 W 1:30May 9 F 1:30May 16 W 1:30May 23 W 1:30May 30 F 1:30
DanielsKansanMay 29 W 4:30Apr. 25 F 8:30May 16 F 8:30May 8 W 4:30May 2 W 10:15May 22 F 4:30
WouldstApr. 25 F 1:30May 29 W 4:30PrintsApr. 18 W 8:30May 22 F 4:30May 2 W 8:30May 9 W 8:30May 16 F 8:30
1221May 2 W 1:30Apr. 25 F 8:30Apr. 18 W 8:30AllMay 29 F 4:30May 22 W 4:30May 16 W 10:15May 9 F 8:30
HopeMay 9 F 1:30May 16 F 8:30May 22 F 4:30May 29 F 4:30HashApr. 18 F 8:30Apr. 25 F 10:15May 2 F 8:30
StevensonMay 16 W 1:30May 8 W 4:30May 2 W 8:30May 22 W 4:30Apr. 18 F 8:30HouseMay 30 W 8:30Apr. 25 F 8:30
NuttingMay 23 W 1:30May 2 W 10:15May 9 W 8:30May 16 W 10:15Apr. 25 F 10:15May 30 W 8:30LeagueApr. 18 F 8:30
MidwayMay 30 F 1:30May 22 F 4:30May 16 F 8:30May 9 F 8:30May 2 F 8:30Apr. 25 F 8:30Apr. 18 F 8:30News
STATE KISTURICAL SOCIETY TOPEKA KAN UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN VOLUME X1. K. U. BATTERY TOO SPEEDY FOR AGGIES NUMBER 142. Bishop and Sommers Hold Farmers to a Score of 6 to 0 ALL KANSAS HITS BAILEY McCarty's Men Get a Homer, Three Bagger, Five Two Base Hits and Five Singles The veteran K. U. battery, Bishop and Sommers, was too speedy for the Aggie batsmen and Kansas won a fast ball game on Cook's diet from farmers but got four hits, one a scramble and fourteen struck out. In the meantime, the Kansas batted Pitcher Bailey all over the list. McCarthy's sluggers got a homer, a three bagged five two base hits and five singles. The Kansans played almost perfect ball back of Bishop and the Aggeries out. The Kansans field was muddy between the bases, which made base running dangerous. Everybody Hit Safely Kansas made its first tally in the second. DeLongy doubled to center and came home on Van der Vries' single over the third base bag. In the second inning, Sommers opened with a double over the bleachers in right field. He went to third when Bailey muffed Smee's easy roller. DeLongy singled through second, scoring Sommers. Two Doubles Bring Score. Bishop started the fourth session with a home run to the right fence. The Aggies tightened and held the Kansans scoreless until the seventh when Smee singled and went to third on DeLongy's third single. Painter grounded Smee home and DeLongy ran to third during the excitement. Agnew's error sent DeLongy home. Two Doubles Bring Score. A double by Bishop followed by a double by Sprowl gave K. U. another score in the eighth. The score: Aggies Brodle, lf Agnew, ss Ennis, cf Brinsey, 3b Kraan, tb Scanlon, c. Meldrew, 2b. McClymans, rf. Bailey, p. AB R H PO A E 4 0 0 2 0 4 0 0 1 1 4 0 0 0 1 4 1 1 0 0 4 0 0 6 0 4 0 0 13 0 3 0 2 6 2 3 0 1 2 1 3 0 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 1 Totals 34 0 4 24 11 3 Kansas AB R H PO A E Sommers, c. 5 1 1 14 14 Wandel, lf. 5 1 1 1 0 Snee, cf. 4 1 2 0 0 DeLongy, 2b. 5 2 3 2 7 0 Painter, 3b. 4 0 0 0 0 Chairy, cf. 3 0 0 0 0 Dinsmore, rf. 1 0 0 0 0 Van der Vries, ss. 4 0 1 0 1 0 Sproull, 1b. 4 1 2 10 0 1 Bishop, s. 4 1 2 10 0 1 Total 39 6 12 27 10 Summary: Home run, Bishop; three base hit, Wandel; two base hits, Sommers, DeLongy, Sproull 2, Bishop; stolen base, DeLongy; Struck out by Bishop 14, by Bailey, 5; base on balls, off Bailey 1; left on bases, Agries 4, Kansas 8; passed ball, Sommers. Score by innings: R. H. P. Aggles 000 000 000 — 6 — 12 Kaggle 010 110 200 — 6 12 TEN ENTER TENNIS TOURNEY High Schools to Play Seventh An nual Round on University Courts Friday Ten high schools have entered the seventh annual tennis tournament to be held on the University court Friday. The first ball will be served at the gymnasium, swimming and the set men will be kept busy until the Nebraska meet starts. The winners in the singles and doubles will receive gold medals while the runners-up will get a silver medal and the winner's medal will be give each player. The following high schools have entered the meet: Manual, Central, Westport, Northwest, Kansas City, Northeast, top, Iowa, Eskridge, Baldwin and Winchester. The Y. M. C. A. cabinet meets tomorrow at five instead of Thursday night. The campaign committee will not meet this week. Send the Daily Kansan home. GRADUATE STUDENT GETS FELLOWSHIP IN ILINOIS John A. Elliott, a graduate student in the botany department of the University on the Fairmount College Fellowship, has been appointed to a $350 fellowship in botany in the University of Illinois for 1914-16. Mr. Elliott expects to specialize in phytopathology. He will work with Prof. F. L. Stevens, one of the most eminent phytopathologists in the United States, who was recently called to take charge of this work at Illinois. ANOTHER SORORITY BARS NEW DANCES Pi Phis Announce Their Sup port of Mrs. Brown's Recommendations Following the lead taken by the Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority in announcing official action in support of Mrs. Brown in regard to certain dance reforms recommended, other organizations are considering like action. The Pi Beta Phi sorority was the root in line to announce a similar and a news event given at a fraternity house upheld their decision. Recently a dancing party given by the Mu Phi Epsilon sorority at the University excluded the objectionable dances and was the first official disapproval made by any sorority in America. "I am proud of the action taken by the Kappas in this matter and also of the Pi Phis. The decision of the Engineers is a most welcome surprise because the attitude of the men students in the question," said Mrs. Brown. "My attitude in urging the classes and other social organizations to take a stand against the undesirable influences of the new dances is in their own defense. I merely want them to use their own judgment in the matter and decide for the better thing before it becomes necessary for a higher authority to make rules regulating our student dances." TO HAVE OPEN AIR CONCERTS First of Series by K. U. Band Will be given Friday The University band under the leadership of J. C. McCanles will begin a series of open air concerts Fridays evening of this week. The concerts will be one hour long starting at 7:15 on Blake Hall steps JUNIVERSITY CATALOGUES ARE OFF STATE PRESS UNIVERSITY OF KANSASTUESDAY AFTERNOON, APRIL 28, 1914. The University catalogues are on the press and are expected to be here this week or the first of next. Last year they were tied up at the state printer's office and were not issued until after school had closed. The new diploma blanks are also expected this week. The blanks were required because of the change from agents to the Board of Administrators. CABS, FLOWERS, AND DRESS SUITS TABOO AT SOP HOH II Cabs, flowers and dress suits are o be absolutely tabooed at the Soph- more Hop Friday evening, accordi- ly Van Der Lon, manager of he Hou. On former occasions it has been the custom for the men to appear in light trousers and blue coats. This attire will be permissible an informal offair will be permissible. The Stevenson Club of the Hash House League has protested the game with the Midway Club Saturday, claiming that the Midway Club violated the eligibility rules. The commission will meet at the Student Union tomorrow evening to decide the protest. Philosophers to Meet The Philosophy Club will meet in room 101, Administration Building, onight at 7:30. Prof. E. H. Holzens will give a report of the last meeting of the Western Philosophical Association. Send the Daily Kansan home. Kappa Sigma fraternity held dother's Days on Friday and Saturday. The following mothers visited he chapter house: Mrs. E, P. Marquis, Mrs. J. Jacoba, Mrs. Alley, and diff Griffith of Kansas City; Mrs. R. Berry of Tulsa, Okla.; Mrs. A. N Dilley, Council Grove; Mr. and Mrs. C. Jones, Chanute, Mrs. C. Painter, and Mrs. Madlem of Lawrence. Stevenson Protests Game TWO SENIOR HONOR SOCIETIES TO COMBINE Skull and K and Sachems U nite--to Be Called Sachem Because the members of the Skull and K and Sachems, senior honorary societies, thought there was no need of two organizations in the class, a merger was effected last night at the Student Union. The new society will bear the name of Sachems. A new ritual and constitution for the society will be prepared. Sam Fairchild was elected temporary chairman of the new organization. A committee, composed of the following, was chosen to consider the preparation of a new constitution: Elmer Whitney, Oscar Dingman, Webster Holloway, Russell Gear, and Duke Kennedy. A committee was also named to arrange for a mixer in the near future. After the business of amalgamation was completed, the members of the old societies met together, and later adjourned to Brick's for eats, where several members of the faculty made talks. GREAT ARTISTS WILL SING HERE THIS WEEK Elsie Baker and Albert Bar roff Perform Tomorrow-- Others Thursday The second, third, and fourth contests of the Eleventh Annual Music Festival will be given on Wednesday of this week in Robinson Gymnasium. Thursday afternoon at 2:30 the St. Paul Symphony Orchestra will give a concert. The soloists will be Miss Anna Sweene, pianist, Mr. Edmund Foersteel, violinist, and Mr. Frederick Wheeler, bass. Tomorrow evening at 8:15 a joint song recital will be given by Miss Elsie Baker, contralto, and Mr. Albert Borroff, bass. Thursday night at 8:15 the fourth concert will be given by the same organization and at this concert the solist will be accompanied by sophran. Mr. Albert Lindquest, tenor and Mr. Paul Morgan, violoncellist. NANT HARGISS AT EMPORIA State Normal is Trying to Get K. U. Man for Head Coach Next Year H. W. Hargiss, of the physical training department, may be head coach at the State Normal, next year. Mr. Hargiss said today he had received several letters from the faculty committee at the Normal but would make no statern as to the position. An effort is being made by a faculty committee of the Normal to secure "Big Bill" Hargiss, the former College coach, as coach for the Normal teams. Mr. Hargiss is employed as gymnasium director at the University of Kansas, and has readiness to propose to persuade by the Normal team. Besides Hargiss' brilliance as an athletic coach, the Normal would be especially pleased to secure him because he is a graduate of the school, and one of the best athletes ever produced at the Emporia institution. Discuss Photography The Emporia Gazette says: The Delta Phi Delta, art sorority, met this afternoon at the home of Miss Neva Foster. Photography was the general subject, Lucile Brown read a paper on Artistic Photography, and Wilma Arnett and Myrtle Ellsworth discussed "Recent Developments in Photography." The regular meeting of the Home Economics Club will be held tomorrow in the sewing room. A delegate will be chosen for the convention of the Women's Federation of Clubs at the meeting. The Home Economics picnic has been postponed on account of the Music Festival. H. E. Club Will Meet Micky McCune has announced himself a candidate for vice-president of the organization. Pi Beta Phi held initiation yesterday for Hazel Carson. STUDENTS WILL JOIN UNION AT ENROLLMENT Men's Organization to Have Card on Registra-tion Blank When the students enroll next fall they will have an additional card to fill out. It will be one regarding membership in the Men's Student Union and will give the students an admission card to their registration and to pay their fees at the registrar's office at the same time they pay their other fees. The card will read as follows: the activities of the men's Student Union. Whole year membership, $2.00. One semester membership, $1.00. Note: The Men's Student Union is a home for men students where they can meet their friends and have a general lounging place. Games, magazines, newspapers, a piano and other furnishings are provided for the use of members. Organized Feb. 7, 1914. Membership last year 600. Location 1200 Tenn. St. Take advantage of this opportunity to join. Receipts for dues will be given out at the time they are paid. ENGLAND WILL SEND DELEGATE TO K. U. Herbert Cornish, London Tel egraph, Will Attend Kansas Newspaper Week England will send a delegate to the National Journalism Conference in the person of Mr. Percy Bullen, F.J. L., of the London Daily Telegraph. Mr. Herbert Cornish, Secretary of the British Institute of Journalists, wrote the University this morning that Mr. Bullen had made arrangements for and librarians Media Librarians would be pleased to represent the great body of English journalists at the University of Kansas at that time. Mr. Cornish also advised that Mr. Bullen would bear messages of greetings from prominent English newspaper men. Professor Thorpe will urge Mr. Bullen to address the Conference outlining the work of the Institute of Education and incorporated under a Royal charter. TWENTY-SIX TO PUGET SOUND Students Will Get Six Hours Credit Out of Seaside Vacation A party of twenty-six students and pessors will spend the summer on the seashore where the temperature in the day time is around 70 degrees and then get six hours credit thrown in. The party will be led by Prof. W. J. Baumgardner to Puget Sound Marine Station this summer. The total expense of the trip will be about $140 a person. Those who will make the trip are Misses Emma Palmer, Evelyn Ebenshtein Treece, Nam Armstrong, Carrie Wilsey, Florence White, Wheland Reed and Ben Berger, L. G. Allen, Roy Root, and Walter Beauchamp, Professor and Mrs. Risser and two students from Washburn, Prof. S. G Whitcomb, Prof. A. W Trettine, and Prof. W. J. Baumgardner and family. The party will leave Kansas City June 11 in a special car over The Canadian Pacific route. Stops will be made in the Canadian Rockies to formation, hot springs, mineral springs, and other things of interest. The number and the names of the competitors for the prize in the Christianity Essays Contest will not be known by the committee in charge until after May 1. The winners will be announced on Commencement Day. Will Know May 1. To Measure Engineers The engineers will be offered their last chance to be measured for caps on gowns on the first floor of the building. Bush tomorrow from eight-thirty to ten S. H. Lewis, instructor in the department of journalism, has been awarded an honorary degree at the University of Washington, where a chapter is being installed. FINE ARTS KODAKERS SHOW CAMERA PICTURES A collection of seventy photographs, all taken by students of the University, is being shown in the Library and Arts in the Administration Building. "The pictures have been taken with small cameras by students on their vacations and on picnics with a special effort to make them artistic," said Ms. Zimmerman. Fine Arts School, this morning. "The pictures show that real artistic effect can be gained with the cameras as well as with the brush." KANSAS AND TIGERS TO DEBATE TONIGHT Jayhawkers Will Meet M. U in Fraser--Won Last Two H. Merle Smith and J. Christy Wilson will be the Kansas speakers. They will uphold the negative side on a discussion of the literacy test for immigrants, J. W. Head and A. K Lates will represent Missouri A victory over the Missouri debating team this evening would make the third consecutive time K. U. has defeated from our neighbor to US. 68th. Dean F. W. Blackmar of the Graduate School will preside at the debate. The judge will be John G. Nelson, field officer in the Hirer Porter, Kansas city attorneys. A banquet will be held at Lee's College Inn after the debate at which Prof. C. H. T. Hablot will act as toastmaster. The speakers at this banquet will be Judge John G. Park, J. Christy Wilson, and Prof. H. T. Hill. STUDENTS JOIN MILITIA Several Have Entered University K G, and. There's Room for More Since the war scare several students have enlisted in company M and there is room for forty or fifty more at present. Captain Jones said this morning that if any student wished to volunteer for service in the Mexican trouble he could make out his enlistment number, but did not national and they would not be turned in to the Adjutant-General until the militia was ordered to mobilize. In a case of this kind the man is not under any obligation until the militia is ordered out. If the militia is not called upon the volunteer's name it must not be sent to the Adjutant-General. "There is not much probability that the guards will be called out right away to take part in the Mexican trouble," said Captain Jones of the local militia today. "The condition in Mexico will probably not develop into anything serious for a while, at least until the South American countries have tried to settle the matter." Y. W. C. A. CABINETS TO VISIT HAUNTED HOUSE The old and new members of the Y. W. C. A. cabinet will have a house party Friday at the "hunted house" they will stay until Sunday night, Reports of the past year will be be read, plans for the coming year discussed, and the old members will advise the new as to the work. Besides the business matters, a research team must meet Miss Mollie Carroll and Miss Helen Jones, of the German department, will be chaperons. Tigers Come Next Week Two big baseball games are in store for the Varsity nine next week when Missouri comes Wednesday and Thursday. May 6 and 7. The Miss. State team will play a spring. William Jewell and the Chinese players both lost to the Tigers. Band to Rehearse K. U. band will not rehearse Wednesday evening on account of the Symphony orchestra concert. But the band will play Friday afternoon for the N. U. K. U. track meet. All band members please take notice. Medics Initiate Phi Beta Pi. honorary medical fraternity, held initiation Saturday night for Dr. Lindsay C. Minele, of Kansas City, George F. Bachman, Halstead, W. Walter Bowman, Topeka, and Oliver W. Miner, Sirbellez Professor and Mrs. Baumgardner will be at home this evening to Professor Baumgardner's class of Uni- versity and the professor of the Presbyterian Sabbath school. CLUB FORMED TO SEND DYKSTRA TO CONGRESS Students Agree to Work for Political Science Professor in Second District A PERMANENT ORGANIZATION Meeting of "Dykstra-for-Congress" Club Will be Held Soon to Perfect Plans for Carrying on Campaign C. A. Dykstra, professor of political science in the University, is a possible candidate for the nomination as congressman from the second Kansas district at the coming primaries. He will be building in the Administration Building this morning, endorsing Professor Dykstra's nomination, and binding the signers as charter members of a Dykstra-for-Congress club. Fifty men and women, half of them voting in the second district, signed the paper. A meeting of the Dykstra-for- Congress club, to form a regular and permanent organization, will be call this week. When seen by a reporter for the Daily Kansan this morning, Professor Dykstra declined to make a statement concerning his 'ampage'. The second district is now represented in congress by Joseph L. Taggart of Kansas City. It is composed of eight senators, douglas, Franklin, Miami, Limn, Allen, Anderson, and Bourbon. The primaries for nomination of candidates will be held in August and the election in the following November. Professor Dykstra has been at the University of Kansas for five years, and has the rank of associate professor. He is the chair of the University of Iowa, '03. HAWK LEADS TO IDA PERRY AND SOWERS Prominant Parts of "The Fortune Hunter" Assigned-- Rehearsal Nightly A full cast rehearsal will be held in night at 7 o'clock in Room 110, Fraser. Clarence R. Sowers and Ida Perry have been given the leads in "The Fortune" and "Murder," to be produced for Hunter 8th, by the Hawk Dramatic Club. The following compose the cast: Nathaniel Duncan: "Nat" The Fortune Hunter, Clarence, R. Sowers, Harry Kellogg, a rising young fil- maker. James Long; "Jim" Albert Teed; Liam Hunt; Tom Kelly; De- velop Joe. We'd walk street wee Willie Bartlett; a millionaire's son, Larry Kninear. Robbins; Kellogg's servant, Don Joseph. Sam Graham; an old druggist, Easy Anderson. Mr. Lockwood; the banker, Frank Miller. Roland Barnette; the bank clerk. Guy Waldo. Tracy Tanner, son of a liverman, Chester Cassingham. Walkingatha Walkingatha Pete Walling; the sheriff, Halleck Craig. Mr. Sperry; the drummer, Don Burnette. "Watty;" the tailor, Pinky Winston "HI;" the old inhabitant, Cecil DeRoin. Betty Graham; the Druggist's baby. In Bury. course, Toni Pau002 Angle; a country girls, Hazel Williams BOARD OF K. U. ALUMNI INSPECT MOUNT OREAD The Board of Alumni Visitors came to Lawrence for the second visit to the University this year. They will spend two or three days visiting. Their purpose is to look over the University a-1 endeavor to have any improvement made which they think necessary. The board consists of Mrs. Genevieve Chalkley, Lawrence; Mrs. C. W. Smith, Stockton; Mrs. J. V. Humphrey, Junction City; Scott Hopkins, Topeka; Chas. F. Scott, Io兰; and L. C. Davidson, Wichita. Mr. Davidson could not come today but is expected tomorrow. Read your own KANSAN. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Official student paper of the University of Kansas EDITORIAL STAFF EBIDYAL STUDENTS JOHN C. MEDDON, Editor-In-Chief LORN HABSS, Associate Editor JOHN HOBMANN, Editor JOHN HOGNERMAN, High School Editor CALVIN LAMBERT, Sport Editor BUSINESS STAFF BUSINESS EWIN ARELLA...Business Manager RAY BELLROOM...Circulation Manager JOB BISHOP...Advertising Manager ADVERTISING...Advertising CIMA S. H...Budgetary...Advertising CIMA S. H...Budgetary...Advertising REPORTORIAL STAFF LISER BADGER L. W. PERUSON W. W. PERUSON UIT SCHYNER C QAABLES SWEET WILLIAM SWEET W. W. WARD LANDON LAIBB SAM DEUME BORN AND LIVED BY GARDEN ALVINLEY CHARLES WASHON GARDEN ALVINLEY LUCLE HUILNER LAWRENCE HUILNER LAWRENCE SMITH HELEN HAYEN Entered as second-class mail mall matter September 17, 1910, at the post office at Lawrence. Kansas, under the act of March 8, 1879. Published in the afternoon five times a week, by students of the University of Kansas, from the press of the department of Journalism. Subscription price $2.50 per year, in admission; one term, $1.50. Phone, Bell K. U. 25. Address all communications to UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN. Lawrence, Kans. The Daily Kansan aims to picture the undergraduate students going further and more clearly print the notes by standing up and pointing at them; to be clean, to be cheerful and to leave more serious problems to user heads; to be able to ability the students of the University. TUESDAY, APRIL 28.1914. A short saying often carried much wisdom. -Sophocles. BIRD AND BEAST FIGHT Remember the Missouri football game at Columbia last November? Recall the indoor track meet in Convention Hall? Tragic events, those. The Tiger must be feeling pretty chesty with two prominent 1913-14 feathers missing from the Jayhawk's tail. But this Jayhawk is a persistent and wily old bird and it is swooping down on the yellow and black beast from a new angle tonight in Fraser Hall. The fight is called debate in scholastic circles and student tickets are good for ringside seats. May its aim be sure and its claws sharp! PROTECTION FOR STUDENTS The audit of student accounts by a competent bookkeeper is a custom which the Board of Administration has wisely decided to continue, even though the University no longer has a secretary and purchasing agent. From the student point of view tha plan has two advantages. Members of organizations have no chance to shout "graft" at the officials who have an O. K. on the bookkeeping. Then the officials themselves have the assurance that their work is done in a businesslike manner approved by an official who ought to know what he is talking about. THE NOTORIETY SEEKER He sees two students start a game of pitch in the gymnasium on enrollment day while they are waiting for their turn and he declares that card-playing is common; he hears a "cussword" in a football song and he declares the whole University to be running over with profanity; he sees Helena, Montana, in the Daily Kansan and he declares it to be the vilest sheet in Kansas. WANTED: OFFICE SEEKERS WANTED: OFFICE SEEKERS Ye Ancient Gods and East Australasian Potentates! Not once but twice has the University student failed to rise to his accustomed level during the present semester. Grapes, does nobody want them? Plums, has their far-famed sweetness proved a myth? Just think of it, you graduates in the days gone by when a University election rivalled the Spanish-American war in importance, the Athletic STAY WEST, YOUNG MAN! Here in the land of legend and the region of Orlando, I should sit at the feet of learning and charter thought's advance. For every eastern hill-top was sacred and divine To the humble prairie plough-boy who sought in the East, a sign. Out of the West they called me, and I turned my face to the East. And there was pride in my going, as a bridegoon goes to the feast; Written for the Daily Kansan by Willard A. Wattles, '09. Out of the East I turned me—God, what my eyes have seen! From a land of degenerate farmers, from the Land of the Might Have Been. From the narrow halls of learning where the lamp of truth goes out And the still, small voice of the spirit is drowned in the vulgar shout, From a land of wanant cities and dread night things that prey. I turn my face to the West-land.-God, give me one prairie day! Give me the blaze of sunshine, give me the open sky, The crude, young strength of manhood undrained in hardy, The grip, grip, grip. Every Saturday sees the wrecking of baseball reputations which were built up during the winter. When you hear a prominent alumnus telling about the good old days, he usually means the good old nights. —Ohio Sun Dial. The East is an ulcered carcass, bedded like a courtesan. It has two legs, a hoof and flushed throat. Give me a voice that thunderstorms also vision. The flail of honest anger and pity for men's pain. Give me the faith of Kansas and a few young men I know. And we'll carry the gates of Gaza and shatter Jericho. The East is an ulcered carcass, the North the West, like a boy, has heard her call and flushed through his coat of tan. He has sparred with Sanson, his body's strength for a gaudy finger-ring. And the East has fettered him body and soul with a rope of twisted string; But I cannot keep in silence the things my eyes have seen As I turn to the youth of Kansas from the Land of the Might Have Amherst, Mass. April 25, 1914. Board election was postponed because a sufficient number of candidates to fill the vacancies had not announced themselves! Et quid nunc, and what dire calamity will befall us next? Furthermore the present case is the second offense this year. The candidates for editor and manager of the Jayhawker had no opposition and the two men were declared elected without the formality of a vote! Well, anyway, interest has not lagged in the Student Council election, if the number of candidates out for membership is a good indication. That much is gratifying, at least. IT IS TO LAUGH "Miss Hazel Woodhull, women's physical director at Northwestern University, has added a new hour to the curriculum of the university. It has won the name of the 'slumber hour.' It is designed for co-eds too delicate to take any gymnastic exercise more violent than the tango. "Athletic work is compulsory at Northwestern for freshmen. The rapidly increasing number of physicians certificates attesting that 'Miss Blank's health was so poor that she must not take exercise' aroused the sympathies of Miss Woodhull that she ordered all girls bringing such certificates to sleep between 4 and 5 o'clock. And she sits in the room watchfully waiting, to see that none of the girls shall imperil their delicate health by pillow throwing. "A remarkable improvement in health has been noticed among the co-eds.—Chicago Examiner. ENDS AND ODDLETS The Daily Northwestern reports that a fountain pen was lost "without a cap." Wonder if it will be treated as a freshman would be under the same circumstances. The class which has adopted a stone seat as a memorial to leave the University reminds us of Mr. Wilson's friend Huerta. The latter evidently is planning to be most thoroughly "sat upon." France has had another aeroplane collision. Seems to be as inexcusable as two germs colliding in a bath tub. Philadelphia has a bottle of rum that is not to be opened until 1992. Better keep the carnival companies out of town. "Latest typewriter goes in your pocket." If the price is right and even then there might be some physical difficulty. A friend in need is a friend to avoid—Ex. "Anyone would think I was drunk" murmured the movie operator as he reeled away—Harvard Lampoon. The worst news yet, concerning Mexico is that most of the chile in chowing gum comes from that country, and because of war, the supply would be cut off. St. Marys probably felt insulted ver that 9 to 1 ball game the other but they didn't request a salute. CAMPUS OPINION "CRITICAL" IS IRONICAL Why this agitation over campus seats? Are we not sons of Kansas,—of glorious America? We have no time to sit and ponder. Our paths lead to some promised goal, a class room where knowledge by the note-bookful may be had for the asking, or to some musty corner in the Library. We do not care to sit in the warm sunshine with an open book on our knees, or with a likertive classmate at our ebow. If students must read, let them read the lam. It is anything, and it's softer than a stony bench. The next thing, some sentimental class will be asking for chimes, thus plotting to do away with the inspiring toot-toot of our cherished flower whistle. Let Kansans be Kansans! Why attempt to lay more traps for the idle dreamer, the loiterer, the listless ones? Preposterous! "An idle mind is the Devil's workshop." Students are sent to college to hurry along with sorrowful faces, an arm, a knife and a fondill pen. They were not sent here to laugh and chatter like a bunch of African monkeys on a memorial bench donated by some ill-advised class of forgotten alumni. Critical. The Toboggan Slide "in the lost battle, Born down by the flying Where mingles war's rattle With groans of the dying." (Mr. P. C. Young, '82, a lawyer of Fredonia sends us the account of a student prank "in the good old days". Incidently Mr. Young defines a lawyer *a* one who "works hard, lives well and dies poor even though he is often referred to as a "gentleman" who saves your property from your enemy and take sit all himself.") "In the lost battle. By P. C. Young,'82. Quite long ago when Fraser Hall was unfinished, when but one building adorned the Campus, the faithful, including many good citizens of Lawrence, had gathered in the evening on Mount Oread. The darkness was dense. Neither stars, moon nor artificial light cheered or guided the wanderer on his way. Still worse, the rain was falling persistently, steadily, patiently patterning in gloomy mouthes. Despite such conditions the boys brought out their best girls in gala attire, a thing proper then, eternally right now. The writer marks no improvement. Perhaps they have ever been too nearly perfect to admit of improvement. The grand old guard at Waterloo was but a miniature in comparison. With last words from the rostrum, the audience emerged into the black night, covering the sidewalk, crowding thick one upon the other. The procession moved down the hill, commenting upon the lecture, some perhaps upon things nearer, dearer. Bad buds had, for a distance, covered the walk with soft soap. Reaching this place shrieks resounded. A cruel momentum swept from the rear on to doom and destruction. It was a most inartic mix up piling one upon another, tumbling, squirming, infuriating, foul-smelling, footswimming and ever the cries increased. A few saved themselves by seizing some screwly elms at the edge of the walk. All was alike: Where mingles she turns With groans of the dying. Some were wicked enough to suggest, that with light, it would have been a sight for the gods. In all Lawrence the next day. Over all Lawrence the next day, the clothes lines grounded under weight of choice linen. But we were all good, hence happy. Copyright Hart Schaffner & Marx Some men think that because a fabric is imported it's better IF YOU'RE one of these men, you have a wonderful chance to get the things you like best here;the new tariff law has made foreign weaves possible. In the spring and summer showing of Hart Schaffner & Marx clothes you'll find the best fabrics that can be procured in either American or foreign weaves. The cloth is only the foundation, however. You'll find the best tailoring and most skillful designing that can be had. Here are the latest styles. We'd like to show them and tell you more about them The Peckham Clothes Shop The home of Hart Schaffner & Marx good clothes Regal Shoes Heid Caps PROFILE PROFILE Scarf slide space and lock front Lion Collars Oldest Brand in America UNITED SHIRT & COLLAR CO. TROY N.Y. Lion Collars Oakland, CA in America UNITED SHIP & COLLAR CO. TROY N.Y. A GOOD PLACE TO EAT AT ANDERSON'S OLD STAND JOHNSON & TUTTLE 715 PROPS. Mass. A. G. ALRICH Printing Binding, Copper Plate Printing, Bubber Stamps, Engraving, Stee Die. Embossing, Seals, Badges. 744, Mass. SPRING SUTINGS FRANK KOCH TAILOR 727 Mass. Music Festival This Week Second Concert Wednesday, April 29, 8:15 p. m. ELSIE BAKER, Contralto ALBERT BORROFF, Bass Third Concert Third Concert Thursday, April 30, 2:30 p.m. THE ST. PAUL SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA Walter Rothwell, Conductor Frederick Wheeler, Baritone Edmund Foeratel, Violinist Anna Sweepe, Pianist Fourth Concert Thursday, April 30, 8:15 p. m. THE ST. PAUL SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA Walker Rothwell, Conductor Elizabeth Rothwell-Wolfe, Soprano Paul Morgan, Violinistellist Wake Rothwell, Conductor Elizabeth Rothwell-Wolfe, Soprano Albert Llandestow, Tenor Paul Morgan, Violoncellist Student course tickets. $1.59 - Registrar's Single admission. $1 & 75c - Woodward's THE COLLEGE BARN'ER Bert Wadham On 14th Street R. E. Protsch TAILOR BASE BALL GOODS The Sporting Goods Headquarters KENNEDY & ERNST 6 Marr St Phone Phones 341 一 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Plan Engineers' Day Plans were made for Engineers' Day at a meeting of the chemical engineers in Room 201 of the Chemistry Building at 4:30 this afterternoon. ANNOUNCEMENTS All junior and senior women who wish to swim are invited to come to the pool Tuesday and Thursday at 4:30 for advanced swimming. Monday and Wednesday 4:30 for beginners in swimming. This is to accommodate those who were conditioned in swimming, also all College women who care to learn to swim. Dr. Margaret L. Johnson. WANT ADS FOR RENT—Modern twelve room, house, very desirable for club or fraternity. Bell 1823. 138-6 LOST—A black bill-book, containing five dollars in bills and several papers. Call B. 1019. Reward. Want a bathing cap? Large assortment and fresh goods at Wilson's Drug Store—Adv. 138-4 STANDISH A.N.E. ARROW COLLAR 2 for 25¢ Cluett Peabody & Co., Inc. Makers You Can Earn a Good Living and lay up some money to purchase from your business College. Enrol at once get ready and you'll secure a good position. Free Employment Bureau at your service provide you with a job, and be employed Business College. No vacations. Business College Lawrence, Kansas. WATKINS NATIONAL BANK Capital $100,000 Surplus and profits $100,000 The Student Depository CITY CAFE 906 Mass. Strictly Home Cooking Ever try our Special 15c Lunch? You'll like it. PROFESSIONAL CARDS W. C. McONNELL, Physd. and Honor 892. Hall 390, Honor 892. Residence, 1346 Tenn. St. Ball 1023, Homo 928. J. F. BROOK, Optometrist and Specialist Harry Redding, Office 892 Mass. Ball. Ball phone 695. HARRY REDING, M. D. Eye, ear, nos and throat. Hall 892. Hono 514. O. A. HAMMAN, M. D. Ear, ear, and throat specialist. Glasses Stud. Satis- faction Guaranteed. Dick Building. DR. H. W. HAYNE, Occult. Lawrence. DR. H, W. HAYNE, Oculist, Lawrence, Kansas. I. W. O'BRYAN DENIS Over Wilson's Pennsylvania Plains 107 B. BEIGITEL, M. D. D. O. 833 Mass. saccharis Streets. Both phones, office and phone numbers. G. W. JONES, A. M. M. D., Diseases of surgery, surgery, and gynecology suites 1 B. A. A. Bldg. Residence, 1290 St. Orcht. St. both phies, 35. DR. H. T. JONES, Room 12. F. A. B. Ridgway Residents Fax: 561-794-8000 WWW.ORMS.OVERY.COM "es Studio. Both phones. DR. BURT R. WHITE Osteopathe Phones. Home 257. Office, 745 Mass St. Ed. W. Parsons, Engraver, Watchmaker and Jeweler. Diamonds and Jewelry. Bell Phone 717. 71. Mass. 8. T. GILLISPISIE. M. D. Office corner 8. T. GILLISEP, M. D. O'Ferrer office 8. T. GILLISEP, M. D. O'Ferrer office 728 Phone 596. 728 Phone 596. CLASSIFIED Plumbers Phone Kennedy Plumbing Co., for gas goods. Inc. Mada lamps. 937 Mass. Guilds. Ladles Tailors MUSICELLISON. Dressmaking and Ladies MASORINI. Dancewear. 1052 Phone. Phone Bill 2411 West. Queen City College. System and sewing School. Mrs. G. Mark brown, 838#. Kell, Mrs. M. Mark brown, 838#. Kell. Hair Dressers hairdressing, shampooing, scalp and facial massage, shampooing, hair-frigids. Macaroni salad toilets, hair-frigids. Macaroni salads, 1872, Rome; 31. The Seven Fold Dress Shop, 927 Mass St. Barber Shops Go where they all go J. C. HOUK 913 Mass. Student's Co-op Club. $2.50 to $3.00 1849 kd. Gee, H. Geovan Stellard Around Mount Oread Bud Waugh and Butch Stuews went out to Stuews's town of Alma Friday where a county track meet was being held. Butach acted as field judge and Bud rooted for Eskridge. When the boys got back to Lawrence a friend asked "Budo" who won the meet. "Why, Alma of course," Waugh replied. "Butch was field judge." The junior laws in Dr. Burdick's domestic relations class are finding out many things that will be very helpful later in life. "Now," we said Dr. Burdick, "I understand that in Oklahoma a man may marry his widow's sister. Can he do that in Kansas, Cline? We were the case. His further remarks were cut off by the rest of the class. Errett Lamb, notwithstanding the laughter, also was pretty sure that a man might do it in Kansas. Pug Ferguson, who is manager of the 1221 baseball team in the Hash House League, says that even though he does not play, his office is not that of a sinecure. Pug says that all he has to do at the game is to keep score, chase four balls, watch the possessions of the players to see whether or not stolen, coach his team, tell the umpire how many balls and strikes are on the man at bat, decide all disputes and take all the "cussions." Not long age a couple of junior laws, who were in need of a little velvet, advertised some second-hand law books for sale. The ad, was answered by a fellow-student who happened to be as shy of the necessary equivalent as the body in a day or so, on his prostrate in a day or so, that he was allowed to take the books. Three weeks have passed, and the bill is yet unpaid. Students who know how it is are requested to send in suggestions to A 7, Kansan. Claude (Canube) Fletcher forgot that the Easter vacation lasted only till Monday and stayed home a week. Flech says he was unavoidably detained. The family physician came around to visit one day and told Claude that he had better not come back to school for a few days. On leaving house the doctor posted red "Measles" placard on the porch that proclaimed to the natives of Glasgo. Kans, that danger was near. Canube is feeling fine now and says he is glad he didn't have the mumps, too. P. L. Dyer, soph engineer, who was "beamed" in last week's visit to the carnival, says that even though If you want something exclusive in stationery, call at Wilson's Drug Store.-Adv. 138-5 Debate. Debate. Literacy Test For Immigrants, Missouri vs. Kansas, Fraser Hall, tuesday, 8:00 O'clock—Adv. By a special purchase we obtained a large assortment of Men's Union Suits at a low price. While they last we will sell at the special price, $1 for $1.25 values; 75c for $1 values and 50c for 75c values. We have them in every style. Good Clothes 829 Mass. M. J. Skofstad his head is covered with bandages, misery has some recompense. Dyer says that more good looking girls have been speaking to him in the last three days than in all the preceding months of the school year. Joe Howard discovered last week a novel way of beating his way into the carnival shows. He walks along in front of the tents and while the marker is not there, he meets their heart and then says something about the wind. He gets permission to get his hat and in the meantime sees the show. George Babb, K. U.'s stalwart gymnastian instructor declares that he cannot serve his country in its impending crisis with Mexico except in the capacity of a commissioned officer of volunteers. WORK THROUGH K. U. BY CATCHING FROGS Students to Supply Laboratories With 200 Dozen Live Specimens a Year How students of the University of Kansas may work their way through school by catching frogs, and selling them to the University for biological laboratory work was told this morning by Dr. Ida Hye, head of the department of physiology at the University. Dr. Hye has had trouble recently in obtaining the frogs for research work, and has hired a student to catch them by the hour. The departments of anatomy, physiology and zoology as well as physics, at the University, use 200 dozen frogs a year and perhaps half as many turtles. For the frogs, the University pays from 50 to 75 cents a dozen, and for turtles $1.50 to $2 a dozen. The amphibians previously were shipped to Lawrence from as far east as Chicago and Detroit. "Frogs are in great demand at all the large universities of the west and in many high schools," said Dr. Hyde. "At present we must buy them in the east, but there is no reason why we should sell frogs to Nebraska. Two or three years ago there was a student in the University of Nebraska who made a comfortable living selling frogs to Nebraska, Kansas, and other western universities. His method was to catch them in the fall, just as they were going in, the man used a store door and boxed in his cellar. Then as shipments were ordered from him he would dig the frogs out, pack them in wet hay, and they would be delivered to us alive and in good condition." Wrestling Match Catch-as-catch-can PROF. WESTMAN. Physical Culture Instructor at Washburn College vs. HERMAN STROH. WEDNESDAY NIGHT, APRIL 29 New Vaudeville Theatre Champion of Lawrence There Will Be No Show Monday Or Tuesday At This Theatre ONEIDA Prices 35c and 50c Ringside Seats 75c Two Falls Out of 3—To a Finish This Will Be a Fast Go DONT MISS IT. Good Public! Front 2% In. Back 2 In. Barker Collars are Linen in quarter sizes at PECKHAMS HIGH SCHOOL VICTORS TO DEBATE AT K. U. El Dorado and Burlington Will Argue Minimum Wage at Lawrence, May 1 The debating championship of the 550 Kansas high schools will be decided at Fraser Hall, University of Kansas, on the evening of May 1. when debating teams from the high schools of Burlington and El Dorado will discuss the question of minimum wage legislation. These are the schools that debated at the finals last year, and El Dorado has exactly the same team. Burlington won last year. The contest for the state championship is carried on by congressional districts. Elimination debates between schools in the same districts are held, and the champions of adjoining districts meet until only two teams are held. The final debate of the contest is held at Lawrence. An unusual number of high schools entered the contest this year, and interest in the deciding debate is widespread. Last year raa special train brought two hundred Burlington supporters to Lawrence, and arrangements are being made for a like excursion this year. The subject involved is one of great public interest in Kansas. A minimum wage bill was passed by the house in the state legislature last year, and is almost certain to be discussed at the coming session. Social Notes Alpha Delta Phi held initiation Saturday afternoon for Annette Ashton, Helent Thomas, and Mildred Farragher. --entertained their mothers at dinner at the chapter house Sunday. Sigma Alpha Epsilon has announced May eight and ninth as its annual Mothers' Day. Mrs. Stanton Oliner's class of the Presbyterian church entertained at Westminster Hall Saturday afternoon, and Mrs. Robert Oliner of the Presbyterian women of the University. More than sixty guests were present. The members of Chi Omega sorority entertained their patronesses and their husbands at one o'clock dinner Sunday. The members of Achoth sorority Debate. Debate. Literacy Test For Immigrants. Missouri vs. Kansas, Fraser Hall, Tuesday, 8:00 O'clock—Adv. Remember the Candies at Wilson's Drug Store are kept in a large refrigerator case. Always fresh and the best makes... Adv. 183-5 Baseball goods and tennis balls at Wilson's Drug Store—Adv. 138-5 Sam S. Shubert MAT. WEDNESDAY & SATURDAY PEG O' MY HEART Next: Wm. Hodge in THE ROAD TO HAPPINESS S Special Sale of HAIR GOODS Hair Dressing Free By special arrangement with a prominent importing concern we are enabled to show this week a complete line of hair goods of the highest class. Any shade of hair matched perfectly—Gray hair a specialty. This showing will be in charge of Miss Leaverton, an expert hair dresser, who comes to us for this week only. The purchase of any piece of hair goods entitles you to a free hair dressing. Any shades of hair matched perfectly—Gray hair a speciality. Following Special Prices Will Prevail: 20 inch natural wavy switches, regular 95c $2 values at. 22 inch natural wavy switches, regular $3.00 values at...$1.95 24 inch natural wavy switches, regular $5.00 values at...$2.95 26 inch 3 strand switches, regular $6.00 values at...$3.95 28 in natural wavy switches, regular $8 values at. $4.95 30 inch 3 strand switches, regular $10 values at. $5.95 32 inch 3 strand switches $12 values at... $6.95 Transformations $2.95 $4 values... the very $0.95 Extra special switches of any shade, the very finest made in 815 values at ... $9.95 Onms. Bullene Hackman The Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority gave its formal spring party Friday night in the F. A. A. Hall. The guests were received by Chancellor Charles Phillips, Frances Meservey, Harold Woodbury, Emily Berger, Frank Miller, HazelKrazi, Madeline Nachtmann, Bruce Hurd, Philis Buryrell. Debate. Alonzo Buizek. Out of town guests were Misses Rush Foster, Topeka; M. Laverma Egan, Ruth Jackman, Frances Jobs, Bob Golson, Miami City; Marie Fogarty, Junction City; and Mildred Petit, Peabody. Literacy Test For Immigrants, Missouri vs. Kansas, Fraser Hall, Tuesday, 8:00 O'clock-Adv. PAY Student Plays Student Dances Student Mixers When they are advertised in the Daily Kansan. 3,000 Students, Faculty and Alumni read it every day. BOWERSOCK THEATRE [The Only Fire Proof Constructed Theatre in Lawrence] May 4th to May 7th. Matinee 2:30; Night 8:15 One Mile of Films The Renowned White Slave Picture Drama "TRAFFIC IN SOULS" 600 Scenes 700 People Founded on the John D. Rockefeller Vice Investigation and the Reports of District Attorney Whitman of New York City, Shown to 30,000 People the first week at Weber's Theatre, Broadway, New York Price 25c All Seats Reserved. Seats on Sale at Woodward's, Saturday, 8 a. m. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Before the "Hop" Come to our shop, To see a lot Of clothes tip top. The styles are right For Friday Night. The trousers white - The prices light. Ober's HEAD TO FOOT OUTFITTERS DEBATING WAS LIVE ISSUE ON MT. OREAD Several Years Ago an Argument With Baker Ended in a Big Fist Fight Interest in debating has not always been as lukewarm as it is now. After the last debate with Baker, several years ago, enthusiasm was so high that a row and street fight were required to quiet the nerves of the enthusiastic supporters of the two teams. Men are still living who remember the time they slept on top of the ancient chapel piano in Fraser Hall, after one of the debates, rather than to go home in the drenching rain which lasted till morning. Public debating at the University, had its birth in the old time literary societies which met weekly, and whose membership consisted of both men and women. Orations, declamations, debates and "papers" comprised the programs. The societies which existed after 1888 and in the early 90's were the "Orophilian," the "Oread," and the "Athenaeum," the "Palladium," the "Adelphic," and the "Snow." The Snow" was used for a whirl in the court house and led to Old Fellows Hall, and the "Latter part of its existence, met in the old Methodist church, later known as Music Hall, which was torn down a few years ago to make room for the Masonic Temple. The rest of the societies always met in University buildings. The "Burke" and the "X Y Z" were the first societies exclusively for debating, and only men belonged to them. For quite a number of years after the death of the "Burke" and the "X Y Z" there were no debating societies, except in the School of Law, until 1912. In the spring of this year the "K. U. Debating Society" was organized, with Milton Minor as its first president. The following year, 1913, the "Oread Debating Society" was organized through the efforts of Wayne Edwards and E. L. Bennett. Bennett was the first man to be chosen as its president. The name of this society was changed last semester to "The University Debating Society." Recent debating records at this University have varied. In the last four contests with Oklahoma, Kansas teams have won at home and lost there. In 1908 the team to which Ralph Spots belonged won from Colorado, and shoved that mountainer each year, until Olney, Mattono, and Shinn reclaimed the title about two weeks ago. In 1911 Conner and Porter lost to Missouri by a narrow margin. But the next year Allen Wilbur and Milton Minor returned the honors to K. U., and in 1913 Kansas again won over Missouri, with Wilbur and Ayrid Frank. Interscholastic debaters here receive special training from the Debating Council. The University Debating Council is composed of four faculty members, three of whom are chosen by the University Senate, and two additional faculty members who debalearning society. The head of the public speaking is ex-officio member and secretary of the council. This body also makes arrangements for all interscholastic debates and selects the teams. At present the faculty members on the Debating Council are: Professor R. D. O'Leary of literary department, R. D. O'Leary of the English department, D. C. Croissant of the extension department, and H. T. Hill of the public speaking department. HANDBALL TOURNAMENT DELAYED BY FESTIVITIES The progress of the handball tournament which was started some time ago has been disturbed so much by promis, plays, and such things that the contests have been discontinued for the time being. But, according to Dr. James A. Naismith, as soon as the room can be cleaned up, the tournament will begin. The winning夺球 games of the schedule played. Phi Delts to Play Betas Kappa Sigma will entertain with their annual formal party on May 8 at A. A. Hall. This is their regular address in Lincoln county which was postponed. The Betas and Phi Delts will play a scheduled baseball game on freshman field tomorrow evening. The batteries will be: Phi Delts, Lyman and Blair; Betas, Chase and Strothers. MAY TO BE BIG MONTH FOR OREAD GOLF CLUB Two Tournaments on Local Course--Kansas to Defend State Title Because of a conflict with the Trans-Mississippi Golf Association tournament to be held on the Evanston golf course in Kansas City, the date of the state golf meet, to be held at Salina, has been changed from the third week in June to June 1 to 6. Lawrence Kinnear, a senior, will defend his title as state champion at this meet. The state golf meet is the biggest golf event of the year in Kansas and more than one hundred are expected to enter it. Bennett is a member of other members of the Oread Golf club will attend the meet. A meeting of the Oread club will be held soon to consider accepting the invitation of the Trans-Mississippi Association to join that organization. Many members of the local club hope that they can enter to offer the tournament of the larger organization to be held in Kansas City, June 8 to 13. The 2 ball foursome tournament held Saturday was won by C. O. Anderson and O. E. Graebner, both students. Seven teams of two men each round up the match. The winner had a low net score of 70 for the two rounds. Next week the biggest golf event of the year will take place—the 5th annual handicap tournament. The winner will hold for one year the silver loving cup offered by A. D. Carroll. The qualifying rounds for this tournament will be held Friday and Saturday, May 8 and 9. This week the kicker's tournament will be played. Each contestant picks his own handicap, writing his scoreboard before starting the play. Theta Tau, honorary engineering fraternity, will have a mixer at the Sigma Nu house tonight at eight o'clock. Theta Tau's to Mix NEBRASKA MEET WILL OPEN OUTDOOR TRACK Contest With CornhuskersFri day Will Be First Open- Air Cinder Event The Cornhusker track men will come from Lincoln to meet the Jayhawkers on the McCook cinders Friday afternoon after the season and Moss's runners probably will be in good shape to meet the Cornhuskers. The strength of the Nebraska squad is not known although the entries include several old men who have been on the cinder path when they meet on the cinder path. The inter-class meet, Saturday, gave a line on the Kansas strength. Haze歼军 (Haze歼军) will put forth a fast squad against the Nebraskans. The second Kansas-Aggie game will be played on McCook this afternoon. The game is called at 3:30 and the field is in fair play. The battery will be the battery for Kansas with the regular line-up in the field. Smee Pitches Today Si Burton, junior engineer, has come out for athletic member of the Athletic Board. K. U. Calendar Tuesday 7:30 Glee Club practice, (Fra.) 7:30 Y.M.C.A. Prof., A. Schweg 7:30 8:00 M. U.-K. U. debate, (Fra.) Wednesday. 4:30 Cerule Francais, (306 Fra.) 4:30 Mining Journal, (201 Ha.) 4:30 Practice Teachers' Meeting (Myers Hall.) 7:20 Band practice, (Fra). 8:15 Siteside concert, Music Theater, Robinson Gym.) Thursday 11:00 Entomological Club. (Mu.) 2:30 Third Concert, Music Festival. St. Paul Symphony Orchestra. (Robinson Gymnasium.) 4:00 Economics Lecture, Mr. Samuel T. Howe, Chairman State Tax Commission, "The State Tax Commission and Tax Re- (2009) 7:00 Amer. Soc. Mech. Eng. (1301 Ohio). 7:30 Civil Engineering Society, (Marvin ) 8:15 Fourth Concert, Music Festival. St. Paul Symphony Orchestra. (Robinson Gym.) Friday. 1:30 K. U.-N. U. dual track meet (Mcook). 3:00 Seventh interscholastic tennis tournament. (McCook). 7:30 Interscholastic H. S. Debating League. Saturday. Seventh interscholastic tennis tournament, (McCook). Eleventh annual interscholas- track meet. (Meadwood) S:15 Facuccio, Y. M. C. A. (Myers Hall.) May 6-7—Baseball, Missouri at Law- Athletics May 8—K. S, A. C., K. U. dual track track at Manhattan May 14-15-Baseball, Missouri at Columbia. May 16—M. U.-K. U. dual meet at Columbia May 23—Annual invitation H. S. meet at Lawrence May 21-22-Baseball, Ames at Ames, lowa. May 27-28-Baseball, K. S. A. C. at Moehannb. May 29—Baseball, St. Marys at St. Marys May 30—Missouri Valley track meet at St. Louis. June 6—Western Conference track meet at Chicago. Future Events May 5-7—Merchants' Week HIGH SCHOOL MEET TO HAVE 131 CONTESTANTS May 5-7 - Merchants' Week. May 11-14 - Kansas Newspaper Week State and National Newspaper Conference. Eleventh Interscholastic Track Will Be Represented by Thirty Teams One hundred and thirty-one high school track man have entered in the eleventh annual inter-scholastic meet on McCook field, Saturday. These runners represent thirty Kansas high schools. Many of the contestants will arrive in Lawrence, Friday to see the Kansas-Nebraska meet in the afternoon. The big meet will start at 1:30 o'clock. Manager Hamilton today received a dozenoven cups to sauces for the contestants, hundred and fifty-six gold, silver and bronze medals are on exhibition in the trophy room. These medals will be given to the individual winners of the various events. Every contestant will wear a small button which will admit him to the Kansas-Nebraska meet and the inter-scholastic meet. The following are the schools and the number of men entered in the meet Waterville; 2; Catholic high school (Kansas City), 8; Neodesha, 5; Chase County, 8; Axtell, 1; Carbondale, 3; Attica, 3; St. John, 1; Lawrence, 11; Peabody, 3; Maple Hill, 4; Baldwin, 2; Bonner Springs, 6; Tangonike, 9; Pratt County, 4; Marisa, 1; Meridan, 3; Wichita, 1; Burlingame, 3; Perry, 7; LaHarp, 1; Oksaakoa, 2; Cimarron, 2; Paola, 1; Winchester, 1; Kansas City, Kansas, 12; Alta Vista, 14 and Eskridge, 2. Notes of the Game Notes of the Game Sommer and Sproull knocked the ball on the right field fence for two base blows. Both hits cleared the bleachers. Briney, the Aggie third baseman, accepted six chances without an error. DeLongy was kept busy on second. He accepted nine chances without a mistake. In the seventh, Knaus sent his team to win, but in the second baseman juggled the ball be- GILDS OLUS Shirt Suits What's the use of shirt tail? $1.50 up OLUS has made drawers out of theirs—Made in all plain and fancy patterns.—We retail them at Johnson & Carl ween his feet. He recovered in time to catch Enns at the plate and saved himself from an error. DeLongy rot three hits out of five attempts. Bishop knocked the ball to the right fence in the fourth. The entire Aggie outfield lined up to relay the ball in. McClyman, the Farmers's right fielder, didn't see the throw in and the ball hit him in the ear. Bishop went home without opposition. TEXT ONLY Fancy Tailored Suits One-Third Off Earlier Prices. THIS SEASON'S LATEST AND CLEVEREST MODELS THIS SEASON'S LATEST AND CLEVEREST MODELS HANDSOME WOOL MATERIALS SILK MOIRES AND POPLINS THE WANTED SPRING SHADES SIZES FROM 14 TO 40 SALE OPENS WEDNESDAY DANCING DRESSES FOR THE SOPHOMORE PARTY— SPECIALLY PRICED—ONLY ONE OF A KIND. DAINTY DRESSES OF THE NEW DRESS COTTONS, CREPES, VOILES, BATISTE AND LINGERIE, $6.00 TO $12.00 —SUITABLE FOR PARTY WEAR. Innes; Bulline & Hackman COMING TO THE HOP? Pay Fees at Check Stand in Fraser --- STATE HISTORICAL SOCIETY UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN VOLUME XI. PAINTER'S HOME RUN WINS GAME FOR K.U. Hit to Club House Brings i Three Tallies; Score 5 to 3 NUMBER 143. SMEE ALLOWS FOUR HITS Kansas Pitcher in Great Form; Aggies Rally in Ninth and Bring in Two Runs Chuck Painter's home run to the club house with two men on bases gave Kansas a victory over the Agave at field, yesterday afternoon 5 to 1. The game was a pitching bout between Smee and Hodgson and the Wakeken twirler came out ahead, but they both four singles to the Jawhaker's seven. The Kansans took advantage of the Farmers' errors, and timely hits by Sproull and Painter assured the game for K. U. Hodgson was steady but he had ragged support behind him. Errors Started Scoring The show started in the second when DeLongy made first on Brineye's error. Painter laid one down and DeLongy went to the second gallery, Chimney grounded DeLongy to the third row and the curtain went up when Brineye missed Van der Vries' hopper and DeLongy came home. Aggies Score in Sixth Shortstop McClymonds generously allowed DeLongy to reach first when he bobbled a ground ball in the sixth. Painted singled, filling the first two bags. DeLongy was out on a feller's choice and Chinney was safe at first. Sproll poked the ball to the bleachers and Painter trothed home. In the Aggie half of the six, a lonesome tally was scored. Painter played with Brodlee's grounder and Agnew laid one down, advancing Brodlee. On Ems' ground, Brodlee was caught off second and the Aggie was safe on third. He scored on Briney's fly to right. Painter advanced to the center of the stage in the seventh. Wandel hit to McClymonds who heaved the ball over first. He went to third on a fielder's choice. DeLongy walked, and stole second without opposition. Painter hit to the clubhouse and three runs were scored. Farmers Rallied The Farmers started a rally in the last session. Van der Vries was late with Enn's grounder. Brinly singled to left. Knaus was hit in the back, filling the sacks. Scanlon fanned. Enns was caught at the plate when Meldrew grounded. Meldrew grounded and singled through Sproull, scoring Brinley and Knaus. Sproull caught Hodgson's foul and ended the agony. UNIVERSITY OF KANSASWEDNESDAY AFTERNOON, APRIL, 29, 1914. Agries AB R H PO A Brodle, lf. 4 1 1 1 0 Agnew, 2b. 3 0 0 0 4 Enns, cf. 4 1 1 2 0 Briney, 1b. 2 1 1 2 1 Knaus, 1b. 3 1 0 1 2 Seamlon, c. 3 4 0 6 0 McDermott, f. 4 0 0 0 0 McClymonds, ss. 3 0 0 1 2 Hodgson, p. 4 0 0 0 6 *McGalland 1 0 1 0 0 Total 32 3.4 4 24 13 *Batted for McClymonds in ninth. Kansas AB R H PO A B Sommers, c. 5 0 0 9 0 1 Wandel, cf. 4 1 1 2 0 0 Smee, p. 4 1 1 1 5 DeLongy, 2b. 3 2 0 0 2 0 Painter, 3b. 3 2 2 1 0 Chinney, rf. 4 0 1 1 1 0 Van der Vries, ss. 3 0 0 3 1 Sproull, 1b. 3 0 1 9 0 0 Bishop, if. 4 0 1 1 0 Total 32 5 7 27 11 Score by innings: H. R. E. Angers 01 001 001 002- 6 - 7 Kansas 001 001 001 003- 6 - 7 Summary: Home run, Painter; three base hit, Bishop; two base hit, Sprowl. Stolen base, Delongy. Hit by pitched ball, Sproll by Hodgson; Briney and Knaus, by Smee. Base on balls, off Hodgson. Boot on left base, Out of left. basees, Aggies 6; Kansas 7. First base on errors, Aggies 2; Kansas 5. Sacrifice hit, Painter, Van der Vries, Briney. Umpire Wedell. Build New Walk A sidewalk is being put in on the north side of the campus from Oread Avenue to Mississippi street. The hill is being graded so that it will be a gradual slope from the top to the bottom. DEAN SAYS K. U. NEEDS WOMEN'S DORMITORIES Head of the Graduate School Thinks University Should Provide for Quarters WOULD ATTRACT STUDENTS Professor Blackmar Advocates New Move, Basing Arguments on Belleville Survey—Outlines a Plan If the University had dormitories for women, it would draw 150 women here every year who now go to schools which maintain supervised homes for their students, thinks Prof. F. W. Blackmar, head of the department of sociology and Dean of the Graduate School. Professor Blackmar was prompted to make this statement because of the facts which developed in the 16ent social survey of Belleville. It was found, by actual count, that only 27 per cent of the girls who went away to school came to the University of Kansas. In the case of the boyfriend per cent of the girls, the difference, according to Professor Blackmar's explanation, is probably due to the fact that parents, knowing that the University maintains no dormitories for its women students, prefer to send their daughters to schools which provide quarters for them. "While the figures from the Belleville survey cannot be taken as actual conditions throughout the state, they are, to a certain extent, typical," said Professor Blackmar. "Such a discrepancy from the percentage of women students which should come to the University can only be explained by the feeling of parents that the University does not take care of its students as well as denominational and private schools. "Of course the feeling is unfounded. Often dormitories have all the disadvantages that private rooming houses have here in Lawrence. But the fact remains that dormitories can be closely regulated as to hours of study and social life. Students who live in confidence in parent which the private rooming houses fails to do. For this reason, I think that the University should by (Continued on page 4) WOMEN OF UNIVERSITY MUST LEARN TO SWIM Will Not Receive Degrees Until They Acquire Marked Efficiency in Natatorial Art All formal work for women is over in the gymnasium. Those who already know how to swim, are playing baseball, but a majority are laboring ahead that they may swim the required number of times no longer have to seek the shortest home with uncomfortable damp locks. While it is not necessary to be able to swim in order to get gym credit, it is necessary for a swimming credit, and the authorities have made it practically necessary for students to obtain a credit in order to graduate from the University. A complete archery equipment has been sent for, and if it arrives in time the girls will probably take up the ancient sport. This is something new for K. U. girls, and the instructors of physical education are hoping they will take it up with interest. Junior and senior girls who wish to swim are invited to come to the pool Tuesdays and Thursdays at 4:30, for advanced swimming. This provision is made in accordance with a decondition in swimming as well as all college women who wish to swim. Mondays and Wednesdays are reserved for beginners. As far as other sports are concerned, nothing definite is being done, but some of the girls are practicing and teams may be chosen later. The girls are given credit for this work. No credit is given for tennis. Dean Sayre writes in *Coffee* "Potent Principles of Coffee" is the title of an article in the May number of *The Journal of Drug Rescue*, L. E. Sayre, of the School of Pharmacy of the University of Kansas. The essay deals with some of the common beliefs about the effects of coffee and tells of the work that is being done in the laboratory at the University. Dean Sayre Writes of Coffee Alpha Chi Sigma has pledged J. Waite, of Kansas City, Mo. THE RIVER OF THE KINGDOM. Picturesque Potter Lake Will Be Open to Student Swimmers AUDITORS FIND BOOKS IN "VERY BAD SHAPE" Potter lake, which will be opened to student swimmers tomorrow. A spring board and landing platform are being built, and a guard will be provided. James T. Lardner Thinks That too Little System is Followed "The books are in bad shape, very bad," declared James T. Lardner, general purchasing agent of the Board of Administration, "if this one is a sample," and Mr. Lardner held up the first of the students organization accounts which he is auditing today. "But I don't mind," he said. "I'm getting rather used to it. They are a Mr. Lardner arrived from Manhattan today to go over the accounts of the several student organizations he collected his first one when interviewed. "I don't believe I'll get through to day with all of that stack before me," and the auditor pointed to the work on which he had just begun. Mr. Lardner expected to be in Hays tomorrow to go over the books of the student organizations at the Western State Normal. He also audits the books at the Emporia Normal and a Manhattan. "Next year we except to see that a definite system is used. Each organization should have a president, a secretary, and a treasurer, and each one of these officers should have something to do in regard to the handling of the funds. The secretary should draw the money on the treasurer; then the order should be approved by the president. All money should be deposited in a bank and checked out. A receipt should be taken for all money paid out, and a receipt given for all money taken in." The principal trouble, according to Mr. Lardner, is that no system is followed, and not enough receipts are followed. School will be dismissed after 2:30 Thursday afternoon. The Thursday holiday is granted because of the music festival, and the Friday holiday because it is May first. The custom of giving the students a holiday on May first originated several years ago, upon a promise from the stuedents to discontinue the May fight. NO SCHOOL THIS WEEK AFTER 2:30 THURSDAY Prof. Cady Talks at Newton Prof. Hamilton P. Cady lectured at Newton, Kansas, last night on "The Ration of Chemistry to Civilization." Prof. A. M. Sturtevant, of the German department, left this evening (Wednesday) for Des Moines, Iowa, where he goes to attend a meeting of the Scandinavian Society held there Thursday and Friday. The Daily Kansan Board will meet tonight at 7:00 to elect circulation-manager for next year. Important. Ward Hatcher is back in the School of Law after a week spent at Chanute in coaching a high school play. Sturtevant to Iowa. Hatcher is Back Board to Meet Send The Daily Kansan Home TAX COMMISSIONER TO TALK Samuel T. Howe Will Deliver the Last Economics Lecture of Seri- tion Tomorrow ies Tomorrow. The last economics lecture of the year will be given tomorrow by Samuel T. Howe at 4 o'clock in room 201 Administration Building. Mr. Howe is chairman of the state tax commission of Kansas and vice-president of the National Tax Association. Prof. H. A. Mills of the economics department, who is acquainted with economics, is the most efficient of any in the country under equal limitations. EIGHT CANDIDATES OUT FOR ATHLETIC BOARD Laird, Lambert, Craig, Joseph, Sproull, Burton, Reber and DeLongy Seek Office The election is tomorrow in the basement of Green Hall. Polls open at 9 and close at 3:30, with an intermission at noon. Holders of athletic tickets and K men are eligible to vote. The time for handing in athletics board petitions closed last night at six o'clock, with eight candidates in the field for the 5 positions, four for the two non-athletic places, and four for the three athletic positions. The candidates are: non-athletic Landon Laird, Cal Lambert, Don Joseph, and Hank Craig; athletic Bonny Rober, and Harold Delongy. Election judges are: W. E. Brown Flannahia, Phil Miller, and Harlan Hutchinson. Y.M. TO BE HOST OF FACULTY Association Plans Innovation Saturday Night in Myers Hall A faculty stag will be given Saturday night at 8:15 at Myers Hall with the Y. M. C. A. and Advisory board as hosts. Invitations have been made to the men of the faculty it is thought a larger number will be present. Special features of the evening will be pat on by Jimmy Butin, basketball and by the Y. M. C. A. quartet. There will be a boxing bout or two and numerous games and stunts. A number of student stags have in that the faculty will be entered driven, but this is an innovation tained. Would be Mining Engineer Wallace E. Pratt, '09, now engaged in government geological and mining work in the Philippine Islands, has made application for the degree of Mining Engineer. Mr. Pratt's thesis has been received by the department of mining engineering. It is printed and bound, and copiously illustrated with charts and tables. His application has been indorsed by Alvin J. Cox, Director of the Bureau of Science of the Insular Government. Buy it in Lawrence. BAKER AND BORROFF IN CONCERT TONIGHT Contralto and Bass Soloists to Give Joint Recital In G v m The second concert of the Eleventh Annual Music Festival at the University will be held tonight in Robinson Gymnasium, when Elsie Baker, contralto, and Albert Boreoff, bass, will give a joint song recital. Miss Harriet Mossinger, instructor in piano in School, Scholars, Arts, will accompany Mr. Borroff. Mr. Borroff and Miss Baker are solists of the finest order. Miss Baker's voice has a wonderfully pleasing quality, and her technique in the lower registers is said to be marvellous. Her rendition of "A Perfect Day," has been said by those who have heard it, to be an experience impossible for others of the song, has complimented Miss Baker very highly on her method of handling the song. The third course of the festival will be held tomorrow afternoon at 2:30 o'clock. The full St. Paul Symphony orchestra will play, assisted by Anna Sweeney, pianist, Edmund Foersteel, violinist, and Frederick Wheeler, baritone solist. Miss Sweeney is instructor in piano in the School of Fine Arts. This will be her first appearance with orchestra. She is an artist in the department to appear at the festivals, the others being Prof. C. A. Preyer, Miss Harriet Greissinger, Mrs. A. J. Anderson. William Dalton, of Lawrence, will write "violence obligato, written for this" in *Bobcats*. Mr. Borroff is a Russian singer. His voice has a resonant timbre, and is unusually clear in his deeper tones. He selects lighter numbers for his voice, which helps the amazing facility and adaptability of his voice in expressing emotions. Frederick Wheeler, bartonite, sang here two years ago in the city Lyceum course, and is well remembered by many Lawrence people. TWO JUDGES NAMED FOR HIGH SCHOOL DEBATE Two of the judges for the high school championship debate Friday night have been obtained. They are Prof. C. O. Harty, of Ottawa University, and Prof. A. M. Hyde, of Washburn College. Professor Hardy is both from Ottawa, and Professor Hyde is in the department of history at Washburn. The third judge will probably be secured in Lawrence. An effort will be made to obtain Judge Means, of the juvenile court. Club to Serve Refreshments Tonight and tomorrow night the University Club will serve refreshments after the Music Festival for the members and their wives and guests. The innovation was decided upon at the last meeting of the Board of Governors. Friday, May 1, will be Ladies' Night at the club. Will Elect Representatives the mechanical engineering representatives for the 1914-15 Governing Board of Associated Engineering Societies will be elected at the regular meeting of the Mechanical Engineering Society. May 7. KANSAS WINS DEBATE FROM ANCIENT ENEMY Smith and Wilson for K. U. Gain Victory, 2 to 1 2 to 1 AGREE ON THE RESTRICTION But Kansas Contends That Literacy Test Would Not Gain End—Proposes Another Plan Kansas won the debate with Missouri by a vote of two to one last night when the two teams met in Iowa to argue the immigration question. Both sides agreed that immigration into the United States should be further restricted. Missouri, on the affirmative side of the question, contended that requiring the "ability to read ordinary prose in at least one word" was not enough means of selecting immigrants and of reducing their number. Kansas argued that this was not an efficient standard for judging the desirability of foreigners, and that this restriction would not reduce their number. As better restrictive measures Kansas proposed more stringent physical tests and that a limitation be placed on the number of immigrants allowed to enter in one year from any country to one-tenth of the number of that nationality in the United States at the last census. White, WH, and Harry Smith, delivered well. The Missouri men handled their points ably and put up a good case for the affirmative. Both of the men, G.V. Head, and E.K. Lutes, demanded K.U.'s best efforts. Several telling points were made in the rebuttal speeches on each side. At the banquet held after the debate Judge John G. Park, J. Christy Wilson, E. K. Lutes and Prof. H. T. Hill made speeches. STUDENT COUNCIL ELECTION PROMISES TO BE VERY WARM New Candidates Blossom Daily—Vie Bottomly and Cale Carson Out for President The Student Council election May 7, promises to furnish one of the hottest fights in the history of hill politics. A new candidate blossoms forth nearly every day. One of the chief diversions in the classes of prosy professors now is signing petitions for student council candidates. The additional fact that the Council has been in the limelight recently in response to the national cause causes the elections to take on an unusual interest. The election lacks the usual features of barb and frat tickets. Both candidates for the presidency, Victor Bottomly and Cale Carson, are fraternity men. The other candidates from the different schools are a fair mixture of the barb and frat factions. Russell Gear and frat factions are secretary-treasured. candidates from the College for membership are: Walter Rockwell, Alexander Creighton, Samuel Ferguson, Sam Johnson, Edward E. Bennett, Austin Bailey, E. M. Johnson, From the School of Law: James Maryton John C. Greenstream, T. J. Harley. The Engineers are: Dean Ackers, W. E. Brown. Medics: Vic LaMer, H. R. Boon, Arthur Stacey, junior engineer, is a candidate for the Men's Student Council. Bill Brown and McKinley Warren are candidates for the vice-presidency. ENGINEERING SOCIETIES STUDY POPULAR SPHEROID The various engineering societies are wiping their baseball teams in shape in preparation for the games to be played next Tuesday. Engineers' Day. The Civil Engineers' practice held today at 4:30 on the fresh field. The mechanical engineers will hold a tryout for their team Saturday morning at 10 o'clock on the freshman field. To Talk on Posters A talk on "Posters" has been added to the program of Merchants' Week. It will be a five minute talk by H. C. Weatherby of the Weatherbys and John逊ion Glenn Mo., and will be given on Advertising Day, Tuesday, May 4. Pinafore Practice Tonight. "Pinafore" practice will be held tonight! Will be 10:30. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Official students paper of the University of Kansas EDITORIAL STAFF TOWNSHIP NATIONAL SCHOOL JOHN C. MADDER JOHN L. HAPPS JOHN GOMMERMAN JOHN GOMMERMAN High School Editor CALVIN LAMBERT. Sport Editor BUSINESS STAFF REPORTOR BUSINESS EWEN ARLAND Business Manager RY BATTERING Circulation Manager JOB BENSON Advertising Manager CAR ST. UREVANN Advertising SCHR. N. STUEVART RIAL SHOW HADGER BABER W. W. PERGONSON W. W. PERGONSON UISCYNER UISCYNER CHARLAR'S SWEET WILLIAM S. CADDY JOHN B. HAYES LANDON LAIRD **SAM DREUEN** **ALAN GLOVER** **GLENDON ALLYE** **GRABEL** **GARDNER** **HARBORBARK** **LUCLE HILDRIN$^2$ **LAWRENCE SMITH** **LAWRENCE SMITH** **HAUVEN HAYN* Entered as second-class mail matter Lawrence, Kansas, under the act of March Published in the afternoon. Five times a week, by students of the University of Kansas, from the press of the department of Journalism. Subscription price $2.50 per year, in advance; nom. term, 18mo. Phone, Bell K. U. 25. Address all communications to UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN. Lawrence, Kans. The Daily Kansan aims to picture the students of Kansas to go further than merely printing the news by standing up for their interests; to be clean; to be cheerful; to be more serious problems in urban heads; to solve more serious problems in urban heads; to fulfill the students of the University. WEDNESDAY, APRIL 29, 1914. Great souls by instinct to each other turn, Demand alliance, and in friendship burn—Addison. REALIZATION? The senior memorial committee has a man-sized job before it. Collecting the memorial fund, selecting the site for the seat, letting a contract for the work and presenting the memorial to the class by the week of graduation—accomplishment of this sort requires WORK in great big capital letters. The seniors last year went far enough to erect stands in which to pour the concrete for a memorial arch—then they backed up and paid the annual debt. The class this year has no Jayhawker deficit so it merely has to hurry—and class memorials at the University have become a reality. And after all, the committee can merely direct and lead. The class itself must lend concerted support—and when two meetings were held without a word spoken against the idea, there is little doubt but that the class will get in the game with commendable energy. HOME TALENT ART With the fragrant lilac hedge perfumery and the freshly garbed Wakarusa Valley as assisting artists, and with a possibility of securing a blazing Kansas sunset in a solo part supported by exquisite May weather, the first open air band concert on the campus Friday evening is an assured success. A WARNING AND A PLEA Lessons will be poorly prepared tomorrow and the professors should think twice before frowning, or marking down big black zeros. The second concert of the music festival comes tonight in Robinson Gymnasium and judging from the size of the crowd which heard Alice Nielsen some time ago, a large percentage of students will attend. Then consider carefully. Mr. Faculty Man, consider the tired, overworked, downtrodden undergraduate who does not allow his love for good music to be affected even by his affection for your most interesting course! THE HOP The sophomore hop, second only in importance to the Junior Promenade as an all-University event, will be more than usually enjoyable this year if advance news concerning the farce and other details is reliable. Every classman should not forget that the event comes THIS week and that tickets may be obtained at the Fraser check stand. LILACS AND TREES ILLACS AND TREES At this time of year the lovelies thing on our justly famed campus unquestionably the illac hedge eas of Fraser Hall. Whether it is be cause we cannot remember from on spring to the next how beautiful th illacs are, or whether they have really surpassed themselves thi year, they seem to be unusually pro fuse, richly colored and ' sweet scented. Even at a considerable distance the eye is attracted by the purple plumes, hundreds upon hundreds of them, and the closer one comes, the more impelling is the attraction. To look at them is a feast for the soul as well as for the eyes; but it isn't necessary to look at them to derive an exquisite pleasure from their nearness. Every breeze that blows across the green is laten with the most delightful, delicately penetrating odor ever exhaled by any flower. It is like a breath of Spring incarnate. Thirty-six years ago these lilacs were set out-blessings on the man who did it—and for most of those years they have been a source of rare enjoyment to thousands of people. But even illiac bushes had to have a small unpretentious beginning, and to be fostered through a period of slow growth. What is true of illiac bushes is even more true of trees, and final development into beauty is as certain in the one case as in the other. And so, while few of us will enjoy a cool shady walk out to Marvin Hall, and while we are a little prone to make fun of those lines of feeble little trees, future generations will reap the benefit and will bless the planter of those trees just as we bless the saint who is responsible for our lilacs. Extracts From K. U. Congressional Record The Senate met at 4:30 o'clock n m The Journal of the proceedings of the last meeting was read and ap- THE VICE PRESIDENT resumed the chair. Senator BLACKMAR. I present a letter from the secretary of the Men's Student Council. He heaps to report that on Wednesday, April 22, 1968, the men's basketball ball game with a team chosen from the members of the Kannan Board. Senator FOSTER. I should like to inquire of the Senator from the Department of Sociology if the board harrow to hit the bal. (Laugher). Senator BLACKMAR. No, it seems that the board was too bored with boarding house board to do elaborate. (Continued laughter in the galleries.) THE VICE PRESIDENT. The Sergent-at-Arms will preserve order in the galleries. This is the second notice, and the chair instructs the Sergent-at-Arms to see that it is obeyed or to clear the galleries. Senator MITCHELL. Moreover, if I am not mistaken, the game was played immediately after the issuance of the yellow Kanan, which was pink. Little wonder that after getting out a sheet like that the near-journalists were unable to play ball with such a way connected with such a publication. I am sure I should be suffering from yellow arundice. THE VICE PRESIDENT. Gentlemen, we seem to be getting hopelessly mixed up in questions for the medical committee, and this is no objection the entire matter will be referred to the Committee on Conciliation and Arbitration. judgment. Senator NAISMITH. Perhaps scarlet rash would be a more nearly correct diagnosis of the case. ENDS AND ODDLETS A Frosh from K. U. u. spying Flora, Purred: "Girlie you're cute, I adore There was a young man from Eudora Who sported a lady named Flora. B'GORRA! Now come go with me Up to the Patee And just suck about. But be'ner spend a jitney or more-ah. Up to the Turtle And then we'll take in the Aurora." This angered the youth from Eudora, So he biffed the young Freshieorora. When they looked for the pieces He'd bring her to town And just stick aroun' WANTS PERMANENT QUARTERS To the Editor of the Daily Kansan: I wish to protest against the continued appropriation by various organizations of the rooms belonging to debating societies of the University. CAMPUS OPINION There were two spots of greesas and a neat little note: "Lim Erick." In the face of unheard of apathy on the part of the University-at-large, the two debating clubs have struggled on, only to find that from time to time their rooms are not appalled at the slightest claim to the rooms in question on that particular evening. The time has now come when debating must assume its proper importance as an activity, and this direction is the setting apart of permanent quarters for the debating societies. Casey At The Bar Reprinted by request. It looked extremely rocky for the Boston nine that day; and he went on to four, with but an innning left to play. So when Coney died at second, and Burrows did the same, a pallor wreathed the features of the A straggling few got up to go, leaving there the rest. ne rest, with that hope that springs eternal, within W that with him that springs cernail, within for they thought. "If only Cusa would For they thought, "If only Casey could not get a whack, at that." 'hey'd put up an money now, with Casey at the bat. But Flynn preceded Casey, and likewise so did Blake. But Flynn let drive a "single," to the worderment of all, And anirr a pudum, and the latter a take on that stricken death a死犁 slurred war. For the reason but little chance of Cazen's getting to the bat. wonderment of all, And the much-designed Blakey "toe the teeth." And the much-despired Blakey "tore the cover of the door. And when the duck had lifted and they fell into the water, she powered. cover off the ball." And when the dust had lifted and they There was Blakey safe at second, and Flynn a-huggin' third. Then from the gladdened multitude went to a living wall. For Casey, might Casey, was advancing to the bat! There was case in Casey's manner, as he stepped into his place; There was pride in Casey's bearing and a smile on Casey's face. The cheerers cheered. smile on Casey's face; And when responding to the cheers he will No stranger in the crowd could doubt 'tweas Cosy at the bat. Ten thousand eyes were on him as he rubbed his hands with a drizzle when he fell. wiped them on his shirt. Then, when the writhing pitcher ground the Then, when the writting pitcher ground the ball into his hip, Defiance glanced in Casey's eyes, a sneer curled Casey's lip. And now the leather covered sphere came hurling through the air, gradeur there, Close by the sturdy batsman the ball And Casey stood a-watchin' it in haughty grandeur there. PROFILE "That ain't my one," said Casey. "Strike one," the umpire said. From the benches black with people, there were an umpired roar. And its likely they'd have killed him had not Casey raised his hand. With a smile of Christian charity great Casa's visage shone. more the stern and distant shore. "Kill him, kill the mum!" shouted Like the beating of storm waves on the stem and distant shore. But Casey still ignored it, and the umpire said, "Strike two." game go on; He signaled to the pitcher, and once more "Fraud!" cried the muddish thousands, But an awful look from Casey, and a wonderful look from Casey, and the audience was awed; they saw his face grow stern and cold, And now the air is shattered by the force of Casey's blow. They saw his face with, they saw his muscles strain, And they knew that Casey wouldn't let the ball go by again. upon the plate; And now the pitcher holds the ball, and But one sceciful look from Casey, and the audience was awed; Scarf slide space and lock front The sneer is gone from Cases's tip, his teeth are clenched in hate. Oh, somewhere in this favored land the sun is skimming bright. teeth are clenched in hate. He pounds with cruel venomance his bat The band is playing somewhere, and some-where hearts are light. where hearts are light, And somewhere men are toughing, and Lion Collars Outdoor Brand in America UNITED SHIRT & COLLAR CO. TROY N.Y. But there is no joy in Boston—mighty Cause has struck out. "Bob got sore last night and kicked the piano." "No. he hit the soft pedal."—Harrard Lampoon. Tough-I I say, Old Top, could you tell me the time? A GOOD PLACE TO EAT AT ANDERSON'S OLD STAND JOHNSON & TUTTLE 715 PROPS. Mass. Jones--Nothing doing. Another Johnson--Nothing doing. Our New York Globe. Printing A. G. ALRICH Binding, Copper Plate Printing, Bubber Stamps, Engraving, Steel Die Embossing, Seals, Badges. 744 Mass. Wrestling Match Catch-as-catch-can New Vaudeville Theatre WEDNESDAY NIGHT, APRIL 29 PROF. WESTMAN, HERMAN STROH. Physical Culture Instructor at Wasburn College vs. HERMAN, STROH Champion of Lawrence Two Falls Out of 3—To a Finish. DON'T MISS IT DON'T MISS IT. Good Preliminaries rices 35c and 50c Ringside Seats 75c There Will Be No Show Monday Or Tuesday At This Theatre Music Festival This Week Second Concert Wednesday, April 29, 8:15 p. m. ELSIE BAKER, Contralto ALBERT BORROFT, Bass Third Concert Thursday, April 30. 2:30 p.m. THE ST. PAUL SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA Walter Rothwell, Conductor Frederick Wheeler, Baritone Edmund Foerstel, Violinist Anna Sweeney, Pianist Fourth Concert Thursday, April 30, 8:15 p. m. THE ST. PAUL SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA Student course tickets, $1.59—Registrar's Single admission, $1 & 75c—Woodward's Walter Rothwell, Conductor Elizabeth Rothwell-Wolf, Soprano Albert Lindquest, Tenor Paul Morgan, Violonellist Bert Wadham THE COLLEGE BARBER On 14th Street BASE BALL GOODS The Sporting Goods Headquarters KENNEDY & ERNST 26 Mass. St. Phones 34 R. E. Protsch TAILOR Drugs, chemicals, toilet articles. Kodaks & supplies, and in fact a full stock of everything found in a first class drug store. Raymond's 819 Mass. Everything New Even Professors Subscribe for the Daily Kansan If for no other reason They read it in order to be able to Knock Intelligently UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN ANNOUNCEMENTS All junior and senior women who wish to swim are invited to come to the pool Tuesday and Thursday at 4:30 for advanced swimming. Monday and Wednesday 4:30 for beginners in swimming. This is to accommodate those who were conditioned in swimming, also all College women who care to learn to swim. Dr. Margaret L. Johnson. M Company Guardsmens ushering at the music festival this week, will report at the Gymnasium at 7 Wednesday evening, at 1:30 Thursday matinee, and 7:15 Thursday evening. —Sergeant Bennett. WANT ADS FOR RENT - Modern twelve room, fraternity. Bell 1838. 183-8 LOST—A black bill-book, containing five dollars in bills and several papers. Call B. 1019. Reward. STANDISH ARROW COLLAR 2 for 25¢ Cluett Psabody & Co. Inc. Makers You Can Earn a Good Living and lay up some money you won't expenditure four months. You can Enroll at College. Enrol at once get ready and you'll secure a good position Free Employment Bureau at your service Business College. Best and best Business College. No vacations. LAWRENCE Business College Lawrence, Kansas. WATKINS NATIONAL BANK Capital $100,000 Surplus and profits $100,000 The Student Depository CITY CAFE 906 Mass. Strictly Home Cooking Ever try our Special 15c Lunch? You'll like it. W. G. MCOONNELLY, Physician and Director of the Cities program, Honors 9349, Residence, 1344 Temp. 8606, Residence, 1344 Temp. 8606. PROFESSIONAL CARDS McCOLLACH'S Drug Store. 847 Mass. Street. THE REXALL STORE. J. F. BROCK, Optometrist and Specialist BROOK, Office 802 Mass. Phone bells 600-735. BARRY REDING. M. D. Eye. ear, noses. CABINET 513. Phone: 811. Home 612. Phone: 811. Home 612. DR. H, W. HAYNE, Oculat, Lawrence, Kansas. G. A. HAMMAN M. D. E. Eye, arn B. A. HAMMAN G. D. Eye, arn D. B. HAMMAN G. D. Eye, arn Satisfaction Guaranteed . Dick建筑. Battleship. J. W. O'BRYON. Dentist. Over Wilson's Drug Store. Belfast Phone 507. J. R. BECHTEHL, M. D. D. O. 833 Mass- Street. Both phones, office and address. W. G. JONES, A. M. M. D. D., Dissleege of Bruce Rite, A. B. Alden, Reedance, 1201. M. C. DR. H. T. JONES, Room 12 F. A. A. Bldg. Residence 1300 Tenn. Phones 211 DR. H. L. CHAMBERS Office over Home Studio. Phone phonies D. BURT R. WHITE Osteopath. Phones: Bell 933, Home 257, Office, 745 Mass. St. Ed. W. Parsons, Engraver, Watchmaker and Jeweller and Jewelry, Bell Phone 7-11. Mass. S. T. GILLIPSIE, M. D. O'Brien office Warren St., Residence 728 Phone: 504-341-6900 CLASSIFIED Plumbers Ladies Tailors Phone Kennedy Plumbing $ \mathrm{C}_{2} $ for 397 Mass phone 655. Mazda lamps . 987 Mass phone 655. MRS MELLISON, Dressmaking and Ladies Varmont, Phone Boll 2411 West. Varmont, Phone Boll 2411 West. hairdressing, shampooing, scalp and facial massage, shampooing, hair-gifts. Makeup appointments call Ball 1372. Home: 81. The Salon Hold Dressings Shop, 927 Mass St. Hair Dressers Queen's City College. System and sewing machines, Mrs. G Mark Brown, 834 KY, Boll Mrs. G Mark Brown, 834 KY, Boll K. U. STUDENT WRITES ABOUT KANSAS POETRY Barber Shops Go where they all go J. C. HOUK 013 Moses Student's Co-op Club. $2.50 to $3.00 per 14kay 8M. Geo. H. Vanslair Seward. In Work for Master's Degree in English Lelia Swarts is Studying State Bards "Oh dewy was that morning, upon the foot of May." And Dewey was the admiral, down in Manila Bay and dewy were the regent's eyes, them orbs of royal blue, And dewy feel discouraged? I dew not think we dew!" Whether or not this is the most widely circulated bit of verse ever produced in Kansas by a Kansan is a moot question, and Miss Lelia M. Swarts, of Winfield, who is writing her graduating thesis for a master's degree in the University of Kansas, on Kansas poetry, over this matter. But Miss Swarts is going to write a treatise on Kansas poetry. "Eugene Ware was a lawyer. William H. Carruth was a University professor. Ellen Allerton was a farmer's wife. William Allen White and Albert Bigelow Paine are newspaper men, and he lives in the hearts of the poets of Kansas appeared. Kansas is not the home of the professional poet." "The most striking feature about this study is the diversity and variety of professions or trades from whose perspective I saw the realities of the state," said Miss Swarts today. By investigation in the University library and in the library of the state historical society at Topeka, Miss Swarts has found about fifty volumes of collections of Kansas verse, more than it is possible for her to read in the time she has to write her thesis. "The first Kansas poem on record, is a heroic poem called Kansas, which I have found record of but no copy. It was written in 1855." Miss Swarts described the poem as "Oseos, the Spectre Chieftain," by Evenden Kemery. It deals with primitive life in Western territory, to the extent of 220 pages. "And all through the years the romantic history of Kansas has inspired poets to work. Kansana have almost universally been poets. Kansana are known for our authors, authors than anyone in the state who has not studied the matter can imagine. "And there are a great number of poets whose work is hard to classify. Kemp, Wattles, Mason, Canfield, Harger, Miss Clark, all are entitled to attention, but relatively just how much it is hard for a contemporary historian to say. Perhaps that is one of their Kansas qualities." muss Swarts is a graduate from soutwestern University at Winfield Shelf. U. of Illinois. U. of schoola. POTTER LAKE TO OPEN TO BATHERS TOMORROW Potter lake will be opened to baths urs from 4:00 till 5:30 tomorrow afternoon. A platform is now being made at the lake for the accommodation of bathers, and when this is completed the official opening will take place. The lake will be opened to bathers from 4:00 till 5:30 on all school days. As yet no provision has been made for Saturdays, but before long arrangements will be completed for hours on that day also. SOPHOMORES MAY PAY THEIR DUES FRIDAY Sophomores may pay their hop dues any time Friday at the check stand in Fraser. The managers will try to keep some one at the stand all day to accommodate those who could not get around before. Members of the faculty who intend to be present should turn in their names. Seniors should turn in dates tomorrow. Only 75 tickets had been sold up to this noon, but the managers expect at least 250 to be the managers. To make the affair a financial success 200 must pay dues. K. U. Calendar Wednesday. 7:30 Band practice, (Fra.) 8:15 Second Concert, Spring Music Festival, Robinson Gym. 11:00 Entomological Club. (Mu.) 2:30 Third Concert, Music Festival, St. Paul Symphony Orchestra (Baltimore, Baltimore) Thursday 4:00 Economics Lecture. Mr. Samuel T. Howe, Chairman State Tax Commission, "The State Tax Commission and Tax Re-cession." 7:30 Civil Engineering Society (Marvin.) 7:00 Amer. Soc. Mech. Eng. (1301 Ohio) 8:15 Fourth Concert, Music Festival. St. Paul Symphony Orchestra. (Robinson Gym.) 1300 K. U, N. U, dual track meet (Mackey) 1305 11:00 Assembly. 3:00 Seventh Interscholastic tennis attack. (McCall) 7:30 Interscholastic H. S. Debating League. League. Saturday. Seventh Interscholastic tennis tournament, (McCook.) Eleventh annual interschol- atic track meet. (McCook.) 8:15 Faculty stag, Y. M. C. A. (Mercy Hall.) stay 6-7—Baseball, Missouri at Law- Athletics May 8- S.-K. S.A.C. K.-U. dual track meet at Manhattan May 14-15-Baseball, Missouri at Columbia. May 16—M. U.-K. U. dual track meet at Columbia Columbia May 21-22—Baseball, Ames at Ames Iowa May 23—Annual invitation H. S. meet at Lawrence. May 27-28-Baseball, K. S. A. C. at Manhattan. May 29—Baseball, St. Marys at St. St. Marys. May 30—Missouri Valley track meet at St. Louis June 6—Western Conference track meet at Chicago. Future Events May 5-7 Merchants' Week May 14—May 14 Kansas Newspaper Week State and National Newspaper Conference. Remember the Candies at Wilson's Drug Store are kept in a large refrigerate case. Always fresh and the best makes.-Adv. 138-5 Next: Wad. Hodge in "THE ROAD TO HAPPINESS" Sam S. Shubert MAT. WEDNESDAY & SATURDAY PEG O' MY HEART K.U. RESEARCH MAY BREAK POTASH TRUST Student Plays Student Dances Student Mixers PAY When they are advertised in the Daily Kansan. 3,000 Students Faculty and Alumni read it every day. Investigators Are Looking for Valuable Fertilizers in Kansas Salt Mines To save the American farmer from the oppression of the German potash monopoly, which is gradually raising the price of potassium fertilizer, and to build up a great industry in Kansas, by the development of the University of Kansas is investigating the salt mines of the state with a view to discovering workable deposits of the valuable potassium salts. Samples of rock salt from all the mines of the state, as well as salt water from deep wells is being analyzed in the field by E. E. Lyder, fellow in industrial chemistry, under the direction of Prof. W. A. Whitaker. Although no valuable finds have as yet been made, Mr. Lyder is continuing his investigations in the hope of making a discovery that will mean more to the American farmer than an increase of hay or fruit heftility. Germany exports to the United States every year about eleven million dollars worth of potash fertilizer, and the quantity as well as the price, is growing yearly. The United States is Germany's greatest market, taking 56 per cent of the Empire's potash exports. In 2013, however, the great agricultural states will greatly augment the demand for potash fertilizer. "The possible existence of potassi beds in the United States is so important," said Professor Whitaker. "that the government has appropriated a large sum of money to build potassi beds in the United States. Recently potash land in the west has been withdrawn from public entry. But the appropriation was not large enough to cover all the country, so only a superficial examination was made in Kansas. This thoroughly." "Kansas has the largest salt field in the United States, and as potash is always mined in connection with salt, it is here we must look for the fertilizer. It would be possible for a workable quantity of potash to be present about the table materials being impaired. For that reason it is necessary to make careful chemical examination of all salt mined in the state. "At its present market price, potash is worth from $30 to $40 a ton. So it is seen that the discovery of even a small quantity of it would be a tremendous thing for the salt mining industry in Kansas, as well as for the farmers of the entire country." Theta Tau Mixes A get-together meeting, to which all the members of the engineering faculty were invited, was given by Theta Tau at its mixer last night. The purpose was to get the faculty back together. Speeches were made by: Dean Walker, and Professors Haworth, Rice, and Raymond. SPRING SUITINGS FRANK KOCH TAILOR 727 Mass. ONEIDA Front 2% In. Back 2 In. Barker Collars are Linen in quarter sizes at PECKHAMS PROFESSOR SCHWEGLER GIVES LAST Y. M. LECTURE Prof. Raymond A. Schwegler gave his last lecture last night before the University Y. M. C. A. in Myers Hall. His subject was the "Attention," of which he lectured on lectures which Professor Schwegler has been giving this spring. His lectures have been very popular among the students, about a hundred and fifty persons attending eac hlecture. K. U. STUDENTS EARN MORE THAN $50,000 476 Men at the University Work Outside, Y. M. Report Shows Registrar Geo. O. Foster has just received from the state printer some pamphlets giving a survey of the student employment for the year 1913-1918 at The University of Kansas a Boy Work His Way Through the University of Kansas?" Statistics for the book were gathered by the University Employment Bureau, which is in the charge of the M. Y. C. M. A. The tables show that 476 men students are working and earning a total of $54,674, or $114.85 for each student. Forty-five girls are earning part of their expenses. Two hundred and forty-five men reported the kind of work they were doing. There were forty different trades, including a mist, a chauffeur, a popcorn machine man, a carpenter, three life insurance agents, four scene shifters, a weakerman, and a telegrapher. There were also five student preachers. Registrar Foster is sending the pamphlets out over the state. Baseball goods and tennis balls at Wilson's Drug Store—Adv. 138-5 If you want something extra for storage at Wilson's Drug Store—Adv. 138-5 NO WASHINGTON WAR ENTHUSIASM----HODDER Professor Says That President Wilson Is Being Criticized But Supported Not much warm enthusiasm is in the air at Washington, according to Prof. F. H. Hodder, head of the department of history at the University, who returned from the national capital yesterday. He admitted the annual session of the American Society of International Peace. "There are two positions taken by public men generally concerning the Mexican situation," said Professor Hodder. "One side thinks the United States should have rules that would be possible for whatever occurred in Mexico; the other believes that this nation should have intervened in Mexico as it did in Cuba, and straightened out things. President Wilson's counsellor, who felt that these two positions, but most democrates are supporting him, publicly, at least. it seems to be the general opinion that the issue of war should not have arisen over a detail of ceremony but that the loss of life and property, the danger to Americans in Mexico, and our desire to better things should have been made the official reason for our intervention. "Things have cleared up a great deal in the past two days, however, and I think that the crisis of the situation has passed." Professor Hodder said that the Society of International Peace discussed the Monroe Doctrine, but came to no definite conclusion on it. The Brazilian ambassador, Antonio Pimenta, President Taft, Charles Francis Adams and Secretary Bryan were speakers at the convention. Drug Students to Travel Seventy-five students of the School of Pharmacy will take an inspection trip of Kansas City a week from next Friday, May 8, under the guidance of Dean L. E. Sayre. They will dine at the Hotel Baltimore and will visit several of the large drug houses during the day, among them being The McPike Drug Co., The Evans-Smith Drug Co., El Lilly Drug Co., and the Parke, Davis Drug Co. Many of the Pharmics will stay over for the next day and go through for the factories in the city. Send the Daily Kansan home. They Lace in Front Gossard Corset Demonstration Miss Anna McGrath the special representative from the Gossard factory will be here Thursday and Friday to demonstrate and fit Gossard Lace Front Corsets. Prices from $2.00 to $12.50. WEAVER'S IRELAND Scene From "The Traffic in Souls" Bowersock Theatre All Next Week-25c UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN 15 We beg to announce that our STRAW HAT OPENING will be Thursday, Friday and Saturday. All the new styles will be artistically displayed throughout the interior of our store. Come, bring your friends and see what's what in Straws for Summer 1914. See our window display of correct clothes See our window display of correct clothes for the Sophomore Hop. Ober's HEAD TO FOOT OUTFITTERS Chi Omega and Kappa Gamma Sororities Support Mrs. Brown in Reform TWO BANISH NEW DANCES Following the Pi Beta Phi and Kappa Kappa Gamma sororities the Chi Omega and Sigma Kappa today announced official action in support of Mrs. Prown's recommendations. The Mu Phi Epsilon was the first organization to place a bar to the new dances, and was closely follow- ing by Kappa Kappa Gamma and Ii Beta Phi. The last two make five sororities that have officially banished the objectionable dances. A few more copies of the famous Yellow Kansan are for sale, 5 cents each. DEAN SAYS K.U. NEEDS WOMEN'S DORMITORIES (Continued from page 1) all means erect dormitories on the campus for women students. We could draw 150 additional women here every year." The dormitories should be conducted as a convenience only according to Professor Blackman's idea. No woman should be required to make a room assignment, but planned to accommodate something like thirty students, if possible, and in no case over a hundred. Buildings would be erected as the demand for them increased, so that the dormitories were built on the same basis. Students could be allowed to room in homes in Lawrence if they so desired, but these homes would be subject to the same regulations as the dormitories and be under University supervision constantly, under suggested by Professor Blackman. The feasibility of a state school conducting dormitories has been demonstrated sufficiently to warrant Kansas adopting the plan, thinks Professor Blackmar, for other states have successfully operated them. POTTERY COLLECTION IS PLACED IN MUSEUM CASE The collection of fragmentary pottery which was recently donated to the University by Dr. R. S. Dinnimore, of Troy, has been placed in a case on the third floor of the museum for the inspection of the public. Civils Will Meet The Civil Engineering Society will meet this evening at 7:15 in Marvin Hall. The following program will be given: Steam Shovel Work in Connection with the Kansas City Terminal, Walter Moore; the Wichita Terminal, S. M. Haag. The meeting will be open to all. Music Festival Tickets Music Festival Tickets Get festival course tickets at the door on Monday for tickets for $1.50. After tonight only single admissions, sold at $1.00 and $7.5. Send the Daily Kansan home. High Schools to Debate for This Cup KANSAS SCHOOL HOCKEY GAMES LEAGUE Burlington and El Dorado will debate for this cup in Fraser Friday night. The debate subject will be minimum wage legislation. COUNCIL WILL PUBLISH UNPAID UNION PLEDGES All Signers Must Pay up to Make Project Successful Says Chairman Kennedy. The Student Council last night voted to publish the names of all signers to Student Union petitiones who have not paid their dues on Out of the 650 signers, about 500 have paid. "We must have the money. We must have the chairs of the Union committee." "It is the salvation of the Union." Send the Daily Kansan home. GRUEN Graduation Gifts of Quality Notes of the Game OTTO A. FISCHER To be closed out at the greatest reductions ever before offered on such high class Footwear. They are not old styles—many new English lasts are here—Blacks, Tans, Nubucks and White Canvass. Broken lines from this season's selling together with styles carried over from last summer. Look in the windows and judge the styles for yourself. Qualities are guaranteed by Sale Opens Friday, May 1st, 8 a.m. him in the ear. Briney stretched out for several minutes but was able to continue the game. DeLongy was up four times and got on base each time without a hit. Brinity fumbled two grounders. McCullough put the ball into Dee. drew a pass the last time. "Gruen Verithin" Watch $17.50 up Fischer's Store to the Store Room at 745 Mass. St. A BONAFIDE SHOE SALE Over 2000 pairs of Ladies' and Men's Shoes have been taken from Bishop hit a triple to deep center in the fourth but his crew couldn't in the fifth. Sommers and Wandel whiffed to Sees. Steege outed, out Brodke to Knuts. Gustafson Mail orders given special attention. Send for Catalog. Ladies' Shoe Women's tan and white nubuck English, low heel, button and lace, $5 values go at .$29.5 Special—Armstrong's patent leather and white nubuck, English lace shoes, reduced from $5.00 and $5.50 to...$3.45 Women's black satin, turn and welt soles. $5.00 values go at . . . $2.95 The College Jeweler Women's gummetal button and lace shoes, reduced from $3.50 and $4.00 to .1.45 Women's patent leather, turn and welt soles, reduced from $3.50 and $4.00 to .14.5 Women's patient vici kid, tan kid, tan calf, cravenette and white nubuck, reduced from $4.00 and $4.50 to ... $2.45 Women's tan, gunmetal, patent and vici kid, butt and lace, $3.50 values . . . . . . . . $1.95 Women's vici kid button and lace and white canvas shoes reduced from $2.00, $3.00 and $3.50 to . . . . . . . . . . . . $1.45 Exclusive Agency for the Famous Men's Shoes $4.50 and $5.00 tan and gummetal shoes go at. . . . . Men's Oxfords Painter came to bat in the seventh and smashed a single to right. Umedl Wedell called the ball foul but it looked good from above. Bench. The ball was so awapost landed on the next ball pitched and sent it to the east fence for a homer. One special lot of men's house slippers, vici kid, $1.75 and $2.00 values, your choice now... 95c $5.00 "Hurley" and "Barry" patent leatherers, gummetals and tans, button and lace, your choice now.$2.95 $4.00 and $3.50 gummetal, tans, patent, oxfords, go now at..$2.45 $3.50 and $3.9cis, tans and gummetal oxfords, your choice now...$1.95 One special lot of men's house slippers, vici kid, $1.75 and $2.00 Ladie's Oxfords and Pumps Third-baseman Briney, of the Aguas, ducked into one of the bases and hit Women's new English tan, gummetal and white nubuck, lace oxides, reduced from $4.00 and $4.50 to... $2.45 D. Armstrong & Co.'s tan, calf, gunmetal and white nubuck, invisible eyelet, English oxfords, reduced from $5.00 and $5.50 to ...$3.45 Our Advice:Make your selection early. We have all sizes, but not every size in every style Remember the Opening Hour --- 8 o'clock Friday Morning Women's tan, gunmetal, white nubuck, patent leather and vici kid oxfordes, special. $3.50 value at. $1.95 Kansas will meet Missouri on McCook field. Thursday and Friday, May 6 and 7. Women's White canvass oxford, $3.00 value at . . . . . Women's gunmetal, tan and vici kid oxfords turn and welt soles, reduced from $3.50 and $4.00 to ..$1.45 1 Special Lot slippers and oxford, reduced from $3.00, $3.50 and $4.00 10...95c Albert White ih charge Fischer's Shoe Store 745 Massachusetts St. OLUS OLUS Turn Your Shirt Tails Into Drawers What Good Are Shirt Tails Anyway? IN OLUS the outside shirt and underdrawers are one garment. This means that the shirt can't work out of the trousers, that the shirt tail can't bunch in seat, that the drawers "may put," to say nothing of the comfort and economy of saving a garment. OLUS is coat cut, opens all the way down closed cutch, closed back. See illustration. OLUS one-piece PAJAMAS for lounging, resting and comfortable sleep. Made on the same principle as an OLUS shirt—coat run, closed back, closed crotch. No strings to tighten or come loose. $1.50 to $8.50. For golf, tennis and field wear, we recommend the special attached collar OLUS with regular or short sleeves. Extra sizes for very tall or stout men. Ask your dealer for OLUS. Booklet on request. PHILLIPS - JONES COMPANY, Makers Dept. N 1199 Broadway, New York OLUS The largest stock in the city JOHNSON & CARL New Shipment of fresh goods just in at Bathing Caps CARROLL'S Student Down Town Headquarters 709 Mass. Phone 607 STATE HISTORICAL SOCIETY TOPEKA KAN UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN VOLUME XI. SOLOISTS WERE GOOD, SO IS THE ORCHESTRA NUMBER 144. Second Number of Music Festival Pleased Big Audience Last Night ST. PAUL MUSICIANS TODAY Entire Symphony Orchestra Will Give Concerts in Gym at 2:30 and 8:15—Tenor Tonight Miss Elsie Baker, contralto, more than fulfilled the expectations of a large audience of music lovers with her rich voice and charming presence in the second concert of the Eleventh Annual Music Festival last night. Albert Borroff pleased his hearses with a large collection of songs and N.Y.C. MADAM ROTHWELL-WOLFF held attention for an hour, while awaiting Miss Baker, whose train was three hours late. Mr. Borroff was on an express train, the most expressive of feeling. Italian, German, English "Tommy Atkins" dialect, and Highland Scotch that 2 PAUL MORGAN rivated Harry Lauder's "br-p-r-f-l-a-were expressed with equal facility Perhaps the best received number or his program was "The Cornish Floral Dance," given as an encore Lizzie Lindsay, of a shipyard and a high school's barrack ballad, "Follow Me Home." were heartily applauded. Miss Baker won her audience PETER HUNT ALBERT LINDQUEST completely in her first number, Aria, "O don fatale" from "Don Carlo, "but the third number, "A Perfect Day" was the one for which (Continued on page 3) CHURCH SOCIETIES MAY FORM AN ORGANIZATION A plan to effect an organization of all student church societies was advanced at a meeting of representatives in the churches societies in Movers Hall Tuesday night. Con Hoffman was elected temporary president and Miss Mollie Carroll temporary secretary of an organization to present the matter to the various societies at a later meeting. A. J. McAllister, Rev. Ainslea, and Fred Soper were appointed as a committee to draw up a constitution for presentation to the meeting. DOPE ON TRACK MEET FAVORS JAYHAWKERS Prospects Bright for a Kansan Victory --- Expect to Keep Cup The Nebraska Cornhuskers stand a good chance for a drubbing at the hands of the Jayhawker track squad and the Iowa Hawkeyes. McCook field tomorrow afternoon. "Do you see that cup over there?" asked the coach as he pointed to a large silver cup on his desk. "That is the Kansas-Nebraska cup and we don't intend to let it get out of the gymnasium Friday." The Jayhawk descended upon the Nebraskas last spring and beat them by a big score. A bear story from Lincoln says several members of the Nebraska squad will be ineligible for Friday's meet but Kansas supporters are looking for a strong team from the north. Here are the Kansas entries: 100 and 280 yards dash: 'O'Niel, 'K'Nelley. UNIVERSITY OF KANSASTHURSDAY AFTERNOON, APRIL 30, 1914. Quarter mile: Cissna, Davis, Els- wick. Edwards. Henderson. Half mile: Fiske, Creighton, Edwards, Poos, Grady. Mile; Edwards; Grady; Poos Creighton. Two mile: Malcolmson, Deewall, Cressingham, Edwards. Hurdies: Hazen, Perry, Reber. Surnulw. High jump: Hazen, McKay; Davis Shot put: Reber and Keeling. Dissect the neck, Keiling. Sproul, and brothers. Pole vault: Campbell and Pauley Broad jump; Hazen, McKenny, Hilton, Miller. The Nebraska entries are: Relay: Elwick, Cissna, Edwards Hungerer, Davis, Fiske, Creighton, Lewis 100 yard dash: Reese and Twain. One mile run: McMasters and Hugge. 120 yards hurdles: Ludstrum and Kruse. Quarter mile. Zumwinkel Scott, 220 yards buries; Lindstrup Square. Two mile run; Goetze and Kratz. Relay: Warnswinkel, Soot, Goetze Kratz. Half mile: Kubikand Spohr. 220 yards dash: Reese, Scott, Zumwalt. Pole vault: Reavis and Lindsturm Disc throw; Meyers and Reavis High jump: Meyers and Krusel. Plate击倒 Meyers and Pose. Broad jump; Reavis, Reese, an Irwin. T. J. Grover, K. C. A. C., will respond to a question while W. Hornie Hamilton will be present. The plan of giving distinctive gold K's to each man who represents Kansas in an intercollegiate debate is to be proposed by Prof. H. T. Hill (Haworth) and Dr. E. B. Kingling Council. This emblem will be in the form of a pin or fob. The meet will start at 3:30 o'clock Gold K's for Debators? Phil D. Miller, a sophomore, has announced his candidacy for member of the Student Council from the College. Another Candidate The Kappa Alpha Theta sorority has signified its intention of supporting Mrs. Eustace Brown's recommendations about the new dances. Classes University students have asked the Kaman to announce that Saturday classes will not be discontinued because of the May Day holiday. Thetas. Too Classes Saturday Former Student Marries Leo S. Madlem, a former student in the School of Engineering, was married Saturday to Miss Robbie Port Arthur, Texas, at that place. AUDITOR SEEKS REST AFTER DAY OF BOOKS No Paper Tomorrow The Daily Kansan will not be issued tomorrow because of the holiday. BETTER SYSTEM NEXT YEAR Lardner Says Organization Accounts Are in Mighty Poor Condition Foster Says Uniform Accounting Blanks May be Furnished to All Student Treasures James T. Lardner, general purchasing agent of the Board of Administration, came down from Manhattan to check the accounts of the University organizations. There are about sixty organizations, all carrying accounts and back back to Manhattan. The five took him all day. Wednesday. This summary tells the condition of the books. Mr. Lardner said they were utterly disorganized and had no system whatever. He recommended that next year the University issue a book of blanks to each organization, so that all the accounts can be kept systematically. A system of blanks is now used by the Registrar (usually with Registrar Foster says that the University probably will adopt the plan next year. All of the five accounts were of comparatively small organizations. The Y. W. C. A. was the largest, Mr. Lardner made no attempt to check the Athletic Association or other large accounts. He took some of the accounts back with him, and will return to finish the others. When he came he was expecting to finish the entire work in one day, and he did not announce when he would be able to return. TWO MORE ELIGIBILITY RULES New Regulations Are Designed as a Check on The Playing of Outside Men. The Hash House League Commission did not grant the protest of the Stevenson Club on its game with midway team at its meeting last night. Stevenson protested on the grounds that Midway had more than 13 men at the club at the time of the game, and was therefore not entitled to outside players at the time the official list was prepared they had fewer than 13 men, and was entitled to outside players. There is no rule compelling a team to add to their official list any new men that come into possession of Commission citations that Midway acted entirely within the rules. The Commission passed two new rules: Any player or players, who shall be at the club 24 hours before the time of the game shall be eligible to play. The game shall be passed on by the Commission." "Any club, having at the time of playing, 13 able-bodied men, shall not play any outside men without the manager of the opposing team." "The idea of the two new rules is to prevent a team playing outside men when the club it represents has grown to 13 or more members," said John Gleisser, chairman of this league that had fewer than 13 men when the league was organized were allowed to draft outside men until 13 had been secured. The Commission does not think, however, that after a club has grown past the limit prescribed, it should be allowed to play inside. It can be easy for any manager to make new boards eligible, as a meeting of the Commission will be called when any manager wishes it." Decorations for Sophomore Festivity to Begin After Concert Tonight HOP WILL BE HELD DESPITE DIFFICULTY FARCE WILL BEGIN AT SIX "Miss Firefly" to be Presented by Cast of Eight—Will Serve Four-Course Supper Despite the fact that the decoration committee will not be able to start its work on the gym until after the concert tonight, every night will be ready for the annual society of the sophomores tomorrow night. Four-Course Supper The Hop will begin with a three act force, "Miss Firefly" which will begin as near six o'clock as possible. The presentation will take about an hour. According to Manager J. B. McCauley the preschool will be held tonight from 11:06 to 12:20 when the finishing touches will be put on the production. Dancing will follow the farce. Haley's orchestra will play, the program to consist of twenty-two waltzes and two-steps. On the receiving line will be: Chancellor and Mrs. Frank Strong, Dean and Mrs. P. F. Walker, Dean and Mrs. F. W. Blackmar, Dean and Mrs. Aviin Olin, Mrs. Eustace Brown, Bertil Johnson, Liliann Wolf, Dall James, Letha Williams, C. Van De琳 A four course supper will be served at three intermissions. It is expected by this method to avoid the risk of getting sick, and everything will be run off smoothly. "If present indications indicate anything, the class will go badly in the hole," said the management this morning. "Unless more than 200 tickets are sold we can not pay expenses. This morning only about 100 people were paid anytime up till 4:30 Friday at the check stand in Fraser." The cast of the farce is as follows: Mrs. Breed, Bread Lillis; Mr. Breed, Joe Christman; Robin Breed, Joe Gaitskill; Mahann Lewis, Nellie Hauton; Tom Burnham, Melvin Evans; Firefly, Helene Thomas; Tinkle, Cecil DeRoin; Hepsibai Strong, Hazel Williams; director, Patti Hiatt; manager, James McNaught. STATE PEN WANTS TRETTEIN Would Employ K. U. Professor as a Consulting Specialist for Kansas Prisoners Prof. A. W Trettine is wanted in the Kansas penitentiary. Warden Botkins has adopted the plan of employing consulting specialists in psychology, neurology, pathology, and physiology to determine the needs of inmates. The officials have signified their desire of employing Professor Trettine. If he accepts, he will not be compelled to give up his position on the faculty, as the penitentian position will take only a part of his time. Because of the holiday tomorrow the time for the submission of petitions for candidacy for membership on the Men's Student Council has been extended to Monday evening, instead of tomorrow evening, as previously announced. The election will be held on Thursday. Petition Until Monday The Alpha Tau fraternity will give its formal party in F. A. A, Hall tonight. Send the Daily Kansan home. EIGHT STUDENTS GET TEACHING POSITIONS The following teachers' appointments have been announced by Prof. W. H. Johnson. Chauency Yeoman, superintendent of the Minneapolis schools; Ester Drake, teacher of English and Latin in the Kingman high school; Harrison McMillan, principal of the Kingman high school; Frances C. Wenrich, Neodesha high school; C. C Fairchilds, Seneca high school; Earl O'Rake, principal of the Washington high school; Katie Zook, teacher of the eighth grade at Frankfort. HIGH SCHOOLS WILL DEBATE TOMORROW Burlington and El Dorado to Argue in Fraser for Championship Burlington high school will defend its title of having the champion debating team of the state tomorrow night in Fraser Hall against a team from Alabama. The debated is: "Resolved that Kansas should have a minimum wage law." The team from Burlington is present champion of the state and will attempt to retain the cup at the contest tomorrow night. El Dorado went down before Burlington last year in the final. Virtus Wingett, Robert Jewett, and Ennes Whitehead make up the Burlington team. Superintendent W. S. Rune is here with the team. The El Dorado team consists of: Hiel Bollinger, Ruth Bollinger, and Edwin Rider. Superintendent J. B. Helfeltinger will accompany the BUSENBARK GETS POSITION Elected Circulation Manager of Kansas for Next Year—Other Officers Selected Wednesday R. E. Busenbark was elected circulation-manager of the Daily Kansan for the year 1914-15 at a meeting of the Kansan Board last night. Busenbark will take up his duties at the school year in September. The election of other officers of the Board will be held Wednesday evening at the Kansan office. The officers to be elected are: editor-in-chief business manager, advertising editor, business manager, advertising manager and sport editor. No new members will be elected to the Board until near the close of the election. Cercle Francais Elects The last meeting of Le Cercle Francais for the school year was held at 4:30 yesterday afternoon. Officers for the next semester were elected as follows: president, Genève; treasurer, Pierre Gil seville; secretary, Minnie Sandberg; treasurer, Mildred Spake; sergeant-at-arms, Thomas Moore. To Talk on German Cities Prof. Henry Reese, German exchange professor from the University of Berlin, will give an illustrated lecture on "German Cities and Landscape," Sunday afternoon at 4 o'clock in Myers Hall. There will also be special German songs and music. Another Chance to be Measured Another Chance to be Measured Owing to the fact that the managers of the measurement committee of the senior class could not measure all the seniors at the last hours another trial will be made in Room 118 Fraser at chapel time Tuesday. Send the Daily Kansan home. The St. Paul Symphony Orchestra Here In Music Festival THE ORCHESTRA OF THE CITY OF BERLIN MAKES PREPARATIONS FOR COMMENCEMENT L. N. Flint, Alumni Secretary, Announces Preliminary Program CHARLES R. BROWN A SPEAKER Dean of Yale Divinity School Will Deliver Address—Baccalaureate By Ambrose Vernon A preliminary commencement program has been announced by L. Nifianfahm of the FAMC. The preliminary commencement program follows; Tuesday, June 2. John B. Cheadle, the alumni speaker, is a graduate of the College, he and the school of Law in Heidelberg. His professor of law in the University of Oklahoma. Tuesday, June 2. Annual Concert — Department of Music, School of Fine Arts, Fraser Hall, 8:15 p. m. Sunday, June 7. The commencement address will be delivered by Charles Reynolds Brown, dear of the Divinity School, of Yale University. The baccalaureate sermon will be delivered by Ambrose White Vernon, who has been the pastor of Harvard church, Brookline, Mass, since 1909. Monday. June 8. Baccalaurate Sermon. Ambrose White Vernor, A.M., D.D., Pastor of Harvard Church, Brookline, Mass. Regatta—Potter Lake, West Campus, 2:00 p. m. Swimming races, water games, canoe races, pageants, and "sunts." Band Concert (for piercicken) p. m. West Campus near Potter Lake Origan Recital—Charles Stanford Ogran Recital—Charles Stanford of Fine Alfred, Friger, Hugh, 815 p. m. Annual Banquet of the School of Art, Eldridge Course, 8:06 p.m. (Admission by ticket) All day inspection of buildings and displays of University work. Alumni Address—John B. Cheadle, A.B., 98, LL.B., 92. Professor of Law in the University of Oklahoma. Senior and Alumni Class Lunches, 12:00 pm (Picnic lunches on sale west dorm room, Snow Hall). Class day Exercises of the Class of 1914: Address to Buildings and Farewell Songs, University Campus; 8:30 a.m. Band Concert—Campus, 1500 p. m. Annual Meeting of the Alumni Band at the University of Tampa Senior Class Farce. Baseball Game, Alumni vs. University Seniors, McCook Field, 3:30 p. m. Track Events and Frolic Features. Band Concert—Campus, 7:45. Japanese Lantern Illumination. Reception by Chancellor and Mrs. Strong, Green Hall, 8:30 p. m. (All alumni, former students, and friends of the University are invited to this reception. No individual invitations are issued.) Reception of Law Alumi by Bishop and Mrs. Green at their home, 9:00 a.m. Alumni Prom., Robinson Gymnasium, 9:30 p.m. Wednesday. June 19. Wednesday, June 10. Commencement Exercises—Auditorium, Robinson Gymnasium, 10:00 a. m. Address, Charles Reynolds Brown, A.M., S.T.B. Dean of the Divinity School, Yale University. Cumberland U. of Georgia University Dinner, first floor (Robinson Gymnasium, 1:00 p. m. (Admission by ticket.) Working on Rest Room The office and rest room in the course of construction in Fraser Hall is nearing completion and will probably be ready for occupancy next week. The furniture and carpents are now on hand. Of decoration are needed to make it one of the most attractive retreats on the campus. Boynton to Meet Classes Prof. Arbar J. Boynton, of the economics department, will meet his classes Monday after an absence of two weeks. He has been troubled with bronchitis, but it now recovering rapidly. Catalogs Are Ready Catalogs Are Heady The first shipment of catalogs is expected to arrive that will be ready for distribution at the registration office tomorrow. George B. Drake, of Denver, is visiting at the Alpha Tau house. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Official student paper of the University of Konser EDITORIAL STAFF EDUCRITICAL STUDIO JOHN C. MADDEN, Editor-in-Chief JONC HARBERT Associate Editor JOHN GLEINNERER High School Editor CALVIN LAMBERT High School Editor SPORT Editor CALVIN LAMBERT BUSINESS STAFF BUSINESS EDOWN AREA Business Manager BAY EDUCATION Circulation Manager JOB BOSSOR Advertising Manager STEPHEN HARRIS Advertising SCHAEFMAN Advertising REPORTORIAL STAFF REPORTER BICK HENRY MALET DENISE DEMINGER BICK BARBER W. P. WORSDOMSON CARLEEN GIBSON MARGARET GUT SCHRIVER JOHN HENRY LOUCE HUDSON CHARLES SWETT JOHN HENRY WILLIAM S. CARD JOHN HENRY SUSAN CLAYTON LAUREN LANDA LANDY LAUNDRY Enrolled as second-class mall matter September 17, 1910, at the post face at Lawrence, Kansas, under the act of March 3, 1879. Published in the afternoon five times a week, by students of the University of Kansas, from the press of the department of Journalism. Subscription price $2.50 per year, advance, qn term, $1.50. Subscription price $2.50 per year. Advance, 9/17. Phone Bell K. U. 25. Addres ail communications to UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS. Lawrence, Kansas. The Daily Kansan aims to picture the lives of ordinary people in Kansas to go further than merely printing the news. The Kansan holds to play no favorites; to be clean; to be caretakers; to leave more serious problems to water head THURSDAY, APRIL 30, 1914. Chance is a nick name for Provi dence—Chamfort. SAFETY FIRST Potter lake is to be opened to student swimmers. It is an excellent move and no public objections have been made. One thing important however, has been overlooked. Plans should be made for the safety of swimmers. A gymnasium instructor ought to be on the grounds, or in the water, during all swimming hours in order to prevent accidents. Two lives have already been claimed in the little lake and that is two too many. Safety first is the program on modern railroads and K. U. should join the movement. NO KICK COMING The University is feeling quite well, thank you. Two baseball victories from the Aggies and a favorable decision in debate over Missouri—all in two days—are enough to keep the public reminded that K. U. is alive and healthy. Professor Blackmar's figures from Belleville showing that the percentage of Kansas women who come to the University is much smaller than the percentage of men, is an interesting commentary on the policy of the State of Kansas in regard to dormitories. DORMITORIES Although the figures from one city are rather meager for generalizations it seems likely that the state institutions are suffering in enrollment because the state does not furnish homes for women students. Kansas mothers evidently prefer to send their daughters to schools where dormitories are provided. The legislature meets next year and definite results ought to be obtained now that the club women have joined the University dormitory committee in a united effort for homes on the campus. If Kansas mothers want the state to furnish dormitories for Kansas daughters the political parties are going to sit up and take notice. Women can vote now in Kansas. IMPROVED WORKING CONDITIONS The old saying, "In Union There is Strength," when applied to class honor societies ought to be apt; and the combination of the Sachem and Skull and K organizations should insure more effective work for the University. Energy expended in petty jealousies and foolish rivalry is wasted and could better be directed toward improved class and undergraduate conditions generally. The University will expect effective results from a united society of picked fourth year men—gathered together for the purpose of serving K. U. DICTIONARY OF DATES (NOT MID-WEEK) Air-Balloons were invented by Gusmac, a Jesuit, in 1729. Revived in France by M. Montgolfier, in 1783. At present they are being used very exclusively in higher education. Air-guns were invented by Cuhr of Nuremburg, in 1656. They have never been covered by the Maxim silencer. Air-pumps were invented in 1650 and the tango came 263 years later. Algebra was known in Europe in 1470 at Buda. England in 1492 printed at Oxford, in 1673; but Poor Richard is the most famous almanaker. Alien and Sedition acts were passed by members of Congress in 1798; they, (the acts), expired by limitation, Jan. 26, 1801. "EFFICIENCY" IN READING During my first year in efficiency, work, says a writer in American Mechanics. I collected every catalogue, magazine and reference that I could find. The catalogues were filed, the magazines were in chronological order, and the index contained reference to all my catalogues, magazines or scientific books; also to all magazines or books with which I did not own but had access or knew contained information that I wanted, writes an efficiency expert in the current American Machinist. Before the end of the first year I found that reference to anything which I did not possess was useless, as I had no time to go to the library. On account of these troubles I changed my scheme and the following method is now working satisfactorily: 1. A set of index cards contains references to all of my books in details, thus telling me just what book contains the information I want. 2. All magazine references are eliminated from the index cards and the information is clipped from the magazine or catalogue. If two articles conflict on opposite sides of the page, or if the information is a very small part of the article, or if the article suggests something to do, then I make brief notes instead of slimming. 3. I take the clippings and notes on any one subject, compare them with one another and with any previous ones on the same subject. The reliability must be considered, and also a watch kept for contradictions and repetitions. After these points have been considered, the information is made as clear and concise as possible and typewritten for filing in a loose leaf notebook with previous information. My system has the following advantage which I have not seen in any other one system—it keeps up the quality and keeps down the quan- I look over all the new books, compare them with my present data on the index cards, in the file and notebooks before buying. This eliminates useless repetition. I keep lists of the books I have examined. On one side are the books I want and on the other ones do not want. I write a hierarchical order. I re-read all the valuable data in the magazines to a handbook form, with personal comments and suggestions. All repetition and contradiction are eliminated. In this shape it is ready for quick work. ENDS AND ODDLETS A gryoscope motorcar that can turn sharp corners at high speed without upsetting has been invented, according to news reports. The device is designed to pedal trikes to gyrate out of the way of such motor cars is more necessary. Here's hoping the Mexican difficulties are straightened, out before the chili and hot tamale season rolls around again. "Preachers getting back to soil." —Headline. Lying down and kicking up their heels presumably. The members of the Chi Omega sorority entertained their patronesses and their husbands at one o'clock dinner Sunday.-Social Note. Chi Omegas with husbands! Preposterous. "President Sneeps In Office"—Headline. And yet some professors grumble when a student takes a nap in class. Not much difference between being a Mexican and a batter against Walter Johnson. WITH K. U. POETS Those living gateways of my soul and mind Those gifted with strength that thrice grace truth to find. Lord, in my oldest age, if it should be Thou shouldst recall the senses which thou would know. THE GREATEST GIFT One gift, good Lord, I ask that I may keep Until they mery calls me to my peaceful sleepy Oh Lady! I praise thee keep my vision true That I may see Thy face in whatsofar CAMPUS OPINION A PROBLEM FOR LAWRENCE JOSEPH LAMONT. Why are there no street lights after midnight, in Lawrence? We've never heard why, but at Easter time when we arrived at two o'clock in the little home town of 4,000, the streetlights greeted us from every corner. The comparisonflash mind. Back in Lawrence at that identification was as dark, ahome-room man must seek his way quite in the dark. We've wondered these three years why Lawrence people feel no need of lighted streets. Do they think it serves as a curfew, a warning that all should be indoors, if not at rest when the mid-night hour arrives? If such the plan it isn't effective. Our activities as students may cause us to be later gone home, and we ask, what matters that we find each and every street corner dark and dismal, with a prospect of falling?" The University authorities have listened to our plea for more light and several campus lights have been provided. But over the town generally, every place off from Massachusetts streets, at about 12:30 the lights are turned off. Why not allow them to burn a few hours longer? Why plunge the city, and those unfortunate who are out on the streets, into silent blackness, when light is more pleasant and delicate if there are men out at such a late hour from necessity, they deserve a light and if they are out for evil purposes then no less essential is the light. Already a number of reform movements and forward steps have been considered to better the environment of the present and prospective K. U. student, who wants to raise the awareness and morals of its student body. The city is interested in maintaining a clean and wholesome home for students. Why not add to the list of improvements the light proposition, the change the school's course plan? Fall? The lifecounters of 3,500-5,000 take pride in such an achievement. Why has Lawrence evaded it? E. F. C. '15. OUR DAILY QUIZ Use honor system and grade yourself SPRING POETRY Q. What is spring poetry? A. The result of a horrible epidemic that goes hand in hand with spring fever is even more deadly. Is it? Q. —What is spring poetry? A.—Because no means of suppressing it has ever been found. 4.—Because of the A. —Absent mindedness, vacant expression, loss of memory, weakening of all mental powers, general worthlessness. Q. —What are the symptoms of the malady? Q. —What classes of people are most susceptible? ...but the victims suffer much. A. It does not but as much as everybody else. A.—Freshmen, sophomores, juniors, seniors and graduates. Q—Is there no preventive measure? Q. —What is the most effective treatment? A. —Involuntary cold baths, followed by vigorous exercise with paddles, aggravated cases are sometimes held by being kicked around the block. Q—Do the victims suffer much? A—Yes, but not as much as... Q. —Who is the worst spring poet? PROFILE Scarf slide space and lock front Lion Collars Outstanding Brand in America UNITED SHIRT & COLLAR CO. TROV N.Y. A—Justice might be approximated by having the prison tarred, feathertwisted, and a wail. Hanged, and barred, boiled in oil and thrown to the Medics. Q. —As a crime, how should it be punished? A.—There "ain't no such animal." Q.—Would you call spring poetry a disease or a crime? A. Path A.—Byron. (Not our own Cyrus.) Q.—The best? Prof.—You say you are engaged in some original research. Upon what kind of research? Soph—I am trying to discover why the ink will not flow from my fountain pen unless it is placed in an upright vase. With a of a light, fancy w vest—Cchio News. Hanky—Got my picture taken. Panky—Got the proofs? Hanky—No. You'll have to take my word for it.—Ex. Lion Collars Odyssey Brand In America UNITED SHIFT & COLLAR CO. TROY N.Y. A GOOD PLACE TO EAT AT ANDERSON'S OLD STAND JOHNSON & TUTTLE 715 PROPS. Mass. A. G. ALRICH Printing Binding, Copper Plate Printing, Bubber Stamps, Engraving, Steel Die Embossing, Soals, Badges. 744 Mass. Typewriting Done By Alvin L. Babb 1334 Ohio St. Bell 'Phone 1574W SPRING SUITINGS FRANK KOCH TAILOR 727 Mass. STANDISH JN.D. ARROW COLLAR 2 for 25¢ Cluett Peabody & Co. Inc. Makers REYNOLDS BROS. Ice Creams--- Chocolate Vanilla Strawberry Caramel Rasberry Orange Ices--- Orange Individual Molds, Roses, Grapes. We Will Deliver Your Cream to Dinners and Parties Bell 645 Order for Sunday now. Home 358 New Tennis and Outing Shoe The neatest shoe in town (Spalding make), only $1.75 the pair Sizes for women CARROLL'S Phones 608 709 Mass. St. SEE THEM IN WINDOW R. E. Protsch TAILOR Bert Wadham THE COLLEGE BARBER On 14th Street Drink Coca-Cola It Scores Whether you drink it to quench thirst—for refresh- Whether you drink it to quench thirst—for refreshment—for pure pleasure in its deliciousness Coca-Cola scores goal. It satisfies you in a manner and with a completeness possible to no other beverage. Delicious—Refreshing Thirst-Quenching THE COCA-COLA CO. Atlanta, Ga. Whenever you see an Arrow that lands on a rock, Even Professors Subscribe for the Daily Kansan If for no other reason They read it in order to be able to Knock Intelligently UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN ANNOUNCEMENTS All junior and senior women who wish to swim are invited to come to the pool Tuesday and Thursday at 4:30 for advanced swimming. Monday and Wednesday 4:30 for beginners in swimming. This is to accommodate those who were conditioned in swimming, also all College women who care to learn to swim. Dr. Margaret L. Johnson. The band will meet Friday at 2:15 in South Park to go to the K. U.-N. U. track meet. M Company Guardmen ushering at the music festival this week, will report at the Gymnasium at 7 Wednesday evening, at 1:30 Thursday matinee, and 7:15 Thursday evening. -Sergeant Bennett. The entire cast of "The Fortune Hunter" will meet in Room 110 Fraser at nine o'clock Friday morning, the important—everybody be there promptly. WANT ADS FOR RENT*—Modern twelve room, house, was desirable for its quality. 183-6 LOST A 1914 K. C. A. C. track medal. Ray Edwards. LOST—A black bill-book, containing five dollars in bills and several papers. Call B. 1019. Reward. FOUND~Watch fob with B. J. R. engraved on it. A sweet face is in the locket. Inquire at Kansan office and pay for this ad. 144-3 WANTED—A student who can do soda fountain work. Lee's College Inn. Sam S. Shubert Sall S. Shatz MAT. WEDNESDAY & SATURDAY PEG O' MY HEART Next: Wm. Hodge in "THE ROAD TO HAPPINESS" LAWRENCE Business College Lawrence, Kansas You Can Earn a Good Living and lay up some money on your graduation fee. Learn business at Business College. Enroll at once get ready and you'll secure a good position. Free Employment Bureau at your service. Finish your education and best Business College. No vacations. WATKINS NATIONAL BANK Capital $100,000 Surplus and profits $100,000 The!Student Depository CITY CAFE 906 Mass. Strictly Home Cooking Ever try our Special 15c Lunch? You'll like it. PROFESSIONAL CARDS W. C. MCCONNELL, Physician and surgeon. Burke 1346, Residence, 1346 Teen. St. Ball 1023, Home 936. J. F. BROCK, Optometrist and Specialist 1928 Bell Park, Office #925 Mass. Bell phone 605. HARRY REDING. M. D. Eya, ear, nose Bell. Phone 513. Homie 512. Bell. Phone 513. Homie 512. DR. H. W. HAYNE, Oculist, Lawrence, Kansas. © A. HAMMAN M. D. Eyre, ear, and satisfaction Guaranteed. Dick Building. J. W. O'BRYON, Denist. Over Wilson's Drug Store. Boll Phone 507. R. B. BECHTEL, M. D. D. O. 833 Mass- suisseau street. Both phones, office and telephone. G. W. JONES, A. M. M. D. Diasaea of Butee Rite 1; Butee Rite 2; A. Bldg. Residence, 1200 DR. H. T. JONES. Room 12 F. A. B. Bldg. Residence 1130 Tenn. Phone 2111. DR. H. L. CHAMBERS. Office over Brussels; Studio. Rhoh phones. DR. BURT R. WHITE Osteopath. Phones, Bell 938, Home 257, Office, 745 Mass. St. Ed W. Parsouros, Engraver, Watchmaker and Designer and Jeweler, Belle Phones 71- 71, Mao S. T. GILLISPEL, M. D. D. Office corner W. K. Warren 61, Residence 728 Phone: 504-390-2474 CLASSIFIED Plumbers Phone Kennedy Plumbing Co. for gas goods and Maada lamps. 1975 Mass. Ladles Tallors MRS. MELLISON, Dressmaking and Ladies Vermont. Phone Bohl 2411 West. 1052 MERRON. Phone Bohl 2411 West. Queens City College. System and sewing Technique. Mrs. D. Foster, Mrs. K. School, Mrs. G. Mark Boughnell, BSY K. Hall Hair Dressers Hairdressing, shampooing, scalp and facial massage. shampooing, hair-fixtures. "Martial arts," hair styling. mentions call Bali 1372, homes 51. The Select Hotel Dress Shop, 927 Mass 85. Barber Shops Go where they all go J. C. HOUK 913 Mass. Around Mount Oread *Student's OoC-op Club* $2.50 to $3.00 per day 1340 KK Geo, H. Vancell Stewart Frank Henderson left yesterday for Ann Arbor, Michigan, to represent the local chapter of Sigma Delta Chi, journalistic fraternity, at the national convention. S. Henderson is the institution's department of journalism, is also attending the convention. Mr. Lewis is national president of the fraternity. A history prof, apropos of the Mexican disturbance, remarked: "It is true that trade follows the flag, but always at a safe distance." The former governor of Mexico composed of the men whose financial interests are impersonilled. The girls rooming at 1310 Tennessee street walked to Tonganoxie recently. They started at 5:30 in the morning and reached their destination at 11:00 o'clock. They ate their breakfast at Six Corners and had luncheon in the neighboring city. The girls say they like to walk, but they came back on the evening train. R. E. Busenbark, a student compositor for the Department of Journalism Press, is as proud these days as a high school valedictorian. Busenbark set up a Peckham Clothing Co., ad for the East Kansas. The manager of Hart-Schaffner & Marx wrote Mr. Peckham yesterday that Busenbark's ad was one of the finest that had appeared this season. Crunny Williamson has achieved the doughnut hole of distinction. Not only has the Kansas State College copied his name as C. Edgar Williamson but the University Debating men are parting their names in the middle. Who will be next to take up the fad? Whenever Professor Burgess' class is remedial and corrective agencies takes a trip it invariably has to take a meal in some reformatory before they come back. The first time they took supper at the Municipal Farm in Kansas City and last Saturday when they went to Topake they were forced to take their evening meal at the Boys' Industrial Home. After four months-almost all entire semester, Archie V. Grady, has come to believe that the instructors on the hill do not wish students to be comfortable while attending classes. A comfortable position in the chair will allow them to be in bed by that tired trackman. He will now sit up in the class and refrain from any rest that he might be able to get. At a rehearsal of the sophomore farce Monday evening, Melvin Evans distinguished himself in his lines. Instead of saying: "A duel by moonlight and a trip to Havana" he announced that he would "Take a trip by moonlight and fight a duel with Havana." No the Sigma Kappas were not screaming Tuesday evening because of a mouse, but because two more of their number revealed their engagements. The sorority statistician announces the total number of Sigma Kappa fancees now to be one half dozen. Even in Oklahoma, people sing "Home, Sweet Home." For that reason Marion Blake and Eva Stone, Fine Arts students, are starting today for Muskogee, where they will spend the week-end. Miss Helen Rowles of Baker University will spend the week-end with Miss Sue St. John, a freshman in the College. Although Arthur Jerome Boynton is still on the sick list and unable to attend his classes, he administered his regularly quarterly quizz in economic history of the U. S. by proxy. K. U. Calendar 7:00 Amer. Soc. Mech. Eng. (1301 Thursday 7:30 Civil Engineering Society. (Maximus.) 8:15 Fourth Concert, Music Festival. St. Paul Symphony Orchestra. (Robinson Gym.) 13:30 K. U.-N. U, dual track meet (McLough). 11:00 Assembly 3:00 Seventh Interscholastic tennis tournament. (McCook.) Friday. 6:00 Sophomore Hop and Farce, Robinson Gymnasium. Athletics 7:30 Interscholastic H. S. Debating League. Saturday. Seventh Interscholastic tennis tournament, (McCook). Eleventh annual interscholastic track meet. (McCook). 8:15 Faculty stag, Y. M. C. A. May 6-7—Baseball, Missouri at Law- 8:15 Faculty stag. Y, M. C. A. (Myers hall.) May 8—K. S. A. C.-K. U. dual track at Manhattan. May 14-15-Baseball, Missouri at Columbia Columbia. May 16—M. U.-K. U. dual track meet May 16—M. U.-K. U. dual track meet at Columbia. May 21-22-Baseball, Ames at Ames, Iowa. May 23-Annual invitation H. S. st. at. of. exposure May 27-28-Baseball, K. S. A. C. at Manhattan. May 29—Baseball, St. Marys at St. Marys. May 30—Missouri Valley track meet at St. Louis. June 6—Western Conference track meet at Chicago. Future Events May 5-7 Merchants Week. May 11-14 Kansas Newspaper Week State and National Newspaper Conference. Best post cards obtainable. City views. 5c per dozen up, at Hoadley's.-Adv. "Christ's Challenge to Heroism," Presbyterian Church Sunday evening.—Adv. BASE BALL GOODS CONCERT WAS GOOD, SO IS THE ORCHESTRA BASL BALL GOODS The Sporting Goods Headquarters KENNEDY & ERNST 826 Mass. St. Student Plays Student Dances Student Mixers When they are advertised in the Daily Kansan. PAY 3,000 Students Faculty and Alumni read it every day. the audience waited. Unfortunately the announced violinello obigato was omitted, but a wave of applause greeted her rendition. Her version of "The Fairy Pipers" was especially pleasing, as it displayed the rich qualities of her voice and her admirable technique. Miss Nielsen gave this number at her concert two weeks ago. (Continued from page 1) Miss Baker's accompany, Miss Edna Peterson, is a concert pianist and was able to give her audience music that she felt was beautiful in her recital of "Prelude in G A. E. SMITH WALTER H. ROTHWELL Minor," by Rachminoff and "Eude in E Minor," by Liszt, which demanded an encore. The third number of the course will be held this afternoon at 2:30. The full St. Paul Symphony Orchestra will play in their first concert, assisted by Anna Sweeney, pianist; Edmund Wheeler, keyboardist; Bernard bartone solost; Frederick Wheeler is well remembered by University students, having sung here in a lyceum course two years ago. Miss Sweeny is an MIDDLE SCHOOL FEDERAL UNION The "Dube" correct style in every detail *exemple* materiales "Natural Shake" lists for money $5 fort-an exceptional value at $8. ONEIDA Front 2% in. Back 2 in. Barker Collars are Linen in quarter sizes at New Florsheim Spring Styles PECKHAMS instructor in piano in the School of fine Arts, and makes her first appearance with the orchestra. 805 Mass. St. The fourth and last number of the course will be given at 8:15 tonight when the St. Paul Symphony Orchestra gives a second concert assisted by Worley Conductor Albert Linguet, tenor; and Paul Morgan, violoncellist. HAWK PLAYERS GET PARTS Mr. Lindquest appeared here last year on the first concert of the Festival course, and delighted his audience with his clear tenor and easy are now here. Shoes for all around wear and shoes for dress— in your particular size, tan or black, high or low cut. Ruth Litchen, Webster Kimball, and Ray Eldridge Given Places in Cast -a good investment at $5 - for coolness, comfort and service. Starkweather FOR THE MAN WHO CARES The Florsheim SHOE Make your selection now—Styles and Sizes are complete. The three remaining parts in the cast of "The Fortune Hunter" have been given to Ruth Litchen, Webster Kimball, and Ray Eldridge. Director Sowers is holding full cast rehearsals every evening. Manager Easy Anderson is busy getting together the scenery. "Christ's Challenge to Heroism." Presbyterian Church Sunday evening.—Adv. The play is in four acts. The scenes are: the interior of a millionaire's apartment; an old drug store; an up to date drug store with all modern equipment, including a complete soda fountain; and a garden scene in spring, ending with a rain-storm. The Hawk Club will present pins to every member of the cast after the show, as a recognizance of their efforts. There will be an important meeting on Friday morning Room 110. Fraser "Christ's Challenge to Heroism," Presbyterian Church Sunday evening.—Adv. "Christ's Challenge to Heroism." Presbyterian Church Sunday evening.—Adv. TO COMPETE FOR CUP AT MERCHANTS' WEEK Town With Biggest Delegation at K. U. May 5-8 Will Receive Prize The cup will be given by the Merchants' Journal, Topeka, and will be awarded on a basis of points. A town will be given points for each delegate that it sends and for the number of miles that the delegate has to travel to Lawrence. In this way, towns which are handicapped by their distance from the University will receive greater credit for their efforts than the cities closest. Experts in advertising, leadership and modern business will address these issues in study-sessions of Kansai merchants. The plans for Week are attracting wide attention in Kansas, and many merchants have already written in to Professor Coissant to enroll for the school. Two Games Friday Two Hash House League baseball games will be played on the freshman field Friay morning. They are the Daniels-1221 game, postponed from last Saturday, at 8:30, and the Columbus-Ellis game, which is advanced a day on the schedule from Saturday. The city or town that sends the largest representative to the Merchants' Week short-courses at the University of Kansas May 5 to 1 will receive a valuable cup as a prize, Prof. D, C. Croissant, director of Merchants' Week announced the trophy today. Tests Water for Survey Shaad Lectures The state water analysis department is analyzing water from the wells in use at the school houses in Wakarusa township. The water being carried on by the department of sociology, which will be completed next week. Prof. George C. Shaad will deliver a lecture on "The Electrical Engineer in the Mining Industry" in the Building at 4:30 this afternoon. For good aerated distilled water call MeNish. Bell 198 - Adv. Send the Daily Kansan home. 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 LEE'S COLLEGE INN Good For 30 Days Only Date Name 10 10 10 10 A $ 1.10 for $1.00 GOOD FOR $3.30 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 25 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 10 10 10 10 10 Lee's College Inn Good for 30 days only DATE ... 25 NAME ... 25 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 25 LEE $3.30 for $3.00 These tickets are good for meals, short orders, drinks and ice cream. S Good anytime—Day or Night. Summer Students The Moody Boarding Club remains open for the summer session. Only 40 persons can be accommodated; those who call first will be given preference. Phone or write, MRS. R. K. MOODY, 1339 Tennessee. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Tomorrow Morning at 8 o'clock, the opening hour of The Big Shoe Sale-Fischer's Surplus Stock R.C.W. White Serge Trousers— In plain white and stripe effects, in both English and semi-English models. Plain White Oxford "OLUS" Shirt suits, one piece shirt a n d drawer combined. Just the shirt for the "Hop." Johnson & Carl For spring parties, Reynolds Bros ice cream. Phone Bell 645—Adv. Get your tickets now for The Fortune Hunter, Friday May 8th, at Lee's College Inn. Reserve seats on sale at Woodward's Monday morning May 4th. First come, first served.—Adv. Best post cards obtainable. City views, 5e per dozen up, at Hoadley's.-Adv Best post cards obtainable. City views, 5c per dozen up, at Hoadley's.-Adv. Open air concert, Friday night, 7:30; camp, University band. "Christ's Challenge to Heroism" Pressbyterian Church Sunday evening. —Adv. COME EARLY For good aerated distilled water call MeNish. Bell 198—Adv. Open air concert. Friday night, 7:30, camp. University band. For good aerated distilled water call McNish. Bell 198 - Adv. HIGH SCHOOL MEET TO HAVE 150 MEN Saturday's Contest Will Embrace Representatives of Forty Teams The high school track man, 150 strong, will be in Lawrence Saturday for the 12th annual inter-scholastic track and field games on McCook field in the afternoon. Many athletes are expected tomorrow to attend the Kansas-Nebraska meet. Soon there will be games they will be given badges which will admit them to the Nebraska meet and the big meet Saturday. Several entries have been recorded and Manager Hamilton expects almost forty schools to send representative. The very part of Kansas is represented. The athletic management has everything ready for the visitors. The medals and cups are at hand, programs are ready and the officials chosen for the meet. The first gun will be fired at 13:00 o'clock and the rack men will run their races without delay. Student ticket holders will be admitted for 25 cents while general admission is 50 cents. TOURNEY STARTS TOMORROW Tennis Contest Will Begin With Ten High Schools Entered—Give Gold Medals The preliminaries for the 11th annual interscholastic tennis tournament will start tomorrow morning and raquet wielders from ten high schools will contest for championship on McCourk courts. The events will include singles and doubles. The finals will be played before the Kansas-Nebraska meet tomorrow afternoon. All tennis entries will be tagged with a souvenir button. The winners will receive gold medals while their opponents-up will get a silver trophy. The following teams are in the meet: Kansas City, Kans. Topeka, Eskridge, Baldwin, Winchester, Man- hattan, Westport, Central and Lawrence. MANY ENGINEERS AT EXPURGATED DANCE Attendance at Next Tuesday's Hop Will Be Good, Says Oscar Dingman "Tickets for Engineers' Day are going fast," said Oscar A. Dingman, president of the Engineers, this morning. "Everything looks promising for the best Engineers' Day ever." The parade, as usual, will be the chief attraction of the morning. Floats are being designed by the various societies and classes. The afternoon will be given over to athletics and volleyball; the ball will be played between the several departments of the School of Engineering. Haley's four-piece orchestra will furnish the music at the dance to be held in the Gymnasium in the evening. The decorations put up for the Sophomore Hop will be left in place. Three Prominent Editors Who Will Come to K. U. Soon E. M. C. WILSON Charles H. Grassy, publisher of the Baltimore Sum, who will speak in Robinson gymnasium May 12, at 8 o'clock. P. H. M. A. C. BURTON Oswald Garrison Villard, editorial writer and president of the New York Evening Post, who will speak May 11, in the gymnasium. Henry King, editor of the St. Louis Globe-Democrat, who will speak in Robinson gymnasium on Monday of Newspaper Week. BETAS DEFEAT PHI DELTS Made 17 Hits and Won From Their Neighbors 18 to 9 Seventeen hits, several of which went for extra bases, gave the Betas a 18 to 9 victory over the Phi Delts on freshman field, yesterday afternoon. The game was a swatfied sprinkled with errors. Heizer led the batters with a homer, two-baggers and a single. The score: R. H. E. Phi Delts 104 010 12x— 9 10 4 Betas 251 119 09x— 18 17 4 Batteries: Lyman, Berger and Blair; Chase and Strothers. Umpires Mitchell and Sommers. Will Not Play in Lawrence The Emporia state league baseball team, which had planned to make Lawrence its training quarters and play a series of practice games with the Varsity, has changed its route and taken a barmostorm to the southern Kansas and Missouri. The Emporions will not play in Lawrences. Send the Daily Kansan home. OLUS SHIRTS What good are these tails to the donkey? What good is a shirt-tail to a man? TURN YOUR SHIRT-TAILS INTO DRAWERS What good is a Shirt-tail anyway? INOLUS the outside shirt and underdrawwear are one garment. There are no clothes to wear in there; there are nothing to tie in in seat, that the dancers "stay put" to say nothing of the comfort and economy of saving a garment. ISU is compartment, open all the way down—closed cloak, closed back. ISU is comfortable. For golf, turf and field wear, we request a special attended dress 027.89 with appropriate headband or necklace for tall or small men. All shirt fabrics, shorts, drapes including skirt-$1.95 to $10.00. Ask your dealer for OLUS. Book on request. PHILIPS-JONES COMPANY, Makers Dept. N. 1198 Broadway, N. Y. OLUS The largest stock in the city JOHNSON & CARL [The Only Fire Proof Construction] BOWERSOCK THEATRE May 4th to May 7th. Matinee 2:30; Night 8:15 The Renowned White Slave Picture Drama One Mile of Films "TRAFFIC IN SOULS" 600 Scenes 700 People Founded on the John D. Rockefeller Vice Investigation and the Reports of District Attorney Whitman of New York City, Shown to 30,000 People the first week at Weber's Theatre, Broadway, New York Price 25c All Seats Reserved. Seats on Sale at Woodward's, Saturday, 8 a.m. NEBRASKA-KANSAS TRACK MEET McCook Field, Friday, May 1, 3:30. Tickets 50c. Student Tickets Admit Twelfth Annual Interscholastic Track Meet McCOOK FIELD, SATURDAY, MAY 2nd 40 Schools. 3 Classes. Tickets 50 cents. Student Ticket Holders 25 cents