UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN VOLUME XII. =IRST BE HONEST, THEN SHAKE HANDS" Work for Season Outlined a Committeemen's Banquet Friday Night ERY MAN A CHRISTIAN D rth Aim Sums up Other Three- Fifty-Five Attend Event in Myers Hall the plans of the University Y. M. A., for the year were made known the Committeemen's banquet held Myers Hall Friday night. According to President Hal Coffman four will be worked for: promotion an honor sentiment among the students of the University, especially freshmen, a democratic social activist, a musician, and the last, the motto of association, "Every K. U. man a istian." the emphasis in the working for honour sentiment is placed on the human class because its students are not yet formed school prejudices because four years of such work required the school with all honor dents. the social event planned would be urged in the gymnasium once a month, and would be an all Universal affair. The reason for such an effort should be the idea that the University life is aristocratic. The Y. M. Mas is to dispel such ideas this year, the social plan. The members of Association who worked over the during the summer found the judge so strong that they determined to do something about it thison. he last of the aims will be the big aim of all. All the others work toward it. the evangelistic campaign is which was planned during the semester. It is thought now John D. Mott will come to K. U. direct it. Mott will advise secrecy officers on the opening of October. This campaign will similar to that carried on at Wissin, and other schools of the midwest. During the last semester sound work was lain for the camby by the Mott Campaign Comes, the men of which met at the BER 6. "FORE!" ON MT. OREAD a big thing of the whole meet- was the spirit shown by the com- men. fifty-five men gathered at Myrna's Friday night. President of the M. Hail Coffman, was master of affair and addresses were made Prof. U. G. Mitchell, E. A. Black, U. O. C. Brown, of the Bap church in Chisholm Weddle, Ireland, orach University, the University, and Secer Hoffman. offers May go to New Country Club Trains; Will Decide at Meeting Tomorrow Night the brend Golf Club teed-off be last time? It members will in the Merchants' Association tomorrow night at 7:30 o'clockide this question. The Coat- ing department two weeks, and since most ofed golfers have joined the organization, they have thought to keep up the Mount course. Rank growths ofhe sprung up since the reina and the course is in poor on. STRONG WANTS TO SEE YOU AT CHAPEI I hope to see a great many students in Fraser Hall at chapel Friday morning for I want to discuss me things that are vital to us all," as the statement of Chancellor rong, this morning when asked sat he would speak to students out; Chapel will be held at ten o'clock. Get Massages at S. U. At last there is a barber shop at the Student Union. For some rooms it other units, impossibly hard to find there last year. W. C. Bow is the new barber and he is going to give employment to one student barber. He has two chairs in the southeast room downstairs. Get Messages at S. U At two o'clock today the registra tion figures were 2188. Send the Daily Kansan home "LET'EM FIGHT" SAYS K. U. PROFESSOR UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS MONDAY AFTERNOON. W. H. Twenhofel Is No War Prophet Prof. W. H. Twenhofel returned last night from an all summer's trip in Russia, Norway, Sweden and Germany. H eas much to talk about his work and the war that is raging in Europe. Twenhofel was working with Dr. E. Raymond, of Harvard. They were trying to work out the geologic history of northeastern Europe and its relation into the geologic history of northwestern North America. Pro-terticularity is looking much better than when he left Lawrence in the spring and says he is ready for class work. "Talking about the war is a little wild," said the geologist this afternoon. "I cannot tell who will be the victor. Neither can anyone else. I have talked to possibly a hundred people who have been in Germany and they all say that there is an abundance of food supplies on hand, but the people shouldn't be lieve the stories they need in papers, because they are all exaggerated. The reports that come from Berlin are as false and overwritten as though they come from Leonon and Petrograd. "Of course, the Germans want sympathy in America. They need it and they will not let any report come out from their capital city that will be deterrimental to their cause. While they are doing that, London and all England are distorting the facts just as badly in order to get enlistments. The war is going to have a bad effect on them, but the war looks now as if there was no way to stop it save fighting it out. The stories of Americans and other foreigners being mistreated in the beligertain countries are mostly untrue and when outrages do happen it is usually the fault of the victims." Athlete Held in Europe Iowa athletic authorities have just received word from Mortimer Blackburn, the big tackle of the 1913 freshman team there. That he has been involved in a number of war and will be unable to reach this country before the middle of October. BABES TAKE FIRST STEP Committee of Ten Appointed to Organize Class—Will Also Work for Honor Spirit The freshman, or baby class of the University took its first step at Myers Hall Saturday night. There it met a freshman in a suit, a ault, at the freshman show-low. At the close of the regular program, which was a good one, Prof. U. G. Mitchell suggested that Con Hoffman, secretary of the Y. M. C. A., Vic Bottomly, president of the "Student Council and Geo. O. Boster, registrar for the freshman class," select a committee of ten from the freshman class to consider the question, if there be such, of the honor sentiment for the first-year class, and to present definite plans for the creation and promotion of the honor spirit among the individual members of the freshmen, acted upon unanimously. This committee was later intrusted with the organization of the class. The men chosen by the committee were Neal Ireland, Warren Wattles, D. J. Kabler, Carl Wilhelmson, R. C. Charles, Ed. Todd, George A. Bell, Charles Boughton, A. B. Tourey, and F. W. Richer. Try-out for the University Glee Club will be held at North College, Tuesday night, September 22, at seven o'clock. This committee of ten will meet at clock tomorrow in Myers Hall to begin "BAT THE RAT" WEEK SET ASIDE DEAN CRUMBINE It is estimated that the rat population in Kansas is considerably in excess of the human population and that it costs $2.00 a year per rat to keep him, in grain, groceries, young chicks, eggs, meat, vegetables, and other delicacies of which he is fond, by 1960. He is a menace to the public health as a carrier of disease and of parasites, such as bubonic plague, ape-worm, round-worm, liver flukes, lee, and other dangerous things. ... ... ... ... ... ... ... Dean S. J. Crumbine, of the School of Medicine, has set aside the first week of October as a "Bat the Rat" week in Kansas. MAY RAISE ATHLETIC REQUIREMENT AT K.U Board Is Working on Plan Whereby 30 Hours Will Be Minimum TO EQUALIZE VALLEY TEAMS Nebraska and Missouri Have Lower Requirements Than K. U. and Other Schools Higher Requirements for athletic work may be raised, and the schools in the Missouri Valley placed on an equal basis, if the plans of the Athletic Board work out. In the past Nebraska and Missouri have required much less work from their athletes than has K. U. while Ames, Washington and Drake have exceeded Kansas in their requirements. The fact that those who adopted, will slightly raise Kansas' standard and will put all the schools in the Missouri Valley on a common basis. The requirements as they will stand if approved by the Board will be as follows: Students in all sports must have completed this requirement in the preceding year to make them eligible to any athletic work. But they may drop 2 hours work during the week they are actively engaged in athletics. Courses requiring over 30 hours a year admit of deficiency of 3 hours during the semester and courses under 30 hours, one hour. These deficiencies must, in every case be made up in the following semester. The requirement under the present rule provides for 28 hours. CROWD SWARMS GYM AT FIRST RECEPTION Students and Faculty Shake Hands in Thirteenth All-University Affair Seven hundred students and faculty members of the University attended the All-University reception on Saturday, November 6. The Woman's Association of the University from 8 to 10 o'clock in Robinson Gymnasium Saturday night. Chancellor and Mrs. Strong and Mrs. P., F. E. Kester received the guests. All students present were given the opportunity to mingle with the others and to get acquainted with them. From the appearance it seemed that the opportunity was grasped. There was a constant visiting among the guests. The first Al-University affair ever held at the University was after Chancellor Strong came to the University in 1902. Since that time the affair has been an annual one. The affair so that students and faculty have an opportunity to know each other better. Senior Chemical Injured Russell Bracewell, a senior in the School of Engineering, suffered severe injuries last Monday in a fall from the roof of a barn and home in Kincaid. His knee cap was shattered. The K. U. Dames will meet Wednesday afternoon at 3:00 p.m. m. at the home of Mrs. Stewart, 1028 Miss Stewart. All students' wives are invited to be present at this meeting. Plans for the coming year will be discussed. Dames to Meet Prof. R. A. Schweiger will speak to the Y. W. C. A. Tuesday afternoon at 4:30 in Myers Hall. All freshman girls are extended an invitation. To Talk to Girls Senior Chemical Injured OLD GRADS IN JAYHAWKER Pictures and Write-ups of Former Students Will Appear First Time in This Year's Book Pictures and write-ups of old grades of K. U. will appear for the first time in the 1915 Jayhawker, according to announcement made this morning by Blair Hackney, business manager of this year's book. This feature has been used for some time in the Michigan annual. Bids for emeritus writing are receiving and contracts will be let in October. ENROLL BY MAIL IS NEWEST CAMPUS PLAN Registrar Foster to Do Away With Rush at First of Year 1914. What would you think if when you returned to Lawrence next fall to enter school you could say to yourself, "Well I shall not have to go through that horrible ordeal which was known as enrolling?" "Well, this is exactly what may happen if the plans of Registrar Geo. O. Foster materialize. - Registrar Foster believes that all the enrolling should be done by the students before they arrive in Lawrence. The enrolling, he believes, should be done entirely by mail. It is pointed out that at the University of Minnesota where 6900 students are enrolled each year the work is done by mail-before the students arrive at the university. If 6000 students can be enrolled through the UST, then they should be no reason why 3000 should not be handled in the same way. One of the first things that will be necessary will be a catalog more definite than it is at this time. It seems that the catalog at this time are not off the press until obsolete. In addition, the catalog would be arranged so that it would be good for the entire year following its publication. It the catalogs were made so that it was definite the enrolling of all the upperclassmen might be done before they leave in the spring for the fall. The student would be done by the student by simply filling out a card and depositing it at some central office. This would leave only the freshmen for the next year to be enrolled after they arrived at Lawrence. The present method of enroling is that has grown up with the development of the Board order to make any change unless the faculty chooses to make the change voluntarily. Calbeck in Hospital John Calbeke who had a scholarship in chemistry in the University last year is now in Winfield taking treatment from a specialist. He spent the summer as a cashier for the Redpath-Horner chauqua company, and will be in his father's store in Pratt this winter. The Student Council will meet to tomorrow night at the Student Union. Many problems that confronted last year's council will be up for consideration at the first meeting. Among other questions will be that of the freshman caps and students' social affairs. Council Meets Tomorrow Night Chester S. Cassingham, K. U.'14, and Muriel Whitman, a student in the School of Fine Arts last year. They were married in 2009. Mr. and Mrs. Cassingham will make their home in Leavenworth where Mr. Cassingham is in business. Wilard T. Evans, a student at Leeland Stanford University arrived at that school last week, carrying with him a copy of the White Book, in which the Kaiser justified the Germans for going to war. Has Copy of White Book DROP IN ANY UNIVERSITY MAIL BOX Please put me down for a year's subscription to the University Daily Kanman for which I agree to pay $2.50 before Nov. 1, 1914. "AINT" MAY SPELL DISASTER TO STUDENTS The University Daily Kansan: . Dean Templin Sends Sad Message Signed. Address DROP IN ANY UNIVERSITY MAIL BOX. Mrs. Brows has also been appointed chairman of the faculty committee interests and will have charge of all student social affairs of the year. Are you adducted to saying "aint, that him or or "this here Frenchclasstype?" If you are thenadductnow, while the school year isyoung and the October quizzes far away. Dean Olin Templin has sounded awarning to all upperclassmen, in which he states that whenever any student deficient in his use of the Englishregistrar will notify the student of the fact and warn him that he is in danger of losing his credit in Freshman Rhetoric. Whenever two or more of a student's instructors knowledgeable about the registrar willnotify the Englishof that fact and will cancel thestudent'scredit for Rhetoric. Thedepartment may veto the action of theregistrar whenever it is apparent that such cancellation of credit wouldBut unless the department thusinterrogate the student willbe required to enroll in the subjectat his earliest opportunity. 274 APPLY FOR JOBS AT Y. M. C. A. BUREAU Y. M. C. A. INFORMATION BUREAUE POPULAR PLACE MRS. EUSTACE BROWN Mrs. Eustace Brown, advisor of women, has laid plans this year for the formation of a Woman's Roaming House Association in which rules of self-government will be made by the women in the houses. Announcement of the plans for the formation will be made later. During the past week 274 applications have been received at the University Y. M. C. A. for employment and fifty-nine of these satisfied by regular work jobs. During the same time there were information answered, the number of applications for work is about double that of last year and the number of men placed a few less than that of last year. It seems that this year all the people that had to employ students for work expected them at the close of the school last year so that Secretary Hoffman has comparatively few places to fill. "Mother of Girls" Founder of Rooming House Ass'n A. E. BURNS The University Y. M. C. A. Information Bureau was a very busy place the first week of school. During that period of time nearly twelve kinds of information were applied to various kind of information, beginning day with five hundred and dwindled to but a few calls Friday. Most of the calls were concerning rooming places, all of which were satisfied. In fact on Friday many rooms were occupied by people. The freshmen are fast learning to call on "Con" for their wants. Administrators to Meet Classes Have Financial Advice Purdue University has adopted a plan by which each class in the school shall have a financial advisor from faculty who is to pass on all expenditures of the facers. The reason for such action is the waste and mismanagement of the finances of past classes. Administrators to Meet The first meeting of the admini- tative office of School o Education will be held in Room 111 Fraser Hall at 7 o'clock tonight. GRAND PARADE WILL OPEN 1914 SEASON Line Will Begin at South Park and March to McCook BAND TO LEAD PROCESSION Crimson and Blue to go Before All Others—Reservations Made for Walking Students Headed by the band lustily playing "Crimson and Blue," University of Kansas moleskin warriors will roll along triumphantly in auto-trucks from South Park to McCook field, to onusher in the 1914 football game, to a parade will attract warden students, a attitude of small boys and curbstone spectators. Even staid professors will have buzz chariots if they desire to appear in the procession. The opening game is to be with William Curtis, regarded as a practice contest but not an actual contest the first, hunt down them a The parade will be made up of various sections. First appears the University football team in an auto truck, and after them the K U. u队 in a like vehicle. Then comes Chancellor Frank Strong and the Board of Administration in autos, followed by the president of William Jeyell, Governor George H. Holges, and staff. Mayor W. J. Francisco and the city commissioners will be accompanied by newspaper men of the city and will include the Athletic Board, deans, and the schools, and the Student Council. Following the main part of the procession will be found a section open to the merchants of the city and anyone else who wishes to ride in a machine. The merchants will give way Chalk from the students on foot. On arrival of the students come the high school pupils and ward students, who have received special invitation and rates of admission. The ward students will go in free. Reservation will be available for the students that they may have places if they come late in their walking. 'Automobiles will also have a special offer' as the students are promised a separate block for their cheers and songs. The faculty is to have a place of honor set aside for its special use. No smoking will be allowed in the bleachers, according to Manager W. O. Hamilton. He says the bleachers must be as clean a place as there are. UU. In accordance with this decision he has set aside a place for the women of the University sorority, club, or other organization may have reservation made for it if it makes arrangements ahead of the game. DID EVE EAT THE APPLE? Problems in Genesis to Engage Attention of Students of Class in Hebrew Under Dr. Braden Was Eve made from Adam's rib? Was the world created in seven days? These and a thousand other questions will be discussed in the class Hebrew this semester under Dr. Braden, new head of the Bible school at the University. Dr. Braden said this morning that a score of students, most of them ministerial, desired to study Hebrew and that he has decided to use the book of Genesis with study Hebrew and "The Elements in Hebrew," and "The Hebrew and Manual," both by W. R. Harper. The Rev. Stanton Olinger, head of the Presbyterian chair in Westminster Hall, will offer a course in Bible science to open in two weeks. If the course is not offered, the course in Hebrew, the class will be divided and Doctor Olinger will teach one section. Former Instructor Here Other Instructor Here Miss Edith Pinney, former instructor in the department of zoology and graduate of the University, is in Lawrence enlisted to be Wilson. She will leave shortly for Bryn Mawr where she takes up her duties in the department of zoology there. Visits at Pi U. House Murray G. Hill, A. M. '07, professor of rhetoric at Western Reserve University spent Friday at the Pi Upsion house. Send the Daily Kansan home. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Official student paper of the University of Kansas EDITORIAL STAFF John Gleeson JOHN GLEESON Editor-in-Chief Massachusetts GALVIN LAMSER Spirit Editor BUSINESS STAFF W. DYNES Business Manager CINEMAS CINEMAS STUDIOS VENTANT Advertising Manager REPORTORIAL STAFF LASON HERBERT HILTON BURKE HUMMER GLEATON GLUCKTON CHARLES SWEET CHAMBERSTONE RIX MILLER RIX MILLER Frank B. HENDERSON BRIAN B. HENDERSON HELEN HAYER JENNIE HAYER M.S. C.J. SAMS CHESTER LATTERSON CHESTER LATTERSON Entered as second-class mail master Sep- ter 2015. Entered as first-class mail de- cember. Kansas, under the act of March 3 Phone, Bell K. U. 25 Address all communications to UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Lawrence, Kansas. Subscription price $2.50 per year in ad- dress apparel form, $1.50 Published in the afternoon five times on press. From the press of the department. From the press of the department. The Daily Kavanan aims to picture the kind of students who go to karachi to go further than merely printing the news by starting up a student's ID card. The student is not supposed to be clean; to be cheerful; to charishtastic; to be creative; to be problem-solvers to water headers; in all, to絮起诉 the best of its ability the wisdom of the student. MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 1914 He that plants thorns must never expect to gather roses. -Pilpay. "THIS IS THE LIFE" Nothing is more ridiculous than the clothing advertisements run in almost every current magazine at this season of the year, portraying the college student in a striped blazer, a mandolin on his arm, and a curved-stemmed pipe, either very bull doggish, or abnormally long, in his mouth, and a half a dozen or more similarly equipped comrades lolling about the room in attitudes of ease. Usually they are singing. Pennants adorn the walls. This picture is a long long way from the truth, at K. U., at least. There is very little of the "rah-rah-college-bay" spirit, and what little there is stands in small favor. Students are here for business, and hard work. Smiling chapel speakers assure students they are having the best time in their lives—they are not always believed. And the highly colored posters always portrait impossible situations, and impossible fashions. Students do not come up on Mt. Oread for four years of gay and festive living—they come for work, and if they do not work, they cannot stay. STUDENT CHAPEL The chapel question is still hanging fire. None of the plans yet tried have proved satisfactory—probably the 11 o'clock level of any. The faculty has been unable to evolve a scheme that will induce students to come to chapel—why not let the students themselves, through the Student Council, have charge for a while? In fact, that is about the only plan that remains. One thing is certain, a good chapel attendance cannot be expected when the hour is 11 o'clock. The temptation to stroll down off the Hill is a little too strong, in spite of the fact that last year the chapel committee had many excellent speakers. THE STUDENT UNION If K. U. is to have a permanent Student Union, the time to start is now. Plans were begun last year by the retired Council, and they must be vigorously pushed if anything is to be accomplished. The question must not be allowed to be forgotten. It is a huge task to start the project on a successful course, but once started, it will be easy. Every student can help the Council by joining the temporary Union, for unless it is well-supported, it will look as if the students do not want a new Union, which is far from correct. GET ACQUAINTED The activities of the Y. M. C. A. and Y. W. C. A., this year have done much to establish acquaintance between the new students and the old, but they cannot do all. Everyone is a little homesick once in a while, whether he admits it or not, and freshmen are particularly subject to the malady. A word or two from an older student, or a little friendly advice, does much to make a freshman feel at home, and it is not much effort. "A pigski filled with air and rubber, twenty-two men of bone and blubber, a kick and a pun-t—a tackle and grunt—a shin to swell and crowd to yell, a nose to bleed and a coach to heed—that's football." -Topeka State Journal. It is not probable that Captain Jones, of the University K. N. G., will be swamped with applications for a place in the ranks at the present time, in spite of his call for more men. Students should patronize none but bonded pantatoriums. It is safest, in the first place, and then the measure is a Student Council idea, and a good one, and deserves support. Dean Crumbine has announced a "Bat the Rat" day. What will become of the cats? Arthur Floyd Christopher Columbus Saunders has enrolled. By Willard Wattles Have you heard the shiver of bodies boiled War Chest on crashing chest When thigh-bones snap like pistol shots And men meet breast to breast? And men meet bread to lunch. Have you seen the feet of a madden ded—wet with the wine of war And wondered in crushing a come What you had killed him for? Ever the sweep of the wave of men be the eel of lurged death And frozen face like cockle-shells Where the breaker billoweth. The out-flung arm of a down-lipped boy With his throat shot through: With his throat shot through, Perhaps his shoulder brushed your Or be slept last night by you. I have not shouldered the stick of death Nor hoisted a haversack, Nor slept at night in a swimming ditch With a tap pain, we are seen. Yet I have heard the bugle-call My fathers listened for. And seen the ebony hovy spurt red in the harvest: fields of war. Men say the battle-shocks will en- hold their dead corps ease. Men say the battle-shacks end. Nationally weaker, the nations knelt their welded hands. In common-grounded cace: There is no good, from a baby's birth To the overthrow of Spain That was not forged in sorrow's fire That was not forged in sorrow's fire And purified by pain. You cannot charge the written scroll. Ever must moaning women quail And man make war on man; Out of strength must sweetness come; I thank my fathers for what they naid We weld the metal and forge the key To enter Paradise. On the altar or the years, I thank the women who gave me In agony and tears; I could not wish that life should ask One payment less from me, And the burble-call of the arming The Inflated A. B. And the bugle-call of the arming hosts In the following excerpts from an article in the Nation, vocationalism and nationalism. hosts Sets their old passion free. agony and tears; Not long ago a member of one of our university faculties, while seeking some recent literature in mathematical logic, discovered to his amazement that the room in which he had expected to find the mathematical seminary was equipped with six gas ranges and a complete outfit of pots and pans. Continuing his search, he was confronted in the next room by a number of the owner's "forms." for the note below he found one of the designer's business classes in the art of bookkeeping. And not far away one class was receiving instruction in the elements of machine-work, another in the elements of joinery. All of these were courses in "the college of liberal arts"; and in all of them the students, with a satisfaction not unmixed with humor, were receiving credit towards the degree of bachelor of arts. In this connection we learn that one of the most distinguished state universities, where credit is given for football, rejoices in the possession of a hat-trimming expert. Clearly, this is an academic age. In the state of Michigan one cannot settle comfortably into a barber's chair without such a fortitude that the man behind the chair has successfully passed his canonical examinations—though not yet in the State university. But it is only a question of time when the tonoral art will take its place among the other liberal arts and when, in decency and consistency, it few distinguished members of this, as well as of the gastrocnemic and sartorian disciplines, have been from time to time with the honorary degree of doctor of laws. Clearly nothing is more important than a fine intelligence in the home, but so far there is no evidence to show that such intelligence is developed through domestic science. It is a little hard to believe that any laboratory of cooking can be informed in informing power with that to be gathered in a well-ordered kitchen in a household that respects good food. The real question, however, is whether proficiency in the arts of cooking, or sewing, or joinery, or what not (and why not, then, the tonsorial art?)-a proficiency, we must remember, which is likely to be surpassed by that of men and women of little education who have practiced the crafts—is to count towards a degree which by common consent has been reserved hitherto for the recognition of liberal culture? In the state universities, which are mainly responsible for enrolling domestic science among the instruments of culture, its purpose is frankly that of advertising, of "make people university strong with the people." The truth is that, amidst all the emphasis laid upon practical ends and all the scorn both of the humanities and of pure science, vocationalism is ill at ease without the social stamp of culture. In estimating the vocational motive to which our colleges, and first among them the supposedly democratic state universities, are now appealing for an increase of numbers, this element must not be ignored. The more we wry, while ministering, as they profess, to the most varied needs, they prefer to recognize no distinction either of value or of character in undergraduate studies. Not an honest democracy, where each subject and each man stands squarely upon his own feet, is the end in view, but a spurious aristocracy. Kansas Classics FABLES UP TO DATE Bv T. A. McNeal The University of Chicago is building a Classics Building and Rosenwald Hall for geology and geography, each to cost about a quarter of a million, and Ida Noyes Hall, a club house for women. A Kansas farmer, who was a lover of nature, and also a keeper of sheep was walking through a pasture lot and stoope ddown, to pick a tender flower. And as the agriculturist topped up to clot the blossom, a large and vigorous ram, allured by the prospect, took a running sheep hitting the farmer near the base of the spine, turning a somersaulted ampelled him about two rods through the atmosphere. For an hour or two after that the ram had considerable fun talking the thing over with a crowd of sheep and describing the manner in which he had knocked out the agriculturist. But the following day the farmer returned with a gun and killed the ram and dressed him and sold his carcass to the uniformed for lamb chops. And as one of the ram's companions saw the farmer carrying the remains of her former consort, she said to a sleek lamb that was taking some gymnastic exercises near by: "My son, I observe that you show a disposition to be unduly gay. Take warning from the fate of your father, and remember that there is such a thing as carrying a joke too far." The University of Illinois has a great hall capable of saitening 11,000. It is used for farmers' conventions, as an armory, and for indoor grifon and diamond. New buildings recently completed or in progress include an educational building, a new museum wing to the Commerce building, an addition of stock room to the library, and a new observatory. The University of Oregon has a new hundred thousand dollar administration building, and has received a gift of twenty acres for the building of a new medical building and a hospital. Subscribe now for the Daily Kansa. Send the Daily Kansan home. Scenes the Camera Man Saw GIRLS GYMNASIUM CLASSES EACH WEIGHBED 134 AND WANTED TO GO ON SQUAD Three men came into the office of Dr. James Naismith, professor of physical education, one day last week. On examining them Doctor Naismith found that each of the weighed 134 pounds and each was an applicant for a place on the Jayhawker squad. The General Education board has given two hundred thousand dollars each to Barnard and Radcliff. Bowdin received a bequest of half a million dollars from the estate of Edwin B. Smith, former assistant attorney-general of the United States. ARROW COLAR Cluet, Feebody & Co., Inc. Makers NORMAN "NORMAN" The NEWEST Cluett, Peabody & Co., Ino. Makers Want Adds WANTED -Student to share nice room, modern home, 1312 Ohio; also member faculty for fine large bedroom, same number. 4-3* FOR RENT—Nice furnished room for girls. Corner 9th and La. St. Bell 2452. Mail your want add with 25 cents enclosed to the Daily Kanan—want added. FOR RENT - A desirable room for young ladies at 1408 Tenn. 4-3* FOR RENT—Furnished front room Inquire 1704 Tennessee. FOR RENT—One double room, $10 per month; one room, single $5. double $6; one small single $3. Student Union—Adv. LOST-One pair of eye glasses. Return to Kansan office. Reward. SEASON AT STANFORD FOR RENT—Eight fine rooms, well lighted and heated, exceptionally well lighted, exceptionally fine frat rooms. J. M. Neville, office in Stubbs' building, across from Court House. Bell 384. BELASCO PLAY OPENS SEASON 45 STANFORD "Sword and Sandals," will usher in the dramatic season of 1914-15 at Leland Stanford University September 25, with a presentation of "Men and Women," in the Assembly Hall there. The best talent at Stanford is represented in the cast of this Belasco-DeMille drama, all of the players having had previous experience in dramatics. Yale received a fund of $500,000 in memory of Mrs. Anna H. R. Lauder as a contribution towards the amount of $2,000,000 which is being raised for the Yale medical school. PROFESSIONAL CARDS W. C. M. CONNELL, Physician and Surgeon. Office, 819 Mass. St. Bel 399, Home 9342, Residence, 1340 Tenn. St. Bell 1023, Home 639. J. F. BROCK, Optometrist and Specifier Office 802 Mass. St. D. phone 695 HARRY REDING, M. D. Eye, ear nose and throat. Glasses fitted Office, F. A. A. Bldg. Phones, Belt 513, Home 512. G. A. HAMMAN, M. D. Eye, ear and throat specialist. Glasses fitted Satisfaction Guaranteed. Dick Bldg. DR. H. W HAYNE, Oculist, Lawrence, Kansas. J. W. O'BRYAN, Dentist. Over Willson's Drug Store. Bell Phone 507. J. R. BECHTELT, M. D, D. O. 883 Massachusetts Street. Both phones, office and residence. G. W. JONES, A. M. M., D. Diseases of the stomach, surgery and gynecology. Suite 1, F. A. A. Bldg. Residence, 1201 Ohio St. Both phones, 35. DR. H. T. JONES, Room 12, F. A. A. Bldg. Residence 1130 Tenn. Phones 211. DR. H. L. CHAMBERS, Office over Squire's Studio. Both phones. S. T. GILLISPIE, M. D. Office carrier Vernant and Warren St. Residence 728 Ind. Phones 596. CLASSIFIED Ladies Tailor. Mrs. Emma Brown-Schulz, Dressmaking and Ladies Tailoring in The Mona Lisa 913 Monroe St. Next door to Anderson's Bakery. MONTANA AGGIE CHOOL HAS RECORD ATTENDANCY With but the first three days registration completed over 12 freshmen have enrolled in what we undoubtedly prove to be the larger class that has ever enrolled in t Montana State Agricultural Colleer The largest previous class was th the present sophomores who reached a total enrollment of 475 and thus the fourth of registration last year the enrollment was little over 70. Wednesday evenin the total enrollment in the four classes was over 260. Last year that time the enrollment was 225. Send the Daily Kansan home MRS ELISLON, Dressmaking and Ladies' Tailoring. Evening gown specialty, 1032 Vermont. Phone Be 2411 West. Mrs. M. Brockelsby-Wilson, Kiester College of ladies tailoring and dress making. Over 909 Mass. St. Bo 2109. ED. W. PARSONS, Engra Watchman and Jeweler. Diano and Jewelry. Bell Phone 717. Mass. Jewelers Plumbers PHONE KENNEDY PLUMB CO., for gas goods and Mazda lar 937 Mass. Phones 658. Hair Dressers HAIRDRESSING, shampooing, and facial massage, shampooing, goods, "Marinello" toilet preparations. For appointment calls 1372. Home 51. The Select B Dressing Shop, 927 Mass. St. Barber Shops Barber Shops Go where they all go J. C. HOUCK 913 Mass. GO WHERE you get the Best. Bob Steiner's Barber Shop, 838 Mass St., Cafes For a good clean place to eat, where you don't get "xyped" go to the MARKET CAFE, Room 1, Perkins Building. Millinery WANTED—Ladies to call at Mrs. McCormick's up-to-date millinery parlors to inspect our new line of hats. 831 Mass St. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN TODAY ONLY---VARSITY Watkins National Bank Loyd Ware Theatre, Daniel Frohman Famous Player Production from the book and play "The Little Gray Lady," featuring Broadway's popular star--Jane Grey--and notable cast. Piano and pipe organ music, drums and effects. Capital $100,000 Surplus and profits $100,000 The Student Depository K. U. Barber Shop and Bath Rooms The Only Electric Mass- age Machine in the City 277 Massachusetts Street Razor House and Exchanged W. F. Weise, Prop. Order your Groceries FROM — W. A. GUENTHER Staple and Fancy Groceries 721 Mass. St. — Phone 4 228 A. A. Biglow Grocery Special Rates to Fraternities and Clubs The Best of Goods 013 Mass. Phone 502 Swede Wilson's For Billiards Phones 540 Frank Koch "The Tailor" Full Line of Fall Suitings R. E. Protsch The Students' Tailor A. G. ALRICH PRINTING Binding, Copper Plate Printing, Rubber Stamps, Engraving, Die Embossing, Seals, Badge. 744 MASS. STREET S. H. McCURDY MORGAN'S 1021 MASS. ST. PHONES 212 Our stock is all new and fresh. Our prices are as low as any. We invite the club and fraternity trade to call. MEALS and SHORT ORDERS Sunday Dinners a Specialty Ice Cream Soda Confectionery SPECIAL MEAL TICKETS 1345 Mass. St. Bell 262 Merchants National Bank Kane Cash Grocery Rear Popies State Bank Clean, Fresh Stock We buy for cash and sell for cash. Boarding car hire. Try us BOTH PHONES Remember That Schulz makes Clothes at 913 Mass. St. Lawrence, Kas. The old reliable K. U. Barber Shop welcomes you fellows back and will be pleased to meet you and new recruits at the old stand, 727 Mass. St. Call and get acquainted. Adv. Subscribe now for the Daily Kansan Company M. Which Won State Regimental Shoot THE YEAR OF THE YOUNG BUILDER XII COMPANY M PUTS MEN ON REGIMENTAL TEAMS The current issue of the Inland Printer carries a plan for the keeping of time for the employees in printing plants worked out by W. B. Brown, superintendent of the department of printing at the University. The plan provides for sets of four sheets each, one for each of the four departments of the printing plant on which the time spent in work is shown by the simple method of drawing a pencil through a 'number of lines. The keeping of time accurately and without too much waste is a problem in the printing plants of the country. In the larger offices the time clock can be used successfully, but in the smaller ones some such plan as Mr. Brown has worked out must be used. Mr. Brown has worked out such ideas for twelve years and says that this is his best. The rifle team of Company M, from K. U, besides taking first place in the state placed three men on the regimental team, and two on the state team. In the individual match Corporal Daum, with a score of 289, took seventh place on the state team, and third place on the regiment. Seargent Gold, with a score of 75, took fourth place on the state team. These men because of the University opening were unable to stay for the whole shoot. NOW LITTLE CHANCE FOR LABELLING OF BUILDINGS At present there seems to be little chance to have names placed on the various buildings. The Board of Administration early last spring issued an order that the names should be placed on buildings as such, and Professor Goldsmith would prepare the proper drawings. But Professor Goldsmith has so much work that he says it will be impossible for him to make the drawings. A picture of Uncle Jimmy Green eighteen inches in length and a foot wide has been presented to the Student Union by Con Squires. It will be fung some place in the club where all the students may see it. Squires Makes Present K. U. MAN OUTLINES PLAN IN THE INLAND PRINTER MAY ENROLL ALL THE WEEK Members of Faculty Will Meet Students at Specified Times and Make Out Schedules Dykstra, daily at 4:30 in Ad. 209; Walker, Monday, Wednesday, and Thursday at 10 to 12 in Fraser 202; Sterling at 10 daily in Fraser 204. Those students who were so unfortunate as to not get through the enrolling lines up to this time will still be given a chance. This week's enrollment will be through advisers. There will be six members of the University faculty as advisers and counselors. The six with their office hours are: Stanton, daily; 3:30 in Fraser 104; Sisson, Monday, Wednesday and Friday at 10 and Tuesday and Thursday at 11 in Fraser 104: WILL PROMOTE BIBLE STUDY With the promotion of Bible study in the student body as the central men's Christian Associations of the of the Young Men's and Young Woman's Christian Associations of the University conferred yesterday afternoon in Myers Hall. Mr. Harrison Elliot, national committeeman of the Y. M. C. A. was present and gave brief explanations for the initial steps in this work. Mr. Elliot has been in Lawrence since Saturday and will be here until tomorrow for the purpose of seeing Bible study furthered. Representatives of Young Men's and Young Women's Christian Associations Meet to Make Plans DEBATING SOCIETY TO HOLD MEETING TONIGHT The first meeting of the University Debating Society will be held tonight in Praser Hall at 7:30. There will be presentations of officers and an informal debate. A new sidewalk which will connect Oread and Mississippi is being put in south of the Pi Beta Phi house. Subscribe now for the Daily Kansan Out of 225 freshmen women who have registered 180 have been found and cared for by the Big Sisters. The first-year women were taken to the reception at the Gymnasium Saturday night and the Big Sisters saw to it that they became acquainted with the university. Yesterday they were taken to the churches of the city by these upperclassmen. COMPANY M, K, N, G, WINS METCALF TROPHY AT SHOOT BIG SISTERS CARE FOR 180 OUT OF 225 FRESHMEN The Big Sisters will give a tea to the freshmen women next Friday afternoon in the Gymnasium and will issue a special invitation to every freshman woman. During the year the Big Sisters will give entertainments about once a month for the freshmen. Special to the Daily Kansan. Spectator, Tampa Bay Rip Ramond, Fort Riley, Kan. In a closely contested rifle match here during the last days of the week the K. U. company, Company M, First infantry, Kansas National Guard, won first place in the state shoot and thereby the Metcalf trophy. The following is the score of the K. U. team: Seargart Todd, 218; Segrarte Sterling, 114; Corbett Brisk, 216; Corpora Daum, 202. In the contest for the state队 Lieutenant Utterback stands second at present. Three K. U. men won places on the regimental team. COACH YOST WILL HAVE TWO KICKERS ON SQUAD That Yost, the old Kansas coach, will have at least two kickers in his squad this fall was demonstrated last week when Catlette, famous Michigan halfback on the varsity last year, stepped out in the afternoon drill and sent away some spirals which equalled in distance the best which Spawn has been showing thus far. It developed that Catlette has been practicing kicking all summer long on the Dakota priaries, with the result that he now is ready to do his share of the booting for Yost. C. W. Steeper & Co. Cleaning, Pressing and Remodeling Club For up-to-date men and women 10 years experience. Satisfactory results Satisfaction Arl H. Friedk, Kirsti J. Wilchmeyer, Agn- tia M. Mills A small fire occurred in the coal bunkers of the engine house of the power plant Saturday night. It was discovered by the night watchman and extinguished before much damage was done. Coal in Bunker Blazes University Meat Market WILL JOHNS, Proprietor We'll be glad to have your business. Both Phones 81 1023 Mass. St. Student Headquarters SANITARY CAFE SANITARY CAFE A Nice Clean Place to Eat LUNCHES - SHORT ORDER Across from Kress Store 916 Mass. A Good Place to Eat at Anderson's Old Stand Johnson & Tuttle Proprietors 715 MASSACHUSETTS STREET Francisco & Co. F. B. McGOLLOCH Livery, Hacks and Garage 812 VERMONT STREET Phone 139 Druggist THE REXALL STORE 847 Mass. St. On the Corner KAW VALLEY ICE CREAM CO. 470 Either Phone 10 W.9th We specialize on clubs and fraternity orders. Let us handle that next order. ICE CREAM AND OYSTERS THE CITIZENS STATE BANK Let us handle your accounts. DEPOSITS GUARANTEED The Convenient Bank 824 Mass. St. 3 per cent Paid on Savings CLARK LEANS LOTHES PUNCH $1.50 TEN TICKET PRESSES Phone 355 CLARK LEANS LOTHES All Pressing Done by Hand 730 Mass St. CLARK LEANS LOTHES CLARK LEANS LOTHES FOR TAXICAB Call Either PHONE 100 PEERLESS GARAGE We like to do little jobs of repairing. Lenses duplicated. Gustafson The College Jeweler Frat Novelties a d College Emblems. Quality Jewelry 1922 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN T THE "GABY" An exclusive new suit model for fall 1914. A lively style that appeals to young men. A 3-button. English. no-pad, soft-roll coat with pick-up cuffs on sleeves and slanting pocket flaps. Athletic vest with softroll lapel collar. Straight cut narrow trousers. Designed by "Society Brand." Price $25. Let us show it to you tomorrow. Ober's HEAD-TO-FOOT OUTFITTERS DANCE Why Perspire and be uncomfortable "NITH" NON-PERSPIRE is guaranteed to stop perspiring beneath the arms. HARMLESS — TWO ODORS: VIOLET AND ROSE PRICE 50c PRICE 50c New Football Rules The following is a brief of the new football rules of the season. They will be run in the Daily Kansan for two issues that students may understand the difference in the plays this fall. The last privilege of the head coach has been removed and in 1914 no one will be allowed to walk up and down the sidelines. Those who witnessed one of the principal games of 1913 will remember the safety made by a player caused by his failure to diagnose between an ordinary point in the field of play and a free-kick goal. In order to have no complication of this kind arise again, the rules have been altered so that a free-kick hitting the goal post and bounding back into the field of play becomes automatically a touchback as though it was an ordinary punt. The Field Judge is to be brought back (optional) to act as assistant to the field judge. games. This was voted by the Rules Committee, although, on account of the expense in small games, the addition of this official is left optional. The words "running into the fullback after a kick" have been changed to "roughing the kicker", etc., in the rules. You are not trying and trying to block the kick will not necessarily incur a penalty if he happens to run against the kicker. It has also been determined that the receiver of a forward pass in the end zone, regardless of the position of his hands and the ball, must have both his feet within the end line or side line to make the catch legal. A forward pass that goes out of bounds either on a fly, direct, or after being touched by an eligible play if either side. goes to the opponents. A rule is also added putting a penalty to a man who robss a man One of the most important changes is the cutting out of the kick-out. After a touchback or a safety, the ball will be as berrimaged on the 20-yard line. Another important alteration is designed to prevent a man taking ad- ENTHUSIASM DISPELS ALL JAYHAWKER DOUBT Gridiron Punts and Passes Spirit of Encouragement Meets Kansas Football Mentors' Efforts MUD CUTS DOWN ATTENDANCE Weather Affects Number of Men Turning Out—Scrimimage Necessary Before Line-up is Announced The first week of practice on McCook field has changed a feeling of doubt and uncertainty to a sentiment of encouragement and enthusiasm among the Jayhawker football players and students. Coach Wheaton and assistant coach Bond have turned the worm and Kansas prospects are a hundred per cent better today than they were a week ago. The rain and mud cut down the practice attendance early in the week but since Wednesday the mentors have had a willing squad at their disposal and, according to the old players, Coach Wheaton is whipping his squid into shape slowly but carefully. Anyway, he falls on the ball, punched kicked, passed and practiced every kink in the football game except the rough work, which will come the latter part of this week or early next. A few days of scrimmage and signal practice will be necessary before the dopsters can guess at the opponents' moves. The coaches are emphasizing the correct method of kicking and have several promising toe manipulators. vantage of the rules when he finds himself attempting to make a forward pass and forced back. The trick was cleverly worked last year by throwing the ball to the ground and thus, by the loss of a down, having the ball go back to the place where it was scrimmaged. This is now prevented by a 10-yard penalty, measured from the point in his delivery, minus three thus intentionally grounding a forward pass. In the case of a player out of bounds when the ball was put in play, the play is not made over again, but a 5-yard penalty is exacted. "Hiking" on the side lines is classed under appropriate code4. "Hiking" on the side lines is classed under unsportsmanlike conduct. Teams will no longer be allowed to encroach upon the neutral zone in making shift plays. As soon as either eum is up, as soon as shift must be made without a player passing into this neutral zone under a penalty of five yards. A clause is inserted to include "tripping by hand" under the rule of tripping which formerly only covered tripping with the foot and leg. Tackle Dummies Today Two new tackling dummies will be set up this afternoon and the football squad will start tackling today. With three dummies for a squad of 50 players, the Kannas will get plenty of practice in upsetting opponents. Every member of the Jayhawker football squad has been given a 1914 cap, and his name is never until he is familiar with the code of gridiron laws therein. Must Study Rules Shrorthand and Typewriting Poormarseblin and Spelling Poormarseblin and Spelling Fenmanship spelling In fact, a commercial trained train can be had at Lawrence Business College To the Faculty and Students STUDENTS We will have an expert presser on Saturday, 20th, so bring in your suits Friday in order that we can dust and clean them ready for Sunday. Prince Albert suits and ladies' skirts a specialty. Don't forget the place, Shop Shop and Paintarium, 1342 Ohio. We generate satisfaction—Adv. Did you ever stop to think how much more reasonably you can board on a meal ticket than any other way? You can! More yet. You get the very best, get what you want when you want it. This is the only clean, up-to-date cafe in Lawrence. For the benefit of our present patrons as well as new ones, I am going to give with every meal ticket sold this week a chance on a large beautiful Kansas banner. Stop in and see it. Buy a meal ticket and win it. THE OREAD CAFE E. C. BRICKEN, Owner Just a step from the campus AT THE 1241 Oread AURORA TODAY Jesse L. Lasky Presents the Popular Romantic Actor, Mr. Robert Edeson, in THE CALL OF THE NORTH From the book, "The Conjurer's House." A gift of $1,400,000 from James Deering to the medical school of Northwestern University will be used in establishing clinics to furnish medical aid to the poor. by Stewart Edward White. Dr. William Spencer Currell, professor of English in Washington and Lee University, has accepted the presidency of the University of South Carolina. THIS IS TH' LIFE At the OREAD TUESDAY FATTY'S GIFT. An absorbing two-reel) drama exploiting the advance of civilization. A transition from old to new, ancient to modern, perilous custom to immutable methods of scientific economy. One of these riprearing Keystone comedies with "Fatty" in the lead. DOG'S GOOD DEAD. Depicting the intelligence displayed by our carine friends. BILL & BING, MGRS. Particular CLEANING and PRESSING LAWRENCE PANTATORIUM 12 W. st Ninth Phone 506 Rent a Near. 5 Oliver in perfect condition three months for $4,000. The Oiver Typewriter Company. Kansas City, Mo. e-o The Revolver's Spirit After Fraternity Meeting---Lee's College Inn UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN VOLUME XII. NUMBER MANAGER SENDS S.O.S. CALL FOR MORE MEN Short Hours,ExcellentInstruction and Free Equipment Offered as Inductions DETWILER IS SCOUTING DAILY Captain of Team is Working to Get Fellows to Report—Says Anyone Has a Chance MEN WANTED-For the Kansas football team. Apply at once to Manager Hamilton, Short hours, excellent instruction, Enquire free. The above advertisement tells the condition of the Kansas football squad. Coach Wheaton needs more men and needs them badly. Saturday afternoon 20 men reported, yesterday 30. but more are needed. "We must have more men," Captain Detwiler will declare this afternoon. "The students are showing lots of spirit this fall, but they are slow in coming out. We ought to have a larger squad. Some good men are not out because they say they can't make the team." That is no excuse. The team can still do it with the team. Any man who comes out to tomorrow will have as good a chance making the team as anyone already out." Considering the size of squads at other schools, Kansas is far behind. At the Normal, more than a hundred m netured out and as a result Coach Hargiss is sait to have one of the fastest teams in the state. The Agneta is not so fast. The smaller Kansas Colleges have mustered more than 30 men. The team is still being instructed in starting and falling on the ball DEBATERS READY FOR WORK of Last Year's Staf Absent and an Abundance of New Material is Expected KANSAS MAY NOT HAVE UNIVERSITY EXPOSITION The two debating societies will soon be organized for the year. The amount of attention that is being paid to debating seems to be increase, and it is expected that additional additions to the faculty of the department of public speaking there will be a still greater increase in that interest. With only three of the men who were on last year's debating teams out of school there seems to be a very good chance for the University to gain honors in all the intercollegiate debates thi season. Besides the material from the old squads there is an abundance of new material in the two debating societies, that will make it easy to fill the vacancies made by the graduation of old members. That there is a chance of the K. U. Exposition that is scheduled to come in May being omitted this year was the opinion given out at the Chancellor's office today. "There is no permanent organization for the Exposition," said the Chancellor, "and there has been nothing done about it so far as I know. I do know that it takes a lot of work and interferes with the work of the University considerably." K. U. Debaters to Meet The K. U. Debating society will hold the final meeting Thursday night. Several new men will be initiated at this time. Resigns to Fight With French Prof. Pierre Boubroux, of the department of mathematics, Princeton insignified to enlist in the French army. Editorial Problems and Policies will meet Tuesday, 4:30 p.m. journalism laboratory, Medic building, for organization. Merle Thorpe. Send the Daily Kansan home. HAM ACTORS GET HELP AT LAST F. R. Hamilton Has Play Exchange Ahoy, amateur actors! Whether you want a drama, a melodrama, a tragedy or a farce, there is help in sight. Just write to the University Extension Division of the University of the University of Kansas, explain the style of play, the number in the cast and the length desired and said production will be delivered at a small cost. A neat and convenient suggestion for performance men's and others can get suggestions for performance has been started It remains with the people of Kansas whether it continue to exist. UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS TUESDAY AFTERNOON, SEPTEMBER 22, 1914. F. R. Hamilton, director of the University Extension Division, is the originator of this plan in Kansas and believes it will work successfully. This will mean a great saving of time and correspondence and many useless committee meetings will be eliminated. Besides furnishing plays, the division will also pass upon plays submitted by amateurs. DROP IN ANY UNIVERSITY MAIL BOX. KANSAS LEADS THEM ALL AT PUGET SOUND University Had Largest Delegation of Representatives at Northwest Station Prof. W. J. Baumgartner's trip to Puget Sound during the past summer was the most successful of any one made in the past five years. The University of Kansas had eighteen students registered who will count their credit here. This number is larger than that of all the institutes represented there. Evenington the home state had not registered as many as Kansas. The University Daily Kansan: Eight graduates were working on problems connected with the life of the Sound. They were the following: Miss Lola Brown, of Lawrence high school; Miss Claribel Lupton, of Arkansas City high school; Miss Virginia Welden of Anthony high school; Miss Nan Armstrong, of Linwood high school; J.C. Mack, of University of Notre Dame; C.C. Jensen, of San Pete high school, Utah; and Miss Carrie Woolsey and Lela Watson, now in the University. Most of these students secured good material to aid them inteaching. Professor Baumgartner brought back a few choice specimens to be added to the University collection. As chairman of the reorganization committee, he made a new plan for the future conduct of the station at Puget Sound. A constitution was formulated, and is now being adopted by the regents of the University of Washington. It is expected that most of the universities in Puget Sound river valley will join in the work of the station under the new plan. All of the students who were out there are very enthusiastic about the northwest; in summer, a school of them is already making plans to return next summer. The plants and animals are so abundant in Puget Sound and Friday Harbor that Professor Baumgartner is sure it will become one of the best stations in the world for the study of problems connected with sea life. One thousand "K" books have been riven out to the men of the University by the Y. M. C. A. The supplies exhausted at present, owing to the great demand for the handy little booklets. A new supply will be on and today or tomorrow, however, at he Y. M. office in Myers Hall. 2,000 "K" BOOKS GIVEN AWAY BY Y. M. C. A Send the Daily Kansan home Two thousand books will be printed, 500 of them for the men students on he Hill. The remainder will be distributed among the faculty, alumni, ocal ministers, and citizens who have assisted in financing the enterprise. Please put me down for a year's subscription to the University Daily Kansan for which I agree to pay $2.50 before Nov. 1, 1914. Signed... Address. DROP IN ANY UNIVERSITY M AIL BOX. ANNUAL HAS MONEY AND ALL IS WELL Hackney Says Management Has Funds in Bank This Year Financially the 1915 Jayhawker is well on its feet. Blair Hackney, its manager, has already started a bank account by means of the senior subscriptions taken in during registration days. "It is necessary that the six dollar fee be turned over to the management as soon as possible." declared Hackney this morning, "I am well pleased with the way many seniors have paid the fee, and are now able to manage themselves within the next few weeks. They all expect to pay the fee anyway and they might just as well pay it now and help the management that much. Later, with the rush of work which always accompanies the getting out of a year book, we are going to be better with our money when it is the time to pay the fees when we have the time to take care of it. "We are introducing several new features into the book this year. Harsh will be back in Lawrence the first of October and then definite he made him in regard to two特色 features of the book, he concluded. WILL COLLECT SCHOOL DATA Prof. W. H. Johnson of State Com mitee to Secure More Facts on Kansas Preparations have been made to make a more thorough examination of the state high schools this year than in former years. The committee on state schools met yesterday and made plans for the collection of explicit data regarding various institutions. Members of the committee present were Prof. W. H. Carrothers, of Emporia Normal; Prof. W. H. Andrews, of the Kansas State Agricultural College Prof. C. A. Shivelye, of the Western Kansas Normal; Prof. D. M. Bowen, of the State Board of Education; Professor Ringle, of the Pittsburg State Normal and Prof. W. H. Johnson, of the University of Kansas. Y. M. HAS 350 SOCIAL CENTERS IN ENGLAND Election of officers and laying plans for the year was the business of the first meeting of the University Debating Society last night in Fraser Hall. The officers elected were president, E. K. Groene; vice-president, R. G. Bennett; secretary, E. Moody. All members of the society and any persons not members but wishing to become so are invited to attend the meeting to be held in Room 110 Fraser Hall, Monday night. Debaters Elect Officers Throughout England the Young Men's Christian Association has established 350 recreation centers of training for active service on the continent. The tents are provided with desks, reading matter, game and musical instruments, for the purpose of making them a social addition to the life of the vidited, and they are always men on duty to serve coffee and lunch to soldiers returning from exhausting drills. Students on Chapel Committee Two students, Earl A. Blackman and Hugo T. Wedell, have been chosen for the committee to make plans for chapel at the University this year. The appointment was made by Chancellor Frank Strong today. No time has been set for the meeting of the committee because of the rush of registration and enrollment. Oberlin Professor Here Dr. N. A. Metcalf, formerly of Oberlin College, was in Lawrence Sunday and Monday, the guest of Prof. W. J. Baumgartner. Dr. Metcalf was head of the zoology department in Oberlin College, but is now doing research work. Oberlin Professor Here Kansas Leads at Montana U. Kansas leads eighten outside states in the enrollment at the University of Montana this year. She sends four students, and Illinois three students to various trees in rural states register two students, and even two foreign countries register one. The Sachmes, senior society for men, will meet Wednesday night at 8 o'clock in the Student Union. All members please come out. K. U. STUDENTS FUSS WHILE EUROPE FIGHTS European battles now raging have to effect on the students of the University of Kansas as far as Miss Awls W. Johnson, University librarian, an discern. No Time for Reading War News Before the opening of school, Miss Watson had her assistants diving intoole boxes aid into dusty corners searching for books on War and on the countries engaged in the present struggle. "The students would surely want them," she said, but no. As yet she has had no calls for these books and she and the assistants are wondering why. Is it because the average student is content with the big headline daily and the "it is rumored" stuff, or is it because Arcade has too many rushing" dates with Mabel? When he gets better acquainted maybe he will take her to the library in the evening. Such things have happened. MAKES CLOSE STUDY WESTERN LAND LAWS Prof. H. A. Millis Investigates Japanese Conditions During Summer Months Western land laws and labor conditions was the subject of a seven-week's investigation of Prof. H. A. Millis of the department of economics. The laws passed by the legislature of California discriminating against the Japanese as land owners proved troublesome to members of the diplomatic circles at Washington. The legislature of California passed a law prohibiting Japanese and other aliens from purchasing land in that state and limiting the term for a lease to three years. This was done because of the very cheap labor prevailing among the Japanese which threatened to drive white labor out of the country. As the matter the matter had assumed international proportions, the Federated Churches of America became interested. Professor Millis was chosen for this work because of his recognized ability as an immigration expert and the work that he did with the government commission in the Hawaiian Islands in 1908 and 1909. He spent the seven weeks intervening between summer school and regular session on the ground studying the matter at first hand. The report, which will be ready about the first of December, will be the basis for legislation to be presented to Congress by the Federation in an attempt to regulate the matter. Horticulture at Detroit Horticulture is now being introduced into the public schools of Detroit. The women are pursued for only one year. This year the women's clubs are giving prizes for the best specimens. Horticulture at Detroit The Keltz announce the following pledges: George Thiele, Washington; Pay Walters, Kansas City; Russell Park, Kansas City; and Bart Park, Atchison. Keltz Pledge Four More Than 2,200 Enrolled two thousand two hundred eighteen students and registered for work at the county office three o'clock this afternoon. The number is two hundred and fifty more than it was at this time last year. DUNBAR WORKING ON IOWA More Than 2 200 Enrolled Last Year's Fellow in Geology in Collecting Rocks in Hawkeye State for Yale Museum Carl Dunbar, a fellow in geology last year at the University, is now in Iowa collecting, under the auspices of the Yale Museum, specimens of rock formation of the Denvonian are. Dunbar received a scholarship in geology at Yale this year, and started the first of August collecting these specimens for his thesis. He met Lawrence the last of this month and thence to Yale the first of October. At Yale, the majority of his work will be taken under Prof. Charles Schuchert, although he expects to do research on the branches of geological investigation. While a fellow in geology last year, he made a remarkable discovery of some old vertebrate fossils, and later in the year, with Professor Twnenhofel, published a paper on these specimens, the article appearing in one of the leading geological journals. TO DISCUSS CITY MANAGERS Kansas League of Municipalities to Look Into New Form of Government at Annual Meeting A discussion of the city manager plan of municipal government will be a feature of the convention of the League of Kansas Municipalities which meets here October 7 to 9th. The general aspects of the new form will be presented by Prof. C. A. Dyk-tenke of City Manager and the practical workings of the plan will be dealt with by Kenyon Riddle, City Manager of Abilene. Although the manager form is a comparatively recent development in city government, officials of the city government are now expressing interest in the new rule. Following the addresses on the plan at the convention, the delegates will discuss the matter and question the speakers. More than one hundred Kansas cities and towns are members of the League of Municipalities. Every city in the state is authorized by law to become a member of the organization and to send delegates to the annual meeting. A large attendance is expected at this year's convention. The League was organized in 1910, and has for its object the co-operation of Kansas cities and towns for good city government. No New Law Books Miss Ethel Morrow, who was librarian in Green Hall last year, will act in that capacity again this year. There have been no new books added since 2015, and the usual number of periodicals have been placed upon the library shelves. Books will be checked out under the same system as was used last year with the exception that a closer watch will be kept on books. No management will branch the method of conducting the branch of the law school will be made. Eastern eleven are making ready for the season's contests. Harvard has spent five strenuous days trying to pick its team. There seems to be such a close race for Varsity places that it will probably take the coaches many more days to choose. Eastern Elevens Ready Juniors Enroll in Ad. Enrollment of juniors will be with P. A. J. N. Van der Vries, Administration His office hours are 1:45 to 3:45. MANY TOOTED BUT FEW WERE CHOSEN Out of Seventy Men Only Forty Made Places on the Musical Organization 9 INSTRUMENTS REPRESENTED Director McCanles Announces That First Practice Will be Held Wednesday Night Following a spirited competition of blowing horns, vibrant drums and clarinetss that sang shrilly, 40 students were awarded places in the University band out of 70 enthusiastic college musicians who tried out for the coming year. Director J.C. Wheeler of the successful candidates yesterday. Nine instruments are represented in the line-up of the band. The players and instruments are: Cornets - Errol Welch, Harold Lolly, C. C. Covey, LeVerne Tucker, Cecil Hough, Orland Lyttle, C. C. Walters Flute and piccolo—Fred E. Schumann, Hubert Nutt. Trombones—W. E. Jones, John Hargrett, Donald C. Gold, George B. Hargrett Clinaretz—Robert C. Mcllennny, Della D. Markley, Arthur J. Nigg, Charles M. Long, Hugh A. Grutz- aches, O. Hugh Hartman, C. G. Bach, O. Hugh Chug, Bradley, Ralph Fritts, Clyde Wormer- ing, Homer Hunt, Saxaphanes—Leo Smith, Howard E. Hoffman. Basses—Roscoe Robinson. Dale Young. Drums—Arthur Maltby, P. W. Thiele Baritones—Olin C. Darby, Harold Cox. Altos—W, F. Harkrader, Doster Mullet, Harold M. Roberts,冯 Kenneth There may be some slight changes or additions to the above list. The band has a good BB bass to be filled yet. The first rehearsal will be held tomorrow night at 7:30 in Fraser Hall. K. N. G. WILL MEET IN GYMNASIUM TONIGHT The first meeting of Company M, First Infantry of the Kansas National Guard, will be held at 7:30 this evening on the second floor of Robinson Gymnasium. The wool uniforms to be used during the winter will be distributed tonight, so it is important that all members be present. To Survey Kansas Gas Prof. H. C. Allen, of the department of chemistry, is making arrangements for a state wide survey of Kansas gas. This work is to be largely carried on by E. E. Lider. It will be added on a survey of Kansas soils all summer, but will begin the gas survey some time next week. After 200 Members After 200 Members Baker University Y. M. C. A. has started a campaign for 200 members this year, which will mean as much of 100 over last year's members of Homer Graften, state college Y. M. C. A. secretary, of Topeka, has on the ground helping in the campaign. Pi Ups Pledge Two William Butzer, of Salina, and Charles Pitrat, of Kansas City, have pledged Pi Upson. Nine new faculty members have been added to the teaching staff of Baker College this year. Tooters of Boola in Uniforms of Blue CONCERT KU BAND The University of Kansas Band of last year which played the Crimson and Blue so strenuously at critical moments in football games, and whose successors have just been named by Director McCanles. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN | column- Official student paper of the University of Kansas JOHN GLENNBERR Editor-in-Chief Maria Guzman Marine News CALVIN LAMAR Sport Editor EDITORIAL STAFF BUSINESS STAFF REPORTORIAL STAFF J. W DYCK Custodian, Business Manager J. A W CUNNINGHAM Custodian, Advertising Manager S. SUPERTVANT Advertising Managee LION HARRIS SOMERGLE GORDON GLUETON CLAUTON CHARLES SWEET CHARLES SNEET RUX MILDER RUX MILDER FRANK B. HENDERSON LEBERTON ALKINEY GRAHAM W. SCAFFER W. A. SAPPER CURTIS HENDERSON CURTIS HENDERSON Entered as second-class mailmaster Suppor- tent. Kansas, under the act of March 3. Subscription price $2.50 per year in ad- ance; one term, $1.50. Phone, Bell K. U. 25 Address all communications to UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Lawrence, Kans. Published in the afternoon five times a week in Kamas, from the press of the department. The Daily Kamaas athletics to picture the challenges of going to go further than merely printing them. The students hold to play no favorites; to be clean, to be cheerful to others; to solve serious problems to water hands; in all, to serve to abide by the abilities of the students, at the University. TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 1914. Learning by study must be won; Twas neer entailed from son to son—Gay's Fables. THE ROOMING HOUSE PLAN All champions of student government, and especially those who remember the events of last year in that connection, will be interested in the experiment about to be undertaken by the Women's Student Government Association and the Advisor of Women. The measure of success attained by the proposed rooming-house association will indicate the feeling of the women students in regard to self government and self discipline. Some kind of so-called house government has been in existence for several years, but there has been no organized effort to establish and maintain standards of conduct among the women. It is this lack which the association is intended to supply. In addition, closer cooperation will be brought about between the body of women and their advisor, and the social life of the University will be more or less unified. The first step toward realizing the new plan is for the girls to organize in groups of ten and elect their chairmen, who will meet Mrs. Brown at an early date and perfect the organization. Now is the time for all good women to come to the aid of student government! CONTROL DRAMATICS. Dramatics is a legitimate form of student activity, and should be encouraged. Its existence at the University under present conditions, however, is precarious and not altogether satisfactory. Several organizations, active only while the production is being worked up, disappear until someone comes along to re-organize them. Debts are incurred down town, and the instability of the organization does not always enable them to be paid. Why not make dramatics a University affair, like debate? Until this is done conditions cannot be materially changed. In the old days dramatics was much more important, and it would be important now if subjected to some sort of control. HOLDING CLASSES. Although school has been in session a little less than a week, some of the instructors have already begun to hold their classes overtime. It is not fair. What would happen if a student would be habitually behind time every day? The students dare not complain when class is held overtime. Walking from the second floor of the Administration Building to the third floor of Fraser in three minutes is not a feat the average student enjoys. .COMMUNICATIONS WANTED. COMMUNICATIONS WANTED. The Daily Kansan urges students to make use of its communication The paper endeavors to reflect student opinion, and wants to print ideas, suggestions and complaints from students. Anonymous communications are barred, but the name of the writer will not be disclosed if he asks it to be withheld. The free exchange of opinion on University affairs is beneficial to the institution. The big war in Europe should cause the students to regard Company M., K. N. G., with more respect and esteem. For when a war does come which will involve America, it is the men of Company M and their like all over the country that will wage war for the Republic. Oxford students in England formed a regiment to fight against the Germans. Mrs. Eustace Brown, advisor of women, is pleased with the way the women of the University respond to her suggestions. She has cause to be. Suggestions are more quickly accepted by Kansas students than restrictions on regulations. Mrs. Brown is following the right plan. One thing certain may be said of he suggested plan of enrollment by nail. It could not be much worse han the system, if it may be called hat, now in use. Our Own Budding Bards OWED TO FRESHMEN Who is this being, young and green, Who climbs the hill with timid mien And clutters up the peaceful scene? The freshman Who is the grafter's natural prey? Who throws his father's cash away on chapel ticket: (so they say)? The freshman. Who drives the rhetoric profs to drink? Who spatters walls and floors with ink Who puts decorum on the blink? The freshman. BUT who will play football next answer? And with our foes the landscape smear? Fhy, that's our little brother dear, the freshman. L'ENVOI So let us treat him like a friend, and help his little faults to mend. We'll be proud of him in the end— —Dennis Dante. BY ONE OF THE WISE ONES Ten years ago when a country dub I handled hash in a boarding-club, I had a table of faculty I had a table of facts. As worldly wise as they might be. Whenever a speaker would come to town I liked to take the discussion down. With sword to death," and "Oh humiliation." That terrible critical faculty. They were so wise that my chin would droop Now, I have travelled some since then And visited several kinds of men, And women, too, I have no doubt. One wouldn't exactly talk about. Till I noticed their methods of taking soup. Then all of a sudden they seemed to be Not very uncommonly just like me. So now when I hear the wise ones say The same old things in the same old I thank my stars that I can see The funny side of the faculty. "Go Slow" is about the best general advice that can be retained to the class of '18. To be lost in the world, you must have what can happen to the new freshman. Personal advertising has "queued" more men in the first few days of the college year than have all the other scheduled sins of omission and commission. A good man needs no advertising. If he is a good man advance noticees are neither necessary nor welcome. GO SLOW, FRESHMAN For they did keep down the weeds. —Prossey Bill. OF SOME USE, ANYHOW No more "fore" upon the campus All the golfers now have fled For the golfers played on Sunday And did other naughty deeds Had they brought their legs up The trite Wilsonian safety appli No more hissing balls go flying O'er the green on Oread ance of "watchful waiting" will save more freshmen than any other policy. After all, it is a much finer thing to be the freshman president. Oberlin Review. Kansas Classics ON MOUNT OREAD Dr. Brixton W. Woodward Verily, the State University "hath a pleasant seat." What university in all the land hath such an outlook; one embracing such a magnificent scope of country on every hand? The Loupper' damsmen'OME. The Cornell'; but this deponent, knowing naught of Ithaca, "sait not." By Brinton W. Woodward Our venerable poet, Holmes, said not long ago—contrasting in reminiscence the outlook from the Harvard of his earlier years with that now circumscribed on every hand by intrusive, neighboring brick walls—that it was a rare good fortune to a boy to be born and reared where he could have the prospect of a natural horizon. If this be so; if the daily contemplation, in early years, of pleasing and inspiring scenery will have its specific effect both inward and outward—in developing a love for the beauty and freedom of nature, and in a correlative widening of the mental horizon—the student at Kansas University are especially blessed in their opportunity. Certainly the natural horizon before them is wide enough to suggest and inspire mental "breadth of view." The similitude of a morning landscape—looking eastward—to the aspect of human life as seen from the standpoint of youth, is no doubt sufficiently trite, and yet it often comes upon the Lounger with renewed significance, as suggested by the view from this noble hilltop. Fresh and dewy, sparkling yet distinct is the foreground, as its waves of perlure swell upward to his feet. Poor the landscape spreads a fair to his vision, without shadow of cloud upon its face; but its middle distance merges with the haze that lisses over the concealing all but the tops of intervening ridges—the dim landmarks that youth intends to make upon its journey. Farther on, the broad horizon can scarce be even faintly traced, lost in the effulgent sunlight; the glance of youth radiates the bright future of Youth! There is no perspective to this picture; the glow of faith has effaced it; youth needs none! And confident Manhood; it too, scarce the want of "distance." Its landscape is symbolized by the view from the south and west windows of the University, just before noontide. A view of fertile fields and meadows to be tilled; and beyond, of stream, and if need hills to be crossed with easy endeavor to be us—beautiful slopes, graceful and noble "lines of descent" that make and mark the transition from hill to valley. How beautiful it all is; how practicable everything is; how easily accomplished! Everything is to our hand in this view; everything is possible. We reach forth our hand, and lo, it is done! Life, health, strength are ours; Nature, jocund Nature, herself is ours! Her wreath of summer flowers, her robe of summer green." "Tis in life's noontide she is nearest seen And then comes the afternoon of life. The prospect is no longer all sunshine; shadows, clouds, and sometimes the darkness of storm sweeps over it; but afterward comes a "clearing-up," with nature embracing the harms and joys that nature enhanced by the channels of experience are deepened, the springs of life revered fully, even by the storms that pass over us. Life has more significance. The tones of the afternoon landscape are more vibrant deeper; if nature more harden—if we look eastward. There is enough perspective now; the horizon begins to grow distinct and sometimes sharply defined! Soph. -Let me congratulate you upon being fortunate enough to secure a permanent job.-California Pelican. Fresh—I have just been appointed to collect your landlord bill. But now the dancing craze is on. And now quite the other way, Candil Waltel. "He who hesitates is lost." "Coal Heaver"—"Get die hell out of door." Was what they used to say. But now the dancing craze is of Woman Shopper—I want a pair of socks for my husband. de way."—Exchange. Our Flexible Language socks for my husband. Clerk-What number? Shopper—He is number Three.—Pennsylvania Punch Bowl. Official football score cards are now ready at Carroll's."Adv. Pennsylvania Punch Bowl. When You Buy Emery Shirts Emery Guaranteed Fit, Color, Wear. Just received a fresh shipment o Huyler's and Allegretta famous chocolate creams at Carroll's.-Adv Shorthand and Typewriting Bookkeeping and Banking Penmanship and Spelling Frank Koch "The Tailor" Full Line of Fall Suitings In fact, a complete commercial training can be had at Merchants National Bank Lawrence Business College Kane Cash Grocery Rear People State Bank Clean, Fresh Stock We buy for cash and sell for cash. Boarding Clubs, Fraternities, try us. BOTH PHONES 535 Kane Cash Grocery Rent a No. 5 Oliver in perfect condition three months for $4.00. The Oliver Typewriter Company, Kansas City, Mo. e-o Six Stores Swede Wilson's For Billiards Phones 540 Student Headquarters Student Headquarters SANITARY CAFE A Nice Clean Place to Eat LUNCHES - SHORT ORDER Across from Kress Store 916 Mass you get beautiful fabrics and finish your own sleeve length. well shrunk neckband and Guaranteed Fit. Color and Wear The style represented here is a novelty tucked shirt, up-and-down pleat and crosswise stripe, fast color percale, French cuffs. $1.50 and $2 in a variety of stripes and colors. Emery Shirts only at ARROW SHIRTS are fast in color and steadfast in service. $1.50 up. Peckhams WANTED—A student barber at once—Kaw Barber Shop, 910 Mass. St. 7-6 WANTED -Student to share nice room, modern home, 1312 Ohio; also member faculty for fine large bedroom, same number. 4-3' Mail your want ad with 25 cents enclosed to the Daily Kansan—want ads are payable in advance. Cluett, Peabody & Co., Inc. Makers FOR RENT—Nice furnished room for girls. Corner 9th and La. St. Bell 2452. 4-3* FOR RENT A desirable room for young ladies at 1408 Tenn. 4-3* FOR RENT—One double room, $10 per month; one room, single, $5 double $6; one small single $3 Student Union—Adv. LOST—One pair of eye glasses. Return to Kansan office. Reward. Want Adds FOR RENT—Eight fine rooms, well lighted and heated, exceptionally well lighted, exceptionally fine frat rooms. J. M. Neville, office in Stubbs' building, across from Court House. B384. Whiting initial and University of Kansas box stationery at Carroll's. Adv. Johnson & Tuttle Proprietors 715 MASSACHUSETTS STREET A Good Place to Eat at Anderson's Old Stand 715 MASSACHUSETTS STREET at Remember That Schulz makes Clothes 913 Mass. St. Lawrence, Kas. Bath caps, bath brushes, hand brushes and face brushes; the largest stock in the city at Barber's Drug Store, 909 Mass. St.-Adv. F. B. McCOLLOCH Druggist THE REXALL STORE 847 Mass. St. On the Corner Francisco & Co. Livery, Hacks and Garage 812 VERMONT STREET Phone 139 PROFESSIONAL CARDS W. C. M. CONNELL, Physician and Surgeon. Office, 819 Mass. St. Bell 399, Home 9342. Residence, 1346 Tenn. St. Bell 1023, Home 639. J. F. BROCK, Optometrist and Speci alist in Scientific Glass Fitting Office 802 Mass. St. Bell phone 695. HARRY REDING, M. D. E. eye, ear, nose and throat. Glasses fitted. Office. F. A. A. Bldg. Phones, Bell 513, Home 612. G. A. HAMMAN, M. D. Eye, ear and throat specialist. Glasses fitted. Satisfaction Guaranteed. Dick Blidg. DR. H. W, HAYNE, Oculist, Lawrence, Kansas. One Price J. W. W'BRYON, Dentist. Over Willson's Drug Store. Bell Phone 507. G. W. JONES, A. M., M. D., D. Diseases of the stomach, surgery and gyncology. Suite I, F. A, A. Bldg. Resistance, 1291 Ohio St. Both phones, J. R. BECHTEI, M. D, D. O. 833 J. R. BECHTEI, M. D, D. O. 833 office and residence. office and residence. DR. H, L. CHAMBERS. Office over Squire's Studio. Both phones. S. T. GILLISPIE, M. D. Office corner Vernant and Warren St. Residence 728 Ind. Phones 596. DR. H. T. JONES, Room 12, F. A. A. Bldg. Residence 1130 Tenn. Phones 211. CLASSIFIED Ladies Tailor Mrs. Emma Brown Schulz, Dressmaking and Ladies Tailoring. Phone: 914-256-3011. St. Next door to Anderson's Bakery. Spalding guaranteed black gym suits and gym shoes at Carroll's. Adv. Watkins A. G. ALRICH PRINTING Binding, Copper Plate Printing, Rubber Stamps, Engraving, Steel Die Embossing, Seals, Badges 744 MASS. STREET National Bank Capital $100,000 Surplus and profits $100,000 The Student Depository MORGAN'S SPECIAL MEAL TICKETS MEALS and SHORT ORDERS Sunday Dinners a Specialty SPECIAL MEAL TICKETS 1345 Mass. St. Bell 262 Ice Cream Soda Confectionery First meeting of Geological Club will be held in Haworth Hall, Room 203. Wednesday afternoon at 4:30.—Adv. Cleaning, Pressing and Remodeling Club For up-to-date men and women 10 years old. Results results Satisfaction Guaranteed Arl H. Frost and Karl J. Wielmelsen. Agta. C. W. Steeper & Co. Satisfaction Guaranteed Arl H. Front and R. Back Arts. B434-1024 LA. COLLEGE INN BARBER MRS ELLISON, Dressmaking and Ladies' Tailoring. Evening gowns a speciality, 1032 Vermont. Phone Bell '411 West. Burt Wadhams The Mrs. M. Brockelsby-Wilson, Kiester College of ladies tailoring and dress-making. Over 909 Mass. St. Bell 2109. Jewelers ED. W. PARSONS. Engraver, Watchmaker and Jeweler. Diamonds and Jewelry. Bell Phone 717. 717 Mass. Plumbers PHONE KENNEDY PLUMBING 697 Mass. Phone 6588. 697 Mass. Phone 6588. Hair Dressers HAIRDRESSING, shampooing, scalp and facial massage, shampooing, hair foods, "Marinello" toilet preparations. For appointments call Bell 372. Home 51. The Select Hair Pressing Shop, 927 Mass. St. Barber Shops Go where they all go J. C. HOUCK 913 Mass. GO WHERE you get the Best. Bob Stewart's Barber Shop, 838 Mass. St. Cafes For a good clean place to eat, where you don't get "ryped" go to the MARKET CAFE, Room 1, Perkins Building. Millinery WANTED - Ladies to call at Mrs. McCormick's up-to-date millinery parlors to inspect our new line of hats. 831 Mass St. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN AT THE AURORA TODAY Jesse L. Lasky Presents the Popular Romantic Actor, Mr. Robert Edeson, in The Call of the North From the book, "The Conjurer's House," by Stewart Edward White. WHEN YOU BUY SILK HOSIERY You want a silk hose that is going to wear and one that is all silk. In our Redmore and Honest Dollar silk stockings there is a guarantee with each pair from the manufacturers that they will replace any hose that does not give the best of satisfaction. Again, they are pure silk, and at any time you can have any shade redyed to any other shade—something that you can do only with an absolutely pure silk hose. *Prices 75e*, $1 and $1.50* WEAVER'S THE FLOWER SHOP All Seasonable Cut Flowers. The old customers and friends coming every day and many new students have already called. Be one of our customers. 8251 Mass.MR.and MRS.GEO.ECKE Phones 621 K. U. Barber Shop and Bath Rooms The Only Electric Mass- age Machine in the City 727 Massachusetts Street Razors Honed. Ground and Exchanged W. F. Weise, Prop R. E. Protsch The Students' Tailor Go to the HOME BAKERY For Good Things to Eat SHUBERT Matinee Wed. & Sat. MARGARET ILLINGTON in "Within the Law" Prices 25c to $1.50 Wed. Mat. $1.00 NEXT: THE BIRD OF JARADI E C. M. Williamson 933 Mass. St. We Want Your Kodak Work - We do developing and finishing. Lee's College Inn We carry all sorts of Kodak supplies. Raymond's Drug Store 819 Massachusetts St. SEPT.23,1914 MENU DINNER MENU SEPT. 28, 19 Grape Fruit .10 Cream of Tomato Soup . . . . . MEATS READY Fried Chicken, Country Style. .15 Prime Ribs of Beef Au Jus. .16 Roast Young Pig, Apple Sauce. .18 Spaghetti, Italian Style. .10 Salmon Roll with Tomato Sauce. .10 Stewed Corn. .05 Buttered Beets. .05 French Peas. .05 Mashed Potatoes. .05 Baked Beans. .05 French Fried Potatoes. .10 Cold Shaw. .05 Stewed Prunes. .10 STEAKS Small Porterhouse, brown gravy . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25 Lee's Special Porterhouse, brown gravy. . . . . . . . . . . . 40 Lee's Special Sirlin. For (2). . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 75 Lee's Special Sirlin. For (3). . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1.25 Lee's Special Sirlin. For (4). . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1.50 Lee's Special Sirlin. For (6). . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2.50 Mashed Potatoes, Bread, and Butter With All Steaks. New York Counts. ½ doz. raw . . . . . OYSTERS FRESH HOME MADE PIES FRESH Apple, Apricot, Peach, Raisin, Coconut, Chocolate or Banana... 05 DESERTS DESERTS Chocolate Bitter Sweet Sundae .10 Banana and Ice Cream. .10 Peaches and Ice Cream. .10 Banana Special (2 kinds of cream). .15 Ice Cream and Cake. .10 Assorted Cake. .10 Vanilla, Chocolate, or Caramel-Nut Ice Cream. .10 Sliced Pineapple. .10 Pineapple a la mode. .10 Watermelon on ice. .05 Lee's College Inn Coffee, .05; Milk, .05; Tea, .05; Hot Chocolate, .05. FIRST COLLEGE BALL SCORED 73 TO 31 Mementos of Historic Events Are Preserved in Amherst Trophy Room The first intercollegiate ball game, or old-fashioned round baseball, presents strange contrasts when compared with diamond contests of today. Here is a story built from the recollections of two living players and an umpire and published under date of July 1, 1859, in the Franklin and Hampshire Gazette that is apt to bring a smile: The earliest game of baseball between Colleges was one of old fashioned "round" ball between Amherst and Williams played at Pitfield on July 1, blissfully no worse than the room of 73 to 32. These are now nanking in the Amherst College trophy room the two balls which were used in this game, which bear the following inscription: "The veritable balls used in the first game of interstate play in 1869." Amherst vs. Williams, by amherst. This is how it came about: At a meeting of the college directly after morning prayers at which Mr. Smead of the Senior Class presided, Mr. Claffin made a motion that "Amherst challenge Williams will play at some injury game of ball to be played at some information game or before July 4," which was passed by a strong majority. A committee was appointed of J. T. Claffin, senior class; Walker, junior class; H. D. Hye, sophomore, and T. Tomson, freshman, to make arrangements for the game. A challenge was immediately sent and accepted for thirteen picked men each college to meet in the A delegation from Amherst at Clerestor and draw up the rules and regulations for the game. Mr. Hyde of Amherst met the two Williams delegates, but nothing was agreed on. On Mr. Hyde's return negotiations were carried on by mail for two weeks till at last it was amicably settled that each party its own ball and it must always be caught in five-fifty, sixty-five runs to be limit of the game. The Pitfield Baseball Club offered its grounds and July 1 was appointed as the date. There was to be but one drawback to the game. All Williams College was to be present, including the player while Amherst sent only the players. It is interesting to note the manner of selecting the team for this game. The men were "chosen by balloons from the students at large," during period of daily practice and no elimination from the squad at various times. On Thursday afternoon Amherst's seventen picked men started for Pittsfield. They arrived in Pittsfield eager for battle. Soon the Williams boys began pouring into town until it seemed as if Willamstown must be deserted. Old men and women, young men and maidens, proprietors of female schools with their pupils—the great square of the ball ground was surrounded five or six deep. The appearance of the teams on the field must have been very amusing, although there was some attempt at uniformity of dress as "the Williams team were all dressed alike and wore bells marked Williams, but the appearance of the team was decidedly identical." The only attempt uniform was the blue ribbon which each man had pinned on his breast." It seems that the question of professionalism entered even into the first game as it was "rumored that the Amherst thrower was the professional blacksmith who had been hired for the occasion." A bystander remarked that "the story must be true as nobody but a blacksmith could possibly throw for three and a half hours as he did." The Amherst ball weighed two and one-half ounces and was about six inches in circumference. It was made by Henry Hebard of North Brookfield and was considered a work of art at the time. The Williams ball was about seven inches in circumference, weighed about two ounces and was "covered with light colored leather so as to make it seen with difficulty by the batters." About 11 o'clock the game started with Amherst having the first innning, and at the end of the second round the score stood Amherst 1; Williams 9. This success called out from the Williams students a long universal clapping and cheering whenever one of their comrades gained a tally. Amherst grew desperate and at the end of the third round stood even; at the end of the fourth Amherst led, and continued to do so until the end of the game sometimes having three tallies to one for Williams. The score by innings as given in newspapers develops several interesting facts. It was allowable to put a man out between bases by spotting him on the field and "ticked" ball. The batter was allowed to knock the ball in any direction which he chose, hence the terms "back knocks," "side strikes," etc. No gloves of any sort were worn at this time, nor was the mask a protection or any of the baseball paraphernalia of today. After four hours of steady playing, in which twenty-six rounds had been played wit wit no intermission and with unabashed interest on the part of the spectators, the game was decided finished and Amherst was declared the winner by the score of 78-32. RAH! RAH! ICHABODS EXPLODE Student Paper Carries Story Predicting Victory Over Kansas This Season—Ten "W" Men Back That Washburn is looking at the football season in a self-attitudes way is shown by the following extract from the Washburn student paper, and the fact that in the paper the school predicts victory over Kansas. "With eleven 'W' men in suits and a large squad of last season's subs and freshmen, football prospects at Washburn looks brighter than they have since the fall of 1907. Football fans are doping a state title for the Blue, with victory to win the valley team. Be met and the third team be met with the third. Kansas and the Kansts Argies are slated as sure victims of Glen C. Gray's men, the dope fiends say. The Nebraska game is doubtful. Much of the promised success is based on the return of Coach Gray, who whipped the locals into shape last season with fut four veterans. Well acquainted with his men, an experienced squad to work with and a bungee of new plans he is expected to turn loose more in the month last season. Captain Earl Robert thinks that the mentor will if love the plan of play used last fall, half open work and half old style. "There will be a letter man for every position except left tack." KANSAN MEN REALLY WORK University Newspaper Men Carry on Variety of Strenuous Activities During Summer Vacations That the members of the Kansan Board are accustomed to work is proven out by a study of the occupations which they followed during the summer months. Two of the members followed a threshing outfit during the summer months—John M. Henry, managing editor, and Elmer Arndt. Seven of the men were engaged in newspaper work of some kind. Among these were John Gleissner, solicitor of ads; Cal Lamber reading proof; Mr. Hassall's pad;ad paper; on John Harsh, a paper in Kilberville Gilbert Clayton, news editor of the Summer Session Kansan; Guy Scriven, foreman of a paper plant in Kansas City; Charles Sweet, on a county newspaper; Ray Clapper, foreman of the Kellogg & Baxter printing plant; William Cady, edito ref the Wilson County Gazette, and Sam Ingalls, traveling man. Following the decision of the Supreme Court of Tennessee denying rights of ownership or control of Vanderbilt University to the Methodist Episcopal Church, South, the church has established a new city with five million dollars will be raised to build and end it, Atlanta pledging $500,000. Mrs.Asa G. Candler has subscribed $1,000,000, the largest individual gift to education ever made in the south. Bishop Warren A. Candler has been elected to a department open in temporary quarters in September. The university in its other departments will be organized later. Offers Prize for Scenario The Edison Company has offered $100 for the best math scenario scenario student. The prize will be awarded January 1. M. E. CHURCH ESTABLISHES UNIVERSITY AT ATLANTA Dr. Frances P. Venable has resigned the presidency of the University of North Carolina and has been succeeded by Dr. Edward Kidder Graham, dean of the college of Liberal Arts and head of the department of English. Have your next suit and o'coat made by THE ROYAL TAILORS, $16.50 up.-Adv. HIATT—CLOTHIER local dealer for THE ROYAL TAILORS. Suits, $16.50 up. Adv. Today Only VARSITY 5 Reel Program Lloyd Ware Theatre ERVINE CUMMINS and PATHE SFAR CAST in a timely interesting drama of the present European war "THE LAST VOLUNTEER" Actual scenes made in and around the Austro-Serbian battle fields. Piano and piano orate music, drama and effects. TOMORROW." The House Next Door. by "The Lion and the Mouse" Company, complete in five reels. The Student Union Barber Shop F. M. TIDROW, PROPRIETOR EVERYTHING UP-TO-NOW - ALL STANDARD TONICS Witch hazel egg shampoo. Alcohol rub for the hair. Eau De Qui- nine hair tonic. Rose cream for the face. 1200 Tenn. St., Student Union Bldg. Will make a special offer to a student barber, see me right away. DANCE Why Perspire and be uncomfortable "NITH" NON-PERSPIRE is guaranteed to stop perspiring beneath the arms. HARMLESS — TWO ODORS: VIOLET AND ROSE PRICE 50c Particular Cleaning and Pressing FOR PARTICULAR PEOPLE 12 W. Ninth Lawrence Pantatorium Phones 506 KAW VALLEY ICE CREAM CO. 470 Either Phone 10 W. 9th We specialize on clubs and fraternity orders. Let us handle that next order. ICE CREAM AND OYSTERS CLARK LEANS LOTHES Phone 355 PUNCH TICKET $1.50 TEN PRESSES CLARK CLEANS LOTHES All Pressing Done by Hand CLARK CLEANS LOTHES 730 Mass St. CLARK LEANS LOTHES FOR TAXICAB Call Either PHONE 100 PEERLESS GARAGE We like to do little jobs of repairing. Lenses duplicated. Gustafson The College Jeweler Frat Novetties and College Emblems. Quality Jewelry UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN J. H. W. Classy New Mist-Proof Balmaccans Featuring many new innovations in style and fabric. Every young man will enjoy the comfort of one of these smart coats during the coming chilly mornings and evenings. Prices $12.50 to $35 Here's two new coats that should appeal to every well dressed young man. Found exclusively at this store. THE "TONEDALE" COAT THE "HUDDER" COAT Designed and tailored in London by expert English tailors. The fabric is different from anything you've ever seen. A real Indian coat. Price 830. Tailored from a new knitted fabric which can be packed into a grip or trunk without showing a wrinkle. Very serviceable rain. sleet and snow proof. Price $25. Ladies' Mannish Tailored Balmaccan Coats, too. Beautiful fabrics. Prices $12.50 to $20.00 New Balmaccan Hats and Caps Ober's HEAD TO FOOT OUT FITTERS New Kid Gloves for all Occasions Track Victors Called to McCook K. K. K. K. K. K. K. K. K. K. K. K. K. K. K. K. K. K. K. K. K. K. K. K. K. K. K. K. K. K. K. K. K. K. K. K. K. K. K. K. K. K. K. K. K. K. K. K. K. K. EMPORIANS GUESS ON BILL HARGISS'S WEIGHT "Following his entry as a White Hope the other day, considerable speculation was had on Coach Bill Hargiss's weight. The Normal mentor has grown mrose slender with the passing years, and his trim carriage deceives the eye as to his real weight. He tips the scales at 174 pounds, stripped, this fall—if anybody besides the post office clerks care to know. The clerks had a 10- The old reliable K. U. Barber Shop welcomes you fellows back and will be pleased to meet you and new recruits at the old stand, 727 Mass. St. Call and get acquainted. Adv. cent purse up the other day, and some of them had him guessed as low as 160." - Emporia Gazette. Harvard Starts Practice Leave your name and guess on to the football ball at Carroll's, starting to play. Harvard's football men were called out for their first practice Saturday. This year's schedule is considered one of Harvard's heaviest, with the university of Michigan, Princeton, Brown and Yale numbered among the Crimson's opponents. The season opens September 26 with Bates. All drinks served in clean glasses at Barber & Son's fountain—Adv. Gridiron Punts and Passes CALL FOR TRACK MEN ISSUED BY CAPTAIN Edwards Calls Meeting of Varsity and New Men on McCook, Thursday NEED HURDLERS AND JUMPERS High-Steppers and Men With Spring are in Demand for the Jayhawker Squad This Year Captain Edwards has called a meeting of all men interested in track at McCook Field Thursday afternoon at 5:45 o'clock. Members of last year's freshman and Varsity basketball team will track experience or intend to take up that work are urged to be present. Captain Edwards will outline the fall practice and discuss track prospects. "We want to meet all men of all classes and all events," Edwards said today. "Suits will not be necessary Thursday afternoon. Kansas will be weak in hurdles and we want to try to be good men to try for these as well as other events." Captain Edwards said Jayhawker prospects for this year were good. Fiske is back in school, and from the freshman team, Rodkey, Harriet and Crumb have enrolled for track. The team will lose Hazen and Perry, leaving an opening in the hurdle events. Several promising high school track men have joined the Jayhawk ranks. Treweeke, the Wichita State basketball team, and Winn, all an-all-round athlete from Kansas City, will work on the cinders this year. TYROS CHECK OUT SUITS Freshmen Drain Manager Hamilton's Office of Football Togs—Largest Squad Ever Promised Forty-five freshmen had checked out football suits at noon today. The first freshman practice was held yesterday afternoon on McCook Field under the direction of Coaches McCarty and Weidlein. A large squad reported and went through a light work-out. The freshmen have made a heavy drain on football togs at Manager Hamilton's office this week. Men of all sizes and weights have applied for suits and the squad promises to be the largest ever enrolled for football. Equipment for sixty players is ready for the freshmen. EMPORIA WON'T PLAY K. U. Coach Granger Does Not Want to Cripple the Presbyterians for the Washburn Game Refusal to accept the offer of the Jayhawkers for a game on McCook has just been received from the College of Emporia. The game as planned was to fill the vacant place on the Kansas schedule.-Saturday, October 10. That date is still open on the Kansas several teams under consideration and expects to get a game in a few days. The Emporia team had a game early in the week with Baker University and one with Washburn a week later. To play K. U, between these games, would cripple the Presbyterian team and win over the Ichabods, Coach Granger refused to fill the Jayhawker date. VARSITY CAPTAIN GETS BRUISE IN PRACTICE Captain John E. Detwiler injured his shoulder when he dove for a ball at the Varsity football practice yesterday afternoon. The injury is not serious and will not keep him from practice. To the Faculty and Students We will have an expert presser on Saturday 26th, so bring in your suits Friday in order that we can dust and clean them ready for Sunday. Prince Albert suits and indies' skirts are available at the Kt. U. Shoe Shop and Pantatorium, 1342 Ohio. We guarantee satisfaction—Adv. 2 Guessing contest on total football score made by K. U. for 1914 starts tomorrow—Adv. P Phoenix Silk Hosiery The lustrous,smoothfitting Silk Stocking that wears to your satisfaction. Twenty shades for your selection. Women's 75c, Box of 4 Pairs $3 Men's 50c, " " " $2 Sweater Coats That will please you. Choose from several styles, weaves and prices. Shaker Knit manish models, Rope Stitch, Cashmere Rib, Angora, and Two Tone Rib. $3.50, $5.00, $6.50 and $9.00 C. OF E. PLEASED WITH KANSAS OFFER Orms. Bullline & Hackman W.A. White Says Presbyterian College Considered Chance to Play a Compliment That he was pleasing a school very much when he invited the College of Emporia to play the University of Kansas in football October 10 Manager W. O. Hamilton probably did not know. But that what he did, according to Bill Allen White, in his Emporia Gazette. "Coach Wayne Granger's College of Emporia football warriors have a chance to slip in with the swells this year, for the University of Kansas has offered the Presbysterians a place on its schedule. Mr. Granger received a letter today from W. O. Hamilton, general manager of athletics at the University, informing him that an October date is being held open for the Emporia team. The coach was undecided today whether to accept the offer, and will not reply definitely until after a conference with Captain "Stub" Williams and other members of the team this afternoon. The College schedule has been made up and the game with K. U. could not be taken on without disarranging it. In view of the severe battering that the College lightweight would have to take at the hands of the University team, it is hardly likely that Granger will risk injury to his stars by a game accepted this late in the season. "The offer of the University, however, to include the Emporias on its its schedule is highly complimentary to the prowess of College athletic teams. K. U. schedules games with only two other schools in Kansas, the Aggies and Washburn. The University officials have shown respectful admiration for College athletics in most years, and last week consented to matching a basketball battle between the Jayhawkers, who were the Missouri Valley champions, and the Emporia five—Emporia Gazette. On the all-conference elevens of the Missouri there are six men from the team of the Crimson and the Blue. These are Burton, Weidlein, James, Reber and dWilson. Both Nebraska and Missouri have one more ma non the all-conference team than Kansas has. Each of them having seven men while Kansas has but six, Ames holds the fourth place with five, and the Aggies are in fifth place with three men. Page sixty-four of the football rules book of this year carries a full page picture of the 1913 Jayhawker team. There are in all twenty-two men in the picture. The are Kane, Burton, Strothers, Keeling, Mulloy, Hammond, Reber, Detwiler, James, Duffield, Coach, Tudor, Stuewe, Sommers, Parker, Martin, Wilson, Russell, Calkins, Greenlees, and Bishop. FOOTBALL RULES BOOK CARRIES JAYHAWKER CUT Fountain pens, only the standard kind at Carroll's—Adv. Correct Dress A little time spent here in looking over the new arrivals in Benjamin Clothes for fall will enable you to dress faultlessly, yet without extravagance-upward $18 Johnson & Carl Purveyors of New York Styles In Benjamin Clothes UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN VOLUME XII. NUMBER 8 NO MORE SMOKING ON CAMPUS,—COUNCIL Strict Enforcement of Rules Determined at Meeting Last Night DO AWAY WITH EXPOSITION Decided That Biennial University Af fair Distracts Too Much from School Work A motion providing for a strict enforcement of the rule prohibiting smoking of any kind on the steps of and approaches to University buildings, and cigarette smoking on the campus, as well as a rigid enforcement of all disciplinary rules, was the most important action of the Student Council in its first meeting of the year last night. In accordance with the views of the Chancellor that the University Exposition when given every two years, distracts too much from the work of the University, the Council voted to drop the exposition for this year. The Council further provided for punishment in cases of violation of the rule by fixing the penalty, of a public reprimand for the first offense and suspension from the University for three days for the second offense. It also voted to bond pantatoriums, list the names of those carrying bonds in the Kansan, and placed the work in the hands of a committee which will be announced at the next meeting. Two vacancies in the Council, caused by the failure of Phil Miller and Walter Rockwell to return to school will be filled at the next regular meeting. Both vacancies are in the College. Petitions from the candidates for the position will be sent to the seat of the Council before Tuesday of next week at which time the Council will elect. Any student in the College is eligible. A change in the manner of electing the cheer leader was also made by the Council. Hitherto the election has been by standing vote in front of Green Hall and has resulted in nearly every case in which a cheer leader voted presents. At the close of Friday's chapel all candidates for cheer leader will be given a trist, all those in attendance will be given tickets as they enter on which they can write their preference. These will be deposited in ballot boxes in charge of members of the Council in the general elections being made to have the cheer leader elected on the general ballot in the future, but due to the length of time before the next election it was not possible in this case. UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON, SEPTEMBER 23, 1914. Many Attend First Practice of Uni versity Orchestra—Dean Skilton Needs a Violoncelloist THIRTY CANDIDATES ARE OUT On Friday, September 25, the 10 o'clock classes will be held at 11, and the 11 o'clock classes at 11:30. Thirty candidates attended the first tryout for the orchestra in North College at 7 o'clock last night. The violoncello is the most needed and those who wish to try out for it should call Dean Skilton at once. Members of the orchestra will be chosen Tuesday. A meeting of all the Y. M. C. A. committeemen will be held in Myers Hall tomorrow night at 7:00 p. m. Frank Strong Chancellor. Back From West Virginia Prof. S. J. Hunter returned from West Virginia Monday where he has been doing entomological research work. Send the Daily Kansan home. COFFEE ROASTING INJURES Dean Sayre Thinks That the Harmful Ingredients in Coffee Comes in Roasting Green Berry The roasting process, and not coffee itself, is accounted injurious to the average drinker of coffee, according to Dean L. E. Sayre of the School of Pharmacy, who recently read a paper on the subject before the American Pharmaceutical Association in the late 1970s to system of testing coffee by the United States government was shown to be ineffective. Coffee has received unjust condemnation, continues the Dean. All cereals would, if treated in the same manner, be found to contain properties just as harmful. By a correction of the roasting evil it is hoped that the use of coffee substitutes may be eliminated. COMPANY M ADMITS FIVE NEW MEMBERS The University Daily Kansan: DROP IN ANY UNIVERSITY MAIL BOX Please put me down for a year's subscription to the University Daily Kanman for which I agree to pay $2.50 before Nov. 1, 1914. Kansas National Guards to Compete in DuPont Powder Company Contest Five candidates were received into the ranks of Company M. Kansas National Guard, at the first meeting of the year, last night in Robinson Gymnasium. A large number of old men attended. Captain F. E. Jones is optimistic over the success of the enlistment to reach seventy-five. Sixty men were members of the company last year. There will be a special meeting of the company Thursday evening for the purpose of issuing uniforms to those who were not present last night. Several new candidates will be admitted at this meeting. The DuPont Powder Company has offered a lager loving cup to the organization which qualifies the greatest number of men during the coming season and to the company which receives the highest standing in rife practice. Company M has decided to enter this contest, its previous records indicating that it stands a good show of winning. --great deal worse than anything I had ever given me when I was to be late with the cow. They got 3 or 4 barrels every afternoon. Thursday morning we new fellowship got only dirty water to drink, they put it in glasses so it got it mixed with the coffee while the others drank in cups. My dear man stays in a little room on the 5th floor in Mansar. Meet everything in high account of the war. Must the Day of God stand at a reception. He introduced me on a girl who had on one of the Russian In. In our dresses I had all about our new sale, give MYER'S HALL HAD NO DRONES LAST WEEK Social Events Kept All Y. M. C. A. Members Busy During Enrollment Week Signed... Business was the keynote of the University Y. M. C. A.'s doings on the Hill the opening week of the term, from the first Stunt Night, Monday, to the big Freshman-Blowout, Saturday evening. Every minute in planning or executing some project of interest to the students. The greatest gathering of the week, numerically speaking, was the football rally Wednesday evening, where 800 "studies" gave vent for the first time this year to their enthusiasm for the gridiron sport. The presence of the new coach lent additional interest to the team. A close relationship with the vaudeville and concert Tuesday evening, which drew a crowd of 250. Enthusiasm again rose to a high pitch Thursday evening, when twenty Y. M. members distributed the much desired "K* books to 700 men students. Address... Throughout the week, the employment bureau took care of some 700 men who needed work, directed many of them to boarding clubs, and along with the information bureaus established at the railroad depots, made life less miserable for the homeless freshmen. Con Hoffman, secretary of the Uni- DROP IN ANY UNIVERSITY MAIL BOX. Con Hoffman, secretary of the University. Y. M. C. A. has been working over Freshie's First Letter Home Lawrence Sept 20th Dear Mother This has been loved long There is a Crisp $5 Bill Waiting for the Most Proficient Football ARE YOU A GOOD GUESS? Kansas Man Safe in England Noel Keys, former Emporia College student, and 1913 Rhodes Scholar from Kansas, has reached England in safety after several months in the war zone in continental Europe. A censored cablegraph from Keys, announcing his safe arrival in England, was received in this country a few days ago. Chicago Star Goes to Yale Jack Foote, the University of Chicago star football tackle of 1912, has just matriculated at Yale. Under the one year rule, Foote will not be available for the Eli variance until next fall, but the freshman squad will find him a valuable addition. Resolved: That "Germany was the aggressor in plunging Europe into war," will be discussed by the University Debating Society Monday night at 7:30. The affirmative will be upheld by Burney, Miller, and E. I. Goppert, and the negative by J. M. Johnson and E. Rex. Moody. How many points will the Jay- ah football team score this fall? Debaters to Discuss War Kansas Man Safe in England Pushing Stadium at Princeton Princeton is rushing work on its new football stadium and expects to have it ready in time for the Yale The amphitheatre soon completed will accommodate 12,000 persons. Y. M. C. A. Secretary Has Student Labor Seeking Ways and Means to Get Through College That a University farm or manufacturing plant of some kind be established at the University of Kansas so that students working their way through school may have steady work is a suggestion made. Consequently, the department of the YM C. A. and head of the University Employment Bureau. There is $5 waiting for the fellow who can give the answer. Alex Carroll, proprietor of Smith's News Depot, has posted his guess card, and the business men and students are registering their estimates on the website. The quod will chalk up. A score of guesses flare range from 68 to 309 points. Chicago Star Goes to Yale SUGGESTS A K. U. FACTORY SOPHOMORES NAME MILLER The Board of Administration is trying to meet the situation. Last year the Board made it possible for all students to be placed on the University pay roll, doing janitor work and other jobs. This year the number of students doing such work will be practically the same. "More students are wanting work this year than ever before, and there are fewer jobs for them," says Mr. Hoffman. "Already 284 applications have been made and but 64 have been given steady employment. Odd jobs are numerous but this isn't the kind of work that insures a man getting through a term of school. Several students left the University this week because no steady employment could be found for them." Cartoon by Collins Second-Year Men Take Political Initiative and Places Ticket for October 2 Sophomores took the political initiative last night and launched a ticket for the October 2 election. Forty second-year men met at 1401 Kentucky in a caucus session. The ticket is headed by Lawrence Miller for president. The other candidates are Vice-president, Jack Bond; hop manager, George Voekum; treasurer, Fred Rodkey; secretary, Cora Shinn. FRESHMEN LIKE ALGEBRA; DEPARTMENT IS CROWED Eighty-seven more freshmen are enrolled in the algebra classes this year than ever before, according to the figures of the mathematics department. This increase caused three new sections to be formed, further division being prohibited by lack of room. "This increase is gratifying to the department," said Prof. J. N. Van der Vries this morning. "It shows that the students are awakening to the importance of mathematics in their college work." CHANCELLOR FRANG STRONG INDORSES DAILY KANSAN "The Kansan is all right," said Chancellor Frank Strong, this morning. "It is an unusually good college paper. I am for it. I sincerely hope that the Kansan will have a big circulation. It certainly seems that a colleague in the best United States should have the full support of the University." HENRY AND STOCKTON OUT FOR COUNCIL John M. Henry, managing editor of the Daily Kansan, and Marcellus Stockton have announced themselves as the Student Council from the college. The vacancies were caused by the failure of Walter Rockwell and Phil Mulligan. UNIVERSITY STUDENTS WRITE MANY LETTERS Although Lawrence is ninth in population among the fifty cities of Kansas it stands in fourth place in respect to postal receipts. Possibly this may be explained by the fact that college students are most profiling with letters to the home folk in the quest of "a little spending money." Milengah Man visits here William Carpenter, of Marion, Kansas, is visiting at the University on his way to Ann Arbor, where he is a student in the University of Michigan school of law. Michigan Man Visits Here Graduates Marry Raymond Beamer, '13, and Lucy Dunbar, 14, were married Saturday. Mr. Beamer has been appointed in the department of entomology. TO Geologists to Meet The first meeting of the Geological Society will be held at 4:30 o'clock this afternoon in Room 203, Haworth Hall. The society meets every first and third Wednesday. TO INVESTIGATE ROAD LAWS University Engineering Expert Sent by Kansas Societies to Illinois, Iowa and Wisconsin Prof. H. A. Rice, of the University of Kansas School of Engineering, will leave tomorrow morning as a representative of three state associations to study good road legislation in Illinois, Wisconsin, and Iowa, and its application to conditions in Kansas. He is sent by the Kansas Engineering Society, Good Roads Association, and Automobile Association. At Springfield, Madison, and Des Moines, Professor Rice will get first-hand information on measures proposed and adopted in Illinois, Wisconsin, and Iowa. He will learn what legislation has failed and what has proved most beneficial, and with his knowledge of local conditions, will recommend a plan of procedure for Kansas. ASSOCIATIONS PLANS FOR BIBLE CLASSES Y. M. and Y. W. Will Work With City Churches for Courses A graded school for the study of the Bible and religious subjects is the aim sought by the ministers of the various town churches and the heads of the two christian associations and committee for organizing such a school. The campaign is the result of the demand from students for courses in religious branches under competent instructors. Plans call for a cooperative campaign among the churches in which a committee composed of members from each church will visit every student on the Hill, acquaint him with the work, and endeavor to enroll him in one of the courses. The committee consists of Rev. F; W. Ainsley, Dr. Stanton Olinger, and Dr. A. Braden, assisted by Miss Anne Gittins and Co Hoffman,atee of the College by the addition of Rev. N. S. Elderkin the pastor of the Congregational church, and one representative from another church not yet named. The courses will be specially adapted to young people and will be graded, text books being used. Similar Bible study campaigns are being conducted in universities of Wisconsin, Nebraska, Iowa, and Washburn and Manhattan. CLASS OF '18 JOINS IN HONOR MOVEMENT Committee Draws Resolution Favoring New System of Student Discipline Resolutions favoring the honor system were drawn up last night at a meeting of the freshman organization committee, and were placed in the hands of Willard Wattles, a member of the committee, to be formulated for presentation to the class. Due to the lack of a full committee, another meeting will be necessary before plans for class organization can be made. Friday evening at five o'clock is the next date set. Frick Gives $50.000 Frick Gives $30,000 H. C. Fruck of Pittsburgh, has contributed $80,000 to the fund for the erection of the memorial structure at the birth place of William McKinley, at Niles, Ohio. J. G. Barnes, Jr., is chairman of the National McKinley Birthplace Memorial Association. Entomological Club Elects George Vansell was elected president of the Entomological Club at its meeting yesterday afternoon. T. W. Claussen was chosen vice-president and Christine B. Freark, treasurer. 2223 Registered Now 2223 registered Now Twenty-two hundred, twenty-three have registered for work in the University this year, twelve having enrolled since the Kansan went to press yesterday. CRUMBINE EXPECTS NO MORE WATER TROUBLE Evelyn Strong and Naomi Simpson will give an informal tea Friday afternoon for all freshmen and new women of the University, at the Strong residence, Fourteenth and Louisiana streets. Send the Daily Kansan home. Medical Dean Makes Favorable Report to Board of Administration RAINS CLOGGED THE INTAKES Mud Caused Roiley Condition in Pipes—According to Analyses of State Water Survey That the students of the University will have no more trouble with the city water is the opinion expressed in the report sent to the Board of Administration by Dean S. J. Crumbine, after consultations by the State Water Survey. The report follows: At our Monday morning conference of the department, including divisions of this department, including Professor Haskins, our engineer, and Professor Young, director of the water laboratories, the question of the water supply at Lawrence was very thoroughly gone into. Professor Young presented the last two analyses of the Lawrence water which showed it to be in very good condition. It has been determined that the recent heavy rains have filled the river intake of the water plant full of mud, and that there is now no water seaking through the valve. Professor Young also report, that my request to secure samples from the various water galleries to determine whether or not either or all of these galleries were connected with the river, has been carried out, the analyses of which collected samples showed that there was no such connection. The basins are full, and the ground water levels have risen considerably since the continued wet weather. Both Professor Young and Haskins believe that we will have no further difficulty until next summer, or until it becomes necessary by reason of a large fire to open up the valves in the river. The wells and infiltration galleries are now getting sufficient water to control an ordinary fire. This, together with the recent analyses of the water, lead me to make the statement which I believe should be given publicity by your board. I am also water is a present safe. As an additional measure of safety, however, we have insisted that the Water Company continue to use the hydrochlorite treatment, which they have been doing for the past two weeks. I believe, therefore, that with these assurances, the people of the state may feel reasonably secure in knowing that the students at the University will receive a wholesome supply of water this winter, and I would request that your board make such announcement. I shall make it my business during the coming year to see that the order of the State Board of Health on the Lawrence Water Company is strictly obeyed, and will take such measures as seem to be necessary to guard the health of the citizens of Lawrence and the students at the University. GOLF CLUB MUCH ALIVE Members Decide to Take One Week in Which To Learn of Interest in Sport The Oread Golf Club did not expire last night at all. The motion to disband failed, and was followed by one which carried, to give the club one week in which to learn how much alive it is. That is to learn if the members were interested enough to keep up the links. If the students and faculty wish to maintain the course action will be taken on the matter at the meeting of the club next Tuesday night. Any students who wish to enter the club and help keep up the links may do so by paying the usual fee of two dollars. An attempt will be made to have the mercerity keep up the course f1384 f358 Many New Pharmics Enrollment in the school of pharmacy is a record breaker this year. Although requirements for entrance to the courses have been raised until they equal those of the College and the work has been extended from two to three years, 30 new men have enrolled this year. The entire enrollment of the school of pharmacy is now 65. The first meeting of all the faculty of the University will be held Wednesday at 4:30 in Snow Hall. NIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Official student paper of the University EDITORIAL STAFF REAL STATE JOE GLEIBERMAN **Editor-in-Chief** GARVIN LAMBERT **Editor Editor** MENDEY MUNNEY W. D'YERNE Business Manager J. WYETH Business Manager CHAR. S. SVERBYT Advertising Manager REPORTORIAL STAFF LEON HARRIS GILBERT GILBERT GILDER GLUCKY GLUCKY CULANT CHARLES Sweet CHARLES Sweet RUX MIDDLE RUX MIDDLE FRANK B. HENDERSON BRIAN HAYES HELEN HAYES M.W., S.CAFFY M.S., CRAFT HENRY HENDERSON SAM INGALLS Entered as second-class mail master Sep- ter 1948. Received as third-class mail Kansas, under the act of March 3 Phone, Bell K. U. 25 Address all communications to UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Lawrence, Kans. Published in the afternoon, five times a week. Pamela Kramas, from the press of the department Subscription price $2.50 per year in advance; one term, $1.50. The Daily Kannan aims to picture the students in a real-life situation, go to Kansas to go further than merely printing the news by standing for the district elections; be clean to be cheerful; be charitable; be to be clean; to be cheerful; to be charitable; WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 23, 1914. Habits are at first cobwebs, then cables.—Old Proverb. SENIORS, GET YOUR RECEIPTS The 1915 Jayhawker needs the support of every senior on the Hill. Financially it starts off in a proseperous condition. Editorially many new features are being added to the book and it looks like a big year for a successful annual. The business manager and the editor in chief are working hard on the book to make it a little bit different from the common run of annuals, and to make it a success financially. The management can do much in accomplishing this and it is doing so. But not everything can be done by the two men elected by the senior class to get out their Jayhawker. Every senior should make it his personal business to do what he can in helping the management. Right now is the time to pay the six dollar fee; the business manager will be busy within a few weeks tending to other matters connected with the book, such as printing and engraving contracts and advertising. He would like to get the senior pledges out of the way, and in this manner every fourth-year man can help a great deal. Seniors, pay your six dollar fee now! MORE MEN NEEDED More men must turn out before Wheaton can produce a good team. He cannot make it out of nothing. Manager Hamilton has issued a call for more football players. The need is imperative. Last night only fourteen men were out for the line. The fact that players fear they "can't make the team" should not keep them from trying. The University needs men, and they should respond. And those students who cannot go out-perhaps your roommate, or a good friend is eligible. Send him out. Manager Hamilton will not have to issue a second call for men. Cooperation between students and coaches is absolutely necessary, he says. Here is a chance to help. SUPPORT THE TEAM Manager Hamilton plans to start off the football season with a rush A big parade October third will usher in the first game. The contest may be comparatively easy, but it is by no means won until the whistle blows on the last play. The fact that the University machine expects an easy victory would make defeat all the more distasteful. Every student in the school can help. A place is reserved for him in the parade. Think of the impression it would make if fifteen hundred students would come to the field in a body. The team needs every student's support to be successful and passive support is not apparent. Get in the parade! Help give the Rock Chalk, and sing the Crimson and the Blue! According to a Daily Kansan cub, Chancellor Strong and the Board will be followed by distinguished visitors in the parade Saturday, "among them the president of William Jewell, Governor George H. Hodges, and staff." The Daily Kansan again warns the Ichabods against getting excited over the prospects of defeating K. U. in football. K. U. almost invariably wins all of its practice games. The Daily Kansan announces that Prof. H. C. will survey Kansas gas. Which one of the numerous candidates will he visit first? "K. U, Students Fuss While Europe Fights"-Daily Kansan headline. There is considerable fusing in Europe, too. Professor Flint announced the first of the week that the advertising class would meet on the 5th floor of Fraser. The class went straight up in the air. "Frowsy Sweetheart Make Frowsy Wives," reads a headline. But, the coptimistic lover wants to know, don't hair dressing styles ever change? Because the annual has money, a headline concludes that all is well. That's usually the case. Armageddon By Willard Wattles. the gods of war have tossed the apple of death Into the peaceful laps of reluctant nations The clock of Europe is set back six thousand years and the Servian peasants leave un- rathered harvests To be mown down in an unnameable garnering. I see a sorrowing face lifted in a far garden. hear a voice upon a lonely hill, I hear a voice upon it* almost ill, Nay, I see uncountable millions of Of women and huddled children and helpless old people. And the pale unafraid faces of strong men going to be cut down. It is the desperate rally of expiring feudalism, It is the last crucifixion of the rights of man. It is the resurrection and the day of judgment Pronounced upon the war-gods by unescapable wisdom That men may learn the imperative necessity of avoiding war. Kansas is justly proud of the fact that hazing has become a relic of the past, with the May Day rush, and other small school customs. At the age of seventeen, the spirit still survives, as the following jusatch from Columbia testifies: HAZING AT MISSOURI The sophomores locked up the freshmen to keep them away from sophomore-freshman bag rush. When the mayor and police of Columbia discovered the captive freshmen they said the condition within the silo was such that some of the students at the university were freed by the city officials, including the mayor, chief of police and the chairman of the board of health. Their arrest by the municipal police was the sequel to the annual lass rush which was held here yesterday. The university and police authorities will make a united cibort o ston all hazing this year. Because they locked forty freshmen in the state farm silo and held them prisoners there half a day, four sophomores of the University of Missouri yesterday were arrested, fired and suspended from the University. Forty-five freshmen also were locked up in a corncrib and guarded by seven sophomores. Wasps were released in the crib and the freshman freed themselves by knocking down a side of the crib. A fight then followed and several of the sophomore guards were bruised. A CHANCE TO IMPROVE A Kansas woman lecturer has said that "frowsy sweethearts make frowsy wives." Which is probably true. It is also true that waxen-doll sweethearts usually make waxen-doll wives. However, there is evidence for each variety to improve during her married life—Ottawa Herald. “It's the little things that count,” remarked the kindergarten teacher, as she called the first class in arithmetic—Cornell Widow. Inez—Did you say you would never marry a cross-eyed man? Funny Things The College Jesters Say Priscilla—Certainly. He might put the ring on the hand of the minister. "I dropped my watch on the floor last night." Not long ago, I was in a town and wanted a glass of beer. I came to a big building along the side of which I could see all of the other word 'Saloon.' I stepped inside to find that it was some other line of business, but one which is often run in connection with a saloon. I called for a glass of beer, and the prophetator told me how to whether he should shoot me, kick me into the street or call the police. Did it stop? "Sure, you boob. Did you think it went right through?"—Cornell Widow. "Daughter, I was a stranger in that town; I didn't know that man or his business. I merely was guided by his sign. The man who accosted you is a stranger here, and daughter, as I said before, I have studied you and your ways."—Manchester Journal. "You have changed a lot lately." "Who told you that?" "Told me what?" "The, when you pass a man or a group of men, you giggle, toss your head, and perhaps remark to your girl companion that this is the slowest trick. And if some man accepts your challenge you want him shot. "That I got a job as cashier."—Cornell Widow. Don't pull his hair. You might ravel out his brains—Cornell Widow. Dauton—I know the tangle and all the rest but what is the St. Vitus? Doyle- It's the one you do with the nurse—Cornell Widow. He—The doctor says I must cut out smoking. "That is where I snine," remarked the young man, as he shoved his blue suit to the tailor—Cornell Widow. She-Oh, dear. Can't you hold out until we get enough coupons for that beautiful dining room rug?—Michigan Tradesman. FABLES UP TO DATE By T. A. McNeal A flock of chickens were tramping around after the mother hen, when one of them seized a good-sized worm and lit out with it in its beak. The chicken started to run after the one with the worm. Then the mother hen called to her offspring, saying: "If you little fools would put in your time digging round here instead of trying to take the worm away from your succeeds, they wouldn't have" your lee-warey and would have| your crabs a lot fuller." Kansas Classics Moral: It is a lot better to try to dig up something on your own account than to spend your time figuring on how you can get the best of somebody else and do him out of what he has accumulated. A young lady, her cheeks flushed with indignation and her eyes flashing fire, burst in upon her parents and demanded, in no uncertain tones, that papa immediately go and lick a sword "smart" young man in that town. WHO'S TO BLAME? "Why papa, he flirted with me; he asked me 'which way, little one?' and offered to follow me. I want him whipped. He if I were only a man." "Daughter," he said, calling the girl to his side, "no one on earth is more interested in you than your old dad. No one quicker to arise to your dense sense. But listen. This very clever person listens to you and this is what I have learned. "You go down the street very scantily dressed. You deliberately expose as much of your person as is necessary to appeal to the cural in appearance. You put a large portion of your well developed breast, your arms and—by means of a slit in your skirt and transparent hose—a goodly share of your lower limbs are exposed to view. The portion of your body that is covered is such as a wavy and ever curve and angle is brought out in bold relief. Mamma naturally got dad's hat and told him where the six-shoer lay hidden away. But papa didn't take the hint. Regal, A Small Style for library Occupation Get Acquainted With Regals Selling new Regals to old customers requires no argument, for once a Regal has graced your foot, your permanent patronage is assured. $ \textcircled{1} $ So we want you to meet the Regal Shoe and get acquainted with the greatest shoe values in America. $ \textcircled{2} $ Let us slip on a pair of smart, new Regals. They'll delight you, surprise you and fit you. And, they'll give you unequalled service. PECKHAM'S Frank Koch "The Tailor" Full Line of Fall Suitings Shorthand and Typewriting Bookkeeping and Banking Penmanship and Spelling In fact, a complete commercial train can be had at Lawrence Business College Merchants National Bank Swede Wilson's For Billiards Phones 540 Leave your name and guess on total football score at Carroll's, starting tomorrow.—Adv. Student Headquarters Student Headquarters SANITARY CAFE SANITARY CAFE A Nice Clean Place to.Eat LUNCHES - SHORT ORDER Across from Kress Store 916 Mass are fast in color and steadfast in service. $1.50 up. Cluett, Peabody & Co., Inc. Makers Want Adds WANTED—A student barber at once—Kaw Barber Shop, 910 Mass St. 7-6 FOR RENT-Eight fine rooms, well lighted and heated, exceptionally well lighted, exceptionally fine frat rooms. J. M. Neville, office in Stubbs' building, across from Court House. Bell 834. Mail your want ad with 25 cents enclosed to the Daily Kansan—want ads are payable in advance. FOR RENT—One double room, $10 per month; one room, single $5. double $6; one small single $3. Student Union — Adv. LOST—Upon Sept. 17, a silver Z N bar pin. Please return to 1234 Miss. 8-8* A Good Place to Eat at Anderson's Old Stand LOST-One pair of eye glasses. Return to Kansan office. Reward. Rent a Near. 5 Oliver in perfect condition three months for $4.00. The Oliver Typewriter Company, Kansas City, Mo. e-o Johnson & Tuttle Proprietors 715 MASSACHUSETTS STREET The old reliable K. U. Barber Shop welcomes you fellows back and will be pleased to meet you and new recruits at the old stand, 727 Mass. St. Call and get acquainted. Adv. at Schulz makes Clothes Remember That 913 Mass. St. Lawrence, Kas. Francisco & Co. Livery, Hacks and Garage 812 VERMONT STREET Phone 139 PROFESSIONAL CARDS W. C. M. CORNELLE, Physician and Surgeon. Office, 819 Mass. St. Bell 399, Home 9342. Residence, 1346 Tenn. St. Bell 1023, Home 639. J. F. BROCK, Optometrist and Speci- tor 802 Mass. St., Belton phone 695. HARRY REDING, M. D. E. Eye, ear, nose and throat. Glasses fitted. Office, F. A. A. Bldg. Phones, Bell 513, Home 512. G, A. HAMMAN, M. D. Eye, ear Satisfaction Guaranteed. Dick Bldg. Satisfaction Guaranteed. Dick Bldg. DR. H. W. HAYNE, Oculist, Lawrence, Kansas. G. W. JONES, A. M. M. D., Diseases of the stomach, surgery and gynecology. Suite 1, F. A. A. Bldg. Resi- sion, 1201 Ohio St. Both phones. J. R. BECHTEL, M. D., D. O. 883 Both phones, office and residence. DR. H. T. JONES, Room 12, F. A. A. Bldg. Residence 1130 Tenn. Phones 211. DR. H, L. CHAMBERS. Office over Squire's Studio. Both phones. S. T. GILLISPIE, M. D. Office center S. T. GILLISPIE, M. D. Office center St. Residence 728 12d, Phone 5063, J. W. O'BRYAN, Dentist. Over Wilson's Drug Store. Bell Phone 507. CLASSIFIED Ladies Tailor. R. E. Protsch Mrs. Emma Brown Schulz, Dressmaking and Ladies Tail- ing. 914. 913 Mass. St. Next door to Anderson's Bakery. The Students' Tailor HOME BAKERY For Good Things to Eat C. M. Williamson 933 Mass. St. PRINTING A. G. ALRICH Binding, Copper Plate Printing, Rubber Stamps, Engraving, Steel Die Embossing, Seals, Badges 744 MASS. STREET Watkins National Bank Capital $100,000 Surplus and profits $100,000 The Student Depository MORGAN'S MEALS and SHORT ORDERS Sunday Dinners a Specially Ice Cream Soda Confectionery SPECIAL MEAL TICKETS 1345 Mass. St. Bell 262 F. B. McCOLLOCH THE REXALL STORE Druggist THE REXALLE STORE 847 Mass. St. On the Corner MRS ELLISON, Dressmaking and Ladies' Tailoring. Evening gowns a specialty, 1032 Vermont. Phone Bell 2411 West. Jewelers Mrs. M. Brockelsby-Wilson, Kierster College of ladies tailoring and dressmaking. Over 909 Mass. St. Bell 2109. ED. W. PARSONS, Engraver, Watchmaker and Jeweler. Diamonds and Jewelry. Bell Phone 717. 717 Mass. Plumbers PHONE KENNEDY PLUMBING CO., for gas goods and Mazda lamps. 937 Mass. Phones 658. Hair Dressers HAIRDRESSING, shampooing, scalp and facial massage, shampooing, hair goods, "Marinelli" toilet preparations. For appointments call Bell 1372. Home 51. The Select Hair Dressing Shop, 927 Mass. St. Barber Shops Go where they all go J. C. HOUCK 913 Mass. GO WHERE you get the Best Bob Stewart's Barber Shop, 838 Mass. St. Cafes For a good clean place to eat, where you don't get "ryped" go to the MARKET CAFE, Room 1, Perkins Building. Millinery WANTED - Ladies to call at Mrs McCormick's up-to-date millinery parlors to inspect our new line of hats. 881 Mass St. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN FRESHIES MUST DOFF LIDS TO SENIORS Some Ancient Customs at Harvard College Exact Respect and Courtesy Here are some "Ancient Customs of Harvard College," dated 1734-5, which may comfort the heathen freshman themselves themselves as argyrant upperclassmen; *1. No Freshman shall ware his hat in the College yard except it rains, snows, or hails, or he be on horseback or haith both hands full.* "S. No Freshman shall go by his senior without taking his hair off if he "4. No Freshman shall intrude into his Seniors company. "2. No Freshman shall ware his bear if his Senate Chamber or in his bear if his House." "5. No Freshman shall laugh in his Seniors face. "6. No Freshman shall talk sack- wash with him, or speak to him with his hat but." "7. No Freshman shall ask his Senior an impertinent question. "8. Freshman are to take notice that a Senior Sophister can take a Freshman from a Sophimore, a Middle Batecolour from a Junior Sophister, a Master from a Senior Sophister, and a Fellow from a Master. '9. Freshmen are to find the rest of the Scholars with bats, balls, and '10. Freshmen must pay three shillings a piece to the Butler to have their names set up in the Butter. 11. No Freshman shall loiter by the (way) he is when he is sent of an errand, but shall make hast and give a direct answer when he is asked who he is going for (for) his wish to escape by flying or equivocably to escape some of an errand. '12. No Freshman shall tell who (he) is going (for) except he be asked, nor for what except he be asked, by a Fellow. '13. No Freshman shall go away when he haith been sent of an errand before he be dismissed, which may result in his being thank you, you may go, or the like. "14. When a Freshman knocks at his Seesons, he shall tell (his wife) who did, when "15. When anybody knocks at a Freshmans door, he shall not ask who is there, but shall immediately open the door. "16. No Freshman shall lean at at prayer but shall stand upright. 17. No Freshman shall call his classmate by the name of Freshman. "18. No Freshman shall call up or down to or from his Seniors chamber or his own. 19. No Freshman shall call or throw anything across the College "20. No Freshman shall minge against you, nor go into it. Felluga caj John. "21. Freshmen may ware there hats at dinner and supper, except when they go to receive there Commons of bread and bear. "22. Freshmen are so to carry themselves to there Seniors in all respects so as to be in no wise sauce to them, and who soower of these customs shall be severely punished."—From Delta Kappa Epsilon Quarterly. STATE PRINTER TO DELIVER DIRECTORIES BY OCT. 15 Student directories for this year will be printed by the state printer. Copy will be prepared at once and it is expected that the directories are deleted later than the middle of October, two weeks earlier than last year. "Every student should see that his address is correct in the office of the Registrar," said Registrar George O. Foster, this morning. "If they are not be correct in the directories, not be correct in the directories." Buy Tickets Now Student enterprise tickets, which have been on sale this week, can be purchased the rest of the year at the registrar's office or at the office of Manager Hamilton in the Gymnasium. The tickets sell for five dollars and admit to all athletic events, glee clubs, debates, band concert, and other activities listed in the ticket books. Michigan, too, is ready for her gridiron struggles. All members of the team are good men and the majority are old. Their captain, James Raynasof, is playing end this year. Pedagogues Will Meet Pedagogues Will Meet Pi Gamma Sigma will meet Thursday afternoon at 4:30 o'clock in Room 110 Fraser. The University of Utah has erected, at a cost of nearly half a million dollars, a handsome administration building of white limestone with marble interior trimmings. AURORA TODAY DANIEL FROHMAN Presents The Famous Players' Masterpiece The Scales of Justice Featuring Paul McAllister and Jane Fearnley. Complete in 5 Parts. Coming Soon, "One Wonderful Night" The University of Kansas Offers over 200 courses BY MAIL through its Correspondence Study Department. Credit given for all college work. Address University Extension Division, The University of Kansas, Lawrence, Kansas. At the University of Wisconsin a new commons for men and a new men's dormitory have been erected. The University of Alabama has added a dormitory for women costing about $50,000. The original seal of King's College, now Columbia University, out of sight since 1788, has been recovered. He was the governor of King's College in 1726. Engineers to Meet A meeting of the Theta Tau fraternity, honorary engineering, is called Thursday evening at the Acacia house, 1541 Tenn, at 8:00 o'clock. All members should be present as important business will be brought up. No Women Engineers NO WOMEN ENGINEER No women are enrolled in the school of engineering this year. Miss Marion Manley, a sophomore architectural engineer last year is continuing her work at the University of Illinois this year. The enrollment in the school of engineering is now 425 and several more are expected in the next few days. On Way to Chicago On Way to Chicago Clyde D. Hornbaker, a member of the class of '13, is visiting at the Acacia house on his way back to Chicago where he is studying law in the university there. Clarence Schroeder, who had a scholarship in sociology in the University last year visited at Southwestern College last week. "The student paper in every college is an essential part of student life." So we say You might exist without the University Daily Kansan But you can't live without it. Don't try. Subscribe today. Edited by the students for the students. Full expression of student opinion. A year's issues, 170 in all, for $2.50. (Cheaper than most college dailies). Send it to the folks at home. They will enjoy it. $30 One way to California, Oregon, Washington and British Columbia. $23 One way to Ogden, Salt Lake City. $25 to many points in Idaho. Proportionately low fares from other points September 24 to October 8,'14 Tickets will be honored for passage in free reclining chair cars or coaches or in Tourist sleepers upon payment of regular tourist sleeping car berth rates. LIBERAL STOP-OVER PRIVILEGES EN ROUTE Reasons Why You Should Travel via UNION PACIFIC STANDARD ROAD:OF THE WEST Privilege given of visiting Denver and Salt Lake City en route. Excellent tourist sleeping car accommodations to Salt Lake City, Los Angeles, San Francisco, Portland and intermediate points. Three fast trains daily with free chair cars and Tourist sleeping cars. Apply for illustrated literature and full particulars relative to routes, rates, sleeping car reservations, etc., io E. E. ALEXANDER, City Ticket Agent 711 Mass. St., Lawrence, Kansas DIRECT ROUTE to PANAMA EXPOSITION, SAN FRANCISCO,'15 JUST FOR COLLEGE WOMEN STORY, FANCY AND COMMENT OF INTEREST TO CO-EDS ON THE HILL. MERE MAIDS MAY BECOME MERMAIDS Gym Instructor Opens Pool to Crowds of Clamoring Co-eds Splash! F-f-f-t! Gurgle! Wheel! Aquatic sports for women have begun at the University for this afternoon. Dr. Alice L. Goetz, director of the swimming pool, opened the pool to freshmen girls and from now on they may splash to their hearts' content. Classes will be organized Monday and the regular swimming season will be on. In accordance with the rule adoptee last year, that all girls must learn to swim before being given credit for freshman gym, it is presumed that all of this year's sophomores are expert swimmers. But there are a great many women in the two upper classes who have never had a chance to learn, and they will be welcomed if they wish to begin now. Dr. Alice L. Goetz, the director, is anxious that junior and senior girls make use of the gymnasium and swimming pool. She will be glad to meet them in her office and help them get the work they want. TO THE RESCUE, SISTERS Specter of the 10:30 Rule, Surviving Last Year's Battles, Returns to Worry Women Again—or yet—we are being accused of failing to obey our old and battle-scarred mentor, the 10:30 rule. Every year since student government was taken up by the women of the University, the 10:30 rule has been contention, ridicule, scorn, evasion, mass-meetings, and vindications without number. Only last spring the matter of abolishing the rule was put up to the women, and they voted to retain it. And before the University has fairly started, we hear the rooming-house keeper in me that the rule is not being observed. What is the trouble? Surely those who voted for the rule last spring expected to obey it. Perhaps, though, they were all seniors, who knew they would not be obliged to stand by what they voted for. That must be it. And doubtless the opponents against the law and order are all freshmen women, who are used to doing what they please at home, and have to be educated to self-government. TALKS TO GIRLS ON SERVICE Professor Schwegler Tells Y. W. C. A. Members to Set Standard of Conduct for University Prof. Raymond A. Schwegler, of the School of Education, gave an inspiring address to one hundred girls Tuesday afternoon at the 'opening meeting of the Y. W. C. A. His subject was "The Door of Opportunity" and he emphasized particularly the opportunity to be of service. Reminding us that we are here to give as well as to receive, Professor Schwegel gave four directions for giving the best that is in us: first, hold to the ideals acquired at home; second, get a brownie from us; third, understand the standard of conduct for the University; fourth, translate your ideals into terms of living. Harrison Elliot, of the Y. M. C. A., then explained the work of the different Sunday Schools and Bible chairs, and urged that every girl become a member of one of these organizations. Both served at the close of the evening. NEW REDINGOTE SUT APPEARS ON CAMPUS Today Only VARSITY 5 Reel Program Lloyd Ware Theatre THE HOUSE NEXT DOOR By J. HARTLEY MANNERS, author of "Peg o'My Heart!" Featuring Zach Clarton and centre 'Lion and the Mouse' Co. Special arranged photo and pipe organ music. One of the prettiest of the new styles is the redingote suit. An attractive example seen on the campus yesterday was in king's blue trimmed with black moiré. The coat was cut in kimono fashion, with plain, loose, three-quarter length sleeves gathered into straight cuffs. It formed a bolero jacket in front, where it was fastened by a single black button. The back was larger, and displayed a butterfly bow of the moiré. The skirt was slightly gored, while the long tunic was circular and was finished with a band of moire. DANCE Why Perspire and be uncomfortable "NITH" NON-PERSPIRE is guaranteed to stop perspiring beneath the arms. HARMLESS - TWO ODORS: VIOLET AND ROSE PRICE 50c Particular Cleanning and Pressing FOR PARTICULAR PEOPLE 12 W. Ninth Lawrence Pantatorium Phones 506 KAW VALLEY ICE CREAM CO. 470 Either Phone 10 W.9th We specialize on clubs and fraternity orders. Let us handle that next order. ICE CREAM AND OYSTERS C LARK CLEANS LOTHES Phone 355 PUNCH TICKET $1.50 TEN PRESSES All Pressing Done by Hand! CLARK LEANS LOTHES CLARK CLEANS LOTHES 730 Mass St. CLARK CLEANS LOTHES FOR TAXICAB Call Either PHONE 100 PEERLESS GARAGE GUARANTEE IF the heating element in this Hoppoine Electric Iron powers electric circuit before makes power conversion in heat element to nearest office, and wets digital device for liquidar part to you, FREE Pacific Electric Heating Co. Friday Booth, Pres. E. H. Richardson, Secy. Lawrence Railway & Light Co. Just received a fresh shipment of Whiting initial and University of Huyler's and Allegretty famous Kansas box stationery at Carroll's.— chocolate creams at Carroll's.— Adv. Adv. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN K. N. G. in Action THE LAND OF THE NATIVE PEOPLE To the Faculty and Students We will have an expert presser on Saturday 26th, so bring in your suits Friday in order that we can dust and clean them ready for Sunday. Prince Albert suits and hides skirts Doctored Dresses To the K. U. Shoe Shop and Pantatorium, 1342 Ohio. We guarantee satisfaction—Adv. 2 Squires, photographer wants to do your kodak finishing. He also sells kodaks, films and supplies—Adv. Don't fail to come in and see our K. U. PENNANTS before fixing up your room or buying one to send home. Boyles Book Store 725 Mass. St. We Want Your Kodak Work- We do developing and finishing. Raymond's Drug Store 819 Massachusetts St. We carry all sorts of Kodak supplies. SHUBERT Mutinee Wed. & Sat. MARGARET ILLINGTON in "Within the Law" Price Rs. 20 to $1.50 NEXT: THE BIRD OF PARADUCE Wed. $1.00 "Nifty" That's what every one says after trying on one of our new fall Book Exchange on Tap Hats or Caps Prices range * from 75c to $1.50 for *Caps*. from $2.50 to $3.50 for Hats, Skofstad 829 Mass. Book Exchange on Tap Books are on sale at the W. S. G. A. book exchange which located in Fraser Hall, whereishing books may obtain same by calling Bell 1954 and the president will see that the proper books are obtained. Phi Sig Pledge Two Sigma. Phi Sigma announce the plodging of William Feder, Topeka, and Alfred Brauer, Newton. Con Squires, the students' photographer made a group photo of the Varsity squad today.—Adv. For up to date photos, go to Squires Studio, 1035 Mass. St.-Adv. Spalding guaranteed black gym suits and gym shoes at Carroll's.- Adv. Guessing contest on total football score made by K. U. for 1914 starts tomorrow—Adv. Fountain pens, only the standard kind at Carroll's—Adv. HATT-CLOTHIEIR local dealer for the ROUGE TAILORS. Suits. 856-430-9100 Have your next suit and o'cant ROYAL TAILORS $16.00 up .-Adv. Fountain Pens Self-filling for $1.00 to $6.00. "Moores" Non-leakable $2.50 to $5.50. Lodging. Autonomy. We frame picture pictures. *Bookstore* BOOK STORE, 319 Mass., St.-Adv. Yes! Your Suit Looks Like New NO. NOT ANEW JUIT JUST CLEANED AND DRESSED and few would know that it wasn't after it has been to us to be Cleaned and Pressed. Plenty of your friends send their garments here once in a while for renovation, and we always give them complete satisfaction. The cost is small, the衣服 is cheap, much money in tailor bills. Send us a trial order so that we can prove how we satisfy other people. Buildinghouse Cleaning House house 510 1024 Mass. THE FLOWER SHOP All Seasonable Cut Flowers. The old customers and friends coming every day and many new students have already called. Be one of our customers. 825½ Mass. MR. and MRS. GEO. ECKE Phones 001 Dont Miss This! A remarkable letter from Samuel G. Blythe, who was on the spot, in this week's Saturday Evening Post. On Sale Thursday SPORTS "Paris When the War Broke" GRIGG'S COACHES PUT TEAM THROUGH LINE WORK Advance Foot Ball Class from Primary Division into Scrimmage Position After seven days' work on the fundamentals of football the Jayhawker squad was promoted yesterday afternoon to line work. Coach Jay Bond took the squad north of McCook Field, limbered the men up and then gave them some line practice. Guarding and blocking and position in scrummage was the course of instruction. An increased squad was present yesterday. Thirty-five men were in suits, but the number is still too small, says the coach. To get the best results, Coach Wheaton must have more men and every effort is being made to get the players out for practice. Dope from other conference teams indicates that Kansas will have keen competition this fall and unless Coach Wheaton has enough material, the Jayhawk may lose a few feathers. With about fifty freshmen out and thirty-five Varsity men, the clubhouse is almost as crowded as it was during the state high school meets. The Varsity has been working on McCook, and he is now on the golf course, west of the athletic field. The new fields south of McCook have not been opened. HASKELL-NORMAL GAME FIRST Teachers and Indians to Play Initial Game October 2 for Lawrence Football Lovers Lawrence's football season will open for the local enthusiasts Friday afternoon, October 2, when the Kansas Normal team meets the Haskell Indians. The game which was scheduled for October 3 will be played the Friday before, because of a conference delay. A same schedule on the same date. FOOTBALL FILLS COFFERS The Indians are doped to give the Normals a drubbing although Coach Kennedy is prepared for strong opposition. Coach Hargiss has developed a fast, smashing team, which threatens to clean up the Kansas colleges, but football fans do not expect the Teachers to stand the crushing offense which the Indians have developed. Report of Harvard and Yale Athletic Associations Show Excess of Revenue Over Expense Some idea of the amount of money received and disbursed by the football authorities during a season of approximately ten weeks may be gathered from the annual reports of the Princeton and Harvard athletic associations. These financial statements, so far as football is concerned, refer to the season nof 1912, but since there is not much deviation fro ma general average, they serve all practical purposes when set on a comparative basis. Princeton gate receipts for nine games amounted to $67,313, of which $44,933 o r more than one half was received as the Tiger's share of the Yale, Harvard and Dartmouth game. The other three colleges netted Princeton but $5,379, an average of less than $1,000 per game. A source of revenue, in addition to the gate receipts, was the training table, the players paying $656 for board, while the football programs netted $414. Against this revenue were expenses amounting to $3,064, showing a balance of $8,322, far in excess of receipts of all other sports combined. Official football score cards are now ready at Carrolls.'—Adv. Barber Shop and Bath Rooms The Only Electric Massage Machine in the City 727 Massachusetts Street K. U. Razors Honed. Ground and Exchanged W. F. Weise, Prop. Parker The Tailor High Class Modern CLOTHES 847 Mass. St. SOONERS PREPARING FOR HEAVY SCHEDULE Owen Must Fill Places of Many Men Like Reeds and Courtright By Seward Sheldon Norman, Okla. Sept. 23—Bennie Owen's Sooners have been going through strenuous workouts for the past two weeks on Boyd Field. The new material from last year's freshman team is showing up well, but the roster is not favorable for a strong a team as last year. Names which are familiar in inter-college football circles will be missing from Oklahoma's line-up. Reeds, the great fullback, Courtright, right halfback, Ambuster, quarter and captain last year, Lowery and Rogers, ends, Hott, Meacham, all were last year, all were out of graduation, and it is Bennett Owen's task to build a team from new material to take the place of his galaxy of stars. The backfield will be lighter than it was last year, but just as fast, and if Geyer develops into form near that shown by Reeds last year, the scoring machine will be nearly as strong. Montgomery, Capshaw and Geyer are working on the place kick and one of these men will be picked to do the kicking. Walls and Geyer are showing up best in punting with boots averaging nearly forty-five yards. Material for the line is heavier than last year. The Hott brothers, Captain Billy Clark and Bell are the old man back. Anderson has been showing great form at tackle, both on defensive and at carrying the ball. He is a new man but will push some varsity player for a position. For ends Owen has Montgomery, from last year's freshman team, and Fields, who will take the places of Lowery and Rogers. Oklahoma's schedule this year will compel Coach Owen to keep his team pointed for every game. Missouri, Kansas, Arkansas, Texas, Oklahoma A. & M. Kansas Argies, and Hasan Beasley will face a concise weeks. The Missouri game comes early in the season, October 16. Every game after that date is an important one, and without being hampered by serious injuries, the Stouthern school be on the long end of schools in a majority of the big school games. NOI SIR! FACULTY TENNIS CLUB IS VERY MUCH ALIVE! Mrs. Witter also does catering in an up-to-date and most satisfactory way. Flowers furnished: always the freshest and best. T. T. Smith, secretary and treasurer of the Faculty Tennis Club, raises to remark that that organization has not disbanded, contrary to information previously published in the Kanstan. Two courts just outside of McCook Field are in fair condition and H.Present times and places at the disposal of faculty men. A meeting will be held in about two weeks to elect new officers., Prof. Carl Becker is president of the organization. "Tea Room" Mrs. Jesse Witter invites you to come and drink a cup of tea at the opening of her "Tea Room" on Thursday September 24 from 4 to 9. After that date the "Tea Room" will be open each afternoon and evening and you will visit it at the place to go and take your friends for a nice, quiet tea or lunch. 904 OHIO STREET Bell Phone 1554.—Adv. Student Union Barber Shop F. M. TIDROW, Prop Everything up to Now All Standard Tonics 1200 Tenn. LEE'S COLLEGE INN DINNER MENU SEPT. 24, 1914 Soup orders free with 25c orders Fried Chicken Country Style .15 Roast Beef, Brown Gravy .10 Ox Heart, Raisin Sauce .10 Veal Croquettes, Spanish .10 Sauce .10 Boiled Tongue with Spinach .10 Weather Prediction--Frost 12 Statistics of 1888 and 1908 Reveal Fact That State Institutions are Gaining Annually UNIVERSITIES MORE POPULAR Universities supported by the state have come to be more popular in the past few years than endowed schools. This is shown by a comparison of the years 1888 and 1908. In 1888, 47 endowed colleges, including all the largest had an enrollment of 36,907 and in 1908 the same colleges had an enrollment of 35,297 and of 45 per cent. During the same time the 47 state universities increased their enrollment from 34,653 to 70,013, or 102 per cent. It was noted that in 1888 the 47 endowed colleges had more students than the same number of state universities, while in 1908 the state universities had about 40 per cent more than the colleges. Captain Edwards, of the K. U. track team, was visiting here several days last week. Edwards is noted for his distance runs and relay racing. While here he called on Coach Hargiss, last year assistant physical director at K. U.-Emporia Gazette. In a game club meet between Harvard, Pennsylvania, Dartmouth, and Cornell, held last spring in New York, Harvard was declared the winner. Civil Engineers to Meet Civil Engineers to Meet The civil engineering society will meet in the chapel of Marvin Hall, Thursday evening. October 1, at 8:00 o'clock. The president requests "members of the society to be present." Beginning in the fall of 1915, the law school of the University of Pennsylvania will require an academic degree for admission. Subscribe for the Daily Kansan UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN VOLUME XII NUMBER 9 CLASS OF '13 TO GIVE DRINKING FOUNTAIN Will Build Stone Structure at Junction of Walks Northeast of Fraser TO PLAN A MINIATURE PARK Cement Sidewalk, Flowers and Possi bly Small Cedars Will Border New Landmark A fountain at which four students may drink at any second of the day will be erected at the junction of the sidewalks southeast of Fraser within the next few months if the plans of George W. Staton, permanent secretary of the measure of the committee of the class of 1813 materialize. Walk Around Fountain The fountain will be about four feet in height and about five feet in diameter. It will be composed of Oread limestone. A walk will be laid around the entire fountain. A place may be left at the outside of the walk that may be planted to flowers if the authorities of the University wish to do so. At the time of graduation the class was unable to leave at the University a memorial because of financial troubles on the Jayhawker of that year. They believed that in time they would be able to build a memorial so they left a man at the University who was to be permanent secretary and treasurer of a memorial committee. Staton Made Secretary George W. Steton who was made the permanent secretary and treasurer of the connet matter has been working for some time on various plans for the creation of something that would indicate that there had been sick on Mount Orend and that they had left the University in 1913. A. The University of Nebaska, Mr. Staon, found a water fountain that he felt could make a good thing to leave on Mount Oread for the use of folks that would come to the University of Nebaska. Of his class had gone from the Hill. He began negotiations with the authorities of the University. The approval of the members of the faculty is essential, and he said that the water will be running for the use of students before the end of the present school year. PEDIGREES TOO LONG FOR FACULTY MEMBERS Couldn't Stand During Reading Yes, there are some wonderful personas at the University of Kansas this year. Some of them have pediatrics and stand during the reading. Such is the observance of one of the old faculty members who attended the faculty meeting in Snow Hall yesterday afternoon. !! When the name of the new one was called, he or she was supposed to stand for inspection during the reading of its, his or her wanderings being investigated. But, alas, it was not so. The inevitable happened. Too many COMPLETES CHANGES IN PATHOLOGY DEPARTMENT Rearrangement of the department of pathology is completed, according to Dr. Ralph Majors, in Lawrence and New York at the School of Medicine at Roseville. Changes in the pathology classes were made necessary to care for the increased number of students enrolled in that department this year. Fifteen juniors are enrolled at Rosedale now, and a number of sophomores will go there at the beginning of the second semester. These students will be given every facility for accurate work in pathology, says Dr. Majors. Quills to Select So that an editor and a managing editor for 1914 Oread Magazine may be elected, a meeting of the Quill Club will be held at 4:30 o'clock Monday afternoon in Room 211, Fraser. The failure of Ferguson and Root, who were elected last year to edit the publication, to return to the University this semester, has made the election necessary. CHANCELLOR TO TALK AT FIRST CONVOCATION Head of University to Giv Welcoming Address to New Students UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS THURSDAY AFTERNOON, SEPTEMBER 24, 1914. On Friday, September 25, the 10 o'clock classes will be held at 11, and the 11 o'clock classes at 11:30. Frank Strong, Chancellor DROP IN ANY UNIVERSITY MAIL BOX. Democracy, unity of the institution, the war, college spirit, and self-government will be among the subjects which Chancellor Frank Strong will discuss in his annual address tomorrow. He'll speak at College Hall. No set theme will be discussed. The talk will welcome new students to the University. The University Daily Kansan: JAYHAWKER IN NEW OFFICE Manager Hackney is in Green Hall Basement to Receive Senior Fees Jayhawker offices are in the basemast Green Hall according to a statement made by Manager Blair Hackney this morning. "A sign has been placed on the door of one of the basement rooms and we are now ready to take care of all senior fees," said Manager Hackney. COLLEGE CLASSES CLOSE IN FIFTY-NINE COURSES From 8:00 to 9:00 and from 10:00 to 11:00 each morning and at 1:30 this week and next Hackney will be in his office, and he requests that seniors see him at this time while he is too busy with his advertising work. Arrangements for the next meeting of the society and plans for the year were discussed at the first meet ing session. Engineering Society held last night. Fifty-nine classes in the College are closed. This was the information given out at the office of Dean Dearn Templin this morning. Registration and registration of the Registrar and the enrolling of students continues with advisers. had sown the wild oats in so many parts of this mundane sphere that they could not stand the strain and dropped into their seats from sheer exhaustion before the Chancellor had finished with them. But, then, that is all right and we meet them immediately from now on. They are initiated and have their blue pencils out just like old heads. So, remember thou the days of thy youth, oh upperclassmen and try these not any bluffing with the new ones. Make Plans for Year Please put me down for a year's subscription to the University Daily Kansan for which I agree to pay $2.50 before Nov. 1, 1914. Signed... DROP IN ANY UNIVERSITY MAIL BOX. Address Address... EXAMINER PRAISES THE MEDICAL SCHOOL First Two Years as Good as Any in the Country Dr. Henry A. Dykes, of Lebanon, Kans., secretary of the Kansas State Board of Medical Examiners, was inspecting the school of medicine at the University yesterday. Dr. Dykes spoke in a most complimentary manner of the department and the work that was being carried on there. "I find the work in the first two years at this school to-be equal to that given in any school in the country," said Dr. Dykes. "A medical school to be a good one must have the state or some other body back of it to furnish the finances. It is utterly impossible to run a school on a basis that deserves an A classification on a small appropriation. It seems to me the University of Kansas medical school was ever underlined. I cannot speak too high of Dr. Swundall and the work that he is carrying on." D. Drykes has just started his inspection trip of all of the medical schools of Kansas and K. U. was the first school visited. BRAN POISION KILLS HOPPERS If Insect is in Early Wheat Fields Use Formula as Recommended by Professor Hunter Grasshoppers need not become a monace to early Kansas wheat if the farmers will but follow the directions of Prof. S. J. Hunter of the entomology department of the University of Kansas. "No reports have been received regarding injury from grasshoppers," said Professor Hunter this afternoon. "But some wheat was sown early and in case the grasshoppers have at least survived, we know to know how to meet the situation." The formula as is recommended by Professor Hunter is as follows: Paris green, $2\frac{1}{2}$ pounds; bran, 50 pounds. Mix these dry and add to a mixture of vinegar and lemon juice, all four quarts syrup, five gallons water. Add enough water to make a wet mash. Do not add water until the day the poison is to be distributed. This amount will sow a field of five twenty-five cents an acre. ANT NAMED FOR PROFESSOR Myrima Hunter! a newly discovered ant is so named because it was Prof. S. J. Hunter, of the department of entomology of the University of Florida for the university. Professor Hunter received word this week of his new namesake. The name was given the ant by Dr. W. M. Wheeler, head of the department of entomology of Harvard University. A year ago the new specimen was found by Professor Hunter on a trip made to Montana in search of insect life. George H. Vansell, a student in Professor Hunter's department, also found one of the new specimens. "The poison bran should be distributed broadcast over the field early in the morning between 5:00 and 7:00 o'clock," says Professor Hunter. "It is of great importance to get the poison bran into the field it better when first beginning to feed, Department Head of Harvard University Credits Discovery of Insect to K. U. Man, S. J. Hunter "This mixture was used two years ago on a large scale and greatly reduced the number of native grasshopper nests in Kansas," concluded Professor Hunter. Three More for Sigmas Grace Wedd and Helen Wedd, of Lenexa, and Lillian Martin, of Topeka, pledged Sigma Kappa late yesterday. sect to K. U. Man, S. J. Hunter Another Pledges The Alpha Delta Pi is pledged: Gladys Adams, Kansas City; Lucile Means, Hatwain; Eloise Holt, nightlight; Katrina Reding, Reding, wreence and Ruth Thomas, Watentle. Prof. O. A. Beath, an instructor in the chemistry department last year, has accepted a position in the University of Wisconsin. Mr. Beath is now working on an investigation of Wyoming's poisonous plants. S GET CAMPAIGN PLANS UNDER WAY Goes to Wisconsin Associations With Churches Will Call on Every Student of the University Y. M. C. A, and the Y. W. C. A., in cooperation with the churches of the city, are maturing their plans for the Bible study campaign to be launched under the guidance of an elected upon, some 200 workers, including ministers, Bible class teachers, and students of the Bible, will call upon every student in the University and solicit his interest and assistance in promotion of the study of the Bible. "One of the greatest benefits of the organized campaign which we are planning," said Rev. Stanton Olinger this morning, "is that every student will be appealed to regardless of his religious denomination. This will lend a spirit of democracy to the undertaking, and invite the action of the student body as a whole. The advantages of such cooperation have been demonstrated in similar campaigns at universities in Pennsylvania, Iowa, 7Such a campaign, by bringing the Bible prominently before the student body, will pave the way for a religious uplift and a better moral tone." New debating contracts will be asked for with Oklahoma and Colorado this year, owing to the expiration of the old ones, and to the expedition of making some small changes. There will be no change with Missouri. NEW DEBATING CONTRACTS TO BE BOOKED SOON A large number of promising students is enrolled in the debating classes, and in so much the prospects for a successful year is good. WAR HAS NOT HARMED ART Professor Griffith Thinks Few Good Pictures Have Been Destroyed by the War War and art, according to Prof. W. Griffith of the school of fine arts, are about as compatible as Carrie Nation and whiskey or freshmen and wisdom. However, the professor says the present great struggle have been greatly exaggerated. American schools will as a rule be greatly benefited, for the majority of the thousands of Americans who were studying abroad, many of them will return home and many of them will enter Ai erican schools. As to the destruction of great works of art by the Germans, there has been little if any. Professor Griffith thinks. The German army has only entered one great art center, the city of Lille, and there they did not disturb anything. The great cry raised at the destruction of valuable paintings at Louvain was unwarranted, for the great paintings weren't quite as colorful as collective collections. The greatest loss so far has been the cathedral at Rheins, but it can probably be restored to its original beauty except the great windows of stained glass, the secret of making such glass having been lost. As soon as the war is over, Professor Griffin believes, taking history as a precedent, all forms of art will be greatly stimulated. The Renaissance came immediately following a period of continuous warfare and the French Revolution of 1871. "Of course," the professor ended by saying, "we can't tell a thing about it yet, and personally I am not worrying much." The first meeting of the Civil Engineering Society will be held October 1, at eight o'clock, in the Marvin Hall Chapel. All freshmen intending to take civil engineering next year have been urged to attend this meeting. The Gymnasium will be open this evening from 7:30 until 8:30, for the issue of wool wUniforms to those members of the K. N. G. who were not present at the meeting last night. There will be a football game Saturday, October 3, in full uniform, so it is necessary that they be procured at this time. Civil Engineers Will Meet K. N. G. Meet Again Hoffman Calls Meeting All members of the Bible study committee of the University Y. M. C A, and all men interested in Bible study work or in the Haskell Bible work are asked to meet with the other C. A. C. members in Myrrh Hall tonight at 7 o'clock. ELECT CHEER-LEADER AT CONVOCATION TOMORROW Choosing of the cheer-leader for the year will take place immediately following convocation tomorrow morning. The candidates for the office will be given a trial. All those attending will be given tickets as they enter on which they can write their preference. These will be de-detailed to leave the room in ballot boxes in charge of members of the Council. Two men, Jo. D. Berwick, a senior engineer, and Edward W. Tanner, a sophomore engineer, are the only candidates who have announced. First Try-out For Glee Club First Try-out For Glee Club The first try-out of the year for the Glee club was held last night at Fraser Hall. Sixty-five men turned out. Henry McCurdy has been appointed business manager. Try-outs for the remainder will be held tomorrow evening. The first try-out for the Women's Glee club is also scheduled for tomorrow night at North College. CHANCELLOR FAVORS ANTI-SMOKE EDICT "Governing Body Off on the Right Foot"—Dr. Strong "The Student Council is starting off well," said Chancellor Frank Strong in commenting on the recent edict of that body on the smoking problem this morning. "I would even be in favor of forbidding smoking on campus, as entirely of the present rule cannot be satisfactorily offered." "And the decision that has been reached on the question of the Exposition is another good move. It is hardly feasible that we have such a thing this year and the Council senate would have to approve it. I did not recommend, however, that there be none, as was stated in the Kansan." SHOULD KANSAS CITIES ESTABLISH ICE PLANTS? "Should Kansas towns have the power to establish municipal ice plants?" This question will be discussed by the League of Kansas Municipalities, at its convention to be held at the University of Kansas, October 7th to 9th. Hugh J. Cooper, of Weatherford, Okla., founder of the first municipal ice plant in the United States and commissioner of public utilities of his city, has accepted the invitation of the League to open the discussion with an address on the Weatherford plant. Mr. Cooper is widely known for his successful operation of the city-owned ice, water and light utilities of the Oklahoma municipality, and his speech will be one of the features of the meeting of the Kansas municipal officials. Indications point to a large attendance, league officers declare. HIRD CANDIDATE ASKS FOR COUNCIL VACANCY To fill the vacancies in the Men's Student Council caused by the withdrawal of Phil Miller and Walter Rockwell, three candidates are now announced. Petitions for Othe J. Fisk, a senior in the College were circulated late yesterday afternoon. Other candidates are John M. Henry managing editor of the Daily Kansan, and Marcellus Stockton. NIVERSITY MASONS HOLD ANNUAL MIXER SATURDAY University Masons will hold their mixer at the Masonic Temple on Massachusetts street Saturday evening, September 26. Masons of all degrees among faculty and students are expected to be present. Victim to Yellow Jaundice Wilfred Brotherton, botanist, of Rochester, Michigan, died in Harper hospital recently, a victim of yellow jaundice. Mr. Brotherton had a great love for both plants and woodland creatures, of which he made a deep study during his life. His discoveries in the plant world, and the libraries that surrounded have committed the profound interest of botanists of note. Tonight, at 7:45 the K. U., Debate- ment meeting of the year in 313 Pruners Freshmen to Meet The freshman organization committee will meet at 5 o'clock tomorrow in Myers Hall. All members should be present. WE NEED DORMITORIES SAYS DEAN BIACKMAR Accomodations Furnished by State Would Improve School Life at K. U. WAITING FOR APPROPRIATIONS Need is Recognized and Sentiment Favors Building, but Legislature Hasn't Acted "Dormitories are necessary to the best of our school life and the sooner we begin them the better," declared Dean F. W. Blackmar of the Graduate School, in an interview this morning. The statement was prompted by the announcement that at the University of Wisconsin a new commons for men and a men's dormitory have been erected and that the University of Alabama has added a dormitory for women costing $50,000. **Coming into action.** "Almost everybody concedes that dormitories are now bodily needed, and the only thing lacking is an appropriation from the legislature to build them," continued the dean. "It is a tremendous task and I do not wonder that the state is slow in attempting it." "The early policy of the University did not favor dormitories, because the old-fashioned dormitory had fallen into disrepute. Since the modernized institution has come into favor in the leading institutes, it has been forced to use all available appropriation funds in providing buildings and equipment for instruction. The state has been delinquent even in this, in failing to appropriate funds to complete the new Administration Building, which is much needed." Would Cost $100,000 According to Mr. Blackman's figures it would take ten dormitories to hold one thousand women, coating $100,000 each, at the lowest estimate. To ensure the same amount would be necessary for similar buildings for men. Smoke Sticks Under Ban LADY NICOTINE FLEES WHEN COUNCIL FROWNS Let no cub editor attempt to make copy this year by accusing the Men's Student Council of being inactive. This year's Council forestals any such accusations. Already the members are up and doing. Only yesterday a moral degenerate was rolling a pill on the campus. Did he get away with it? He did not. Even before he could borrow a match, his sin had found him out. Punishment was meted out to him. You are right; he was chastised by a Councilman. The week has had its day on Ocadac. It must now take its place with regents, Mosse, the Scoop Club, the Minnesota Shift, and Shift, the MALCINY MALCINY! STUDENT COUNCIL. beens. Like the Thanksgiving day grate at Kansas City, it is no more. "No Smoking on the Campus or Approaches," is the ultimatum. Smoking in the buildings has long been barred. The minute men are on guard. The Council is mobilizing. What can a poor smoker do? Refrain. There seems little else to do. The reign of Nicotine is history. Times have changed. Where once Fatima's blue smoke wafted from the steps of Green Hall only Kansas breezes blow, and the minute-men of Cincinnati came there to refrain. Faintly comes the refrain for a Councilman is looking. But when he isn't looking there is no refrain. Yale Professor Here Prof. W. J. Baumgartner, assistant professor of zoology has made a number of contributions to the Barrel of Yale for the Sigma XI lectures to be given here in December. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Official student paper of the University of Kansas EDITORIAL STAFF JOHN GLEISNER Editor-in-Chief Management Managers port. editor GAVIN LAWRENRY port. editor J. W DYCHS Business Manager Chemistry S. STURTERT Advertising Manager REPORTORIAL STAFF LEON HARR MUSKIN GILBERT GILBERT CLAYTON CHARLES SWEET CHARLES SWEET RUX MILLER RUX MILLER **FLANK B. HENDERSON** **HOLY GRAVEN** **HELEN HAYNE** **HELEN HAYNE** Wm. S. CAVY Wm. S. CAVY PERSON SAM INALOGER Entered as second-class mail master. Sorry, missing the last name. Kansas, under the date of March 3. Published in the afternoon. five times a week. Known for his work in Kansas, from the press of the department Phone, Bell K. U. 25 Address all communications to UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Lawrence, Kans. Subscription price $2.50 per year in advance; one term, $1.50. The Daily Kaman aims to picture the University in a way that gives Kansas to go further than merely print books. The University holds to be no juices; to be clean; to be cheerful; to be charitable; to solve problems to water heads; in all, to serve the students of the University. OBEY THE RULES CHURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 1914 However much students disapprove of the rule against cigarette smoking on the campus, and against smoking of any kind on the approaches to the buildings, they cannot but commend the action of the Student Council in declaring that the rule must be obeyed. It exists, and the Council has discipline in its hands, so no other course is open. Student Government hangs in the balance at the University, and the Council must prove itself an effective disciplinary agent, or the faculty will assume control again, as in the old days. The task is distasteful to the Councilmen. They do not relish the task of enforcing an unpopular measure on their fellow-students. It is up to students to help the Council by not making themselves liable to punishment. By rigid adherence to its decision, the Council can win respect from both students and faculty. By obeying the rule, students can do much for student government. IT'S TIME TO QUIT In the address delivered here during journalism week, Dr.Washington Gladden said truly that knocking is always news. He might have added with equal truth that it is no news that some people are always knocking. Social activities at this University have always been a favorite target for knockers, and the rushing season is their pet aversion. Our present system of pledging doubtless has its faults, but we can hardly think it as bad as it is painted. For instance, we are told that the "rushees" are obliged to lose so much sleep that many of them are in danger of injuring their respective healths. However, a look at the rushing calendar for one day, taken at random, shows that out of eight social functions, four took place in the morning and one in the afternoon. On this evening, then, and doubtless on many others, most of the actual and prospective fraternity and sorority people had plenty of time to sleep. One who has the good of the students at heart chooses to feel encouraged and gratified by the fact just cited, and if all our friends would give the matter as careful attention, they might find less reason to knock Resolutions favoring the honor sentiment have been prepared for presentation to the freshman class by the University organization committee. AGAIN THE HONOR SENTIMENT The mere adoption of resolutions will do little. If the first year students can accomplish something, and show results, they will do what none of the other classes in the University have done. But the freshmen will do nothing more than adopt the resolution. There the matter will rest, and there it should. Fruitless and constant agitation conveys the impression that K. U. has no honor sentiment. That is far from correct. One thing, at least, the big war has done for the University. It has furnished the debaters with endless themes for discussion, and will give universal suffrage, the recall of judges, the unicameral legislation, and canal tolls a rest. New dormitories have been erected for women at Alabama, and for men at Wisconsin. Leading educators all over the country endorse the dormitory system. Kansas, usually in the lead, is in this instance far behind. Now that the smoking rule has again become a live issue, it is probable that the old controversy about what constitutes an approach to a building will be revived. How much time would the average student have to spend in a University-conducted factory, especially if he carried engineering, or very much chemistry? "No Fore on Mount Oread," says a headline, but we can testify to having made a four on the aforementioned Mount. Hands Up! How Much Do You Know About Kansas! Hands up, ye sons and daughter.of Kansas. How many of you know anything about your state? The following list of questions may prove that you are well versed on things relative to sunflowers and Japhawkers. It may show you by hiking. It may show you of things you ought to know about this rectangular piece of soil in the middle of U. S. A. All right. first trial; 1. Name the nations that owned the territory before it was sold to the United States. 2. What was the purpose in passing the Kansas-Nebraska bill? 3. What great poet wrote a poem on the Marias des Cygnes Massacre? 4. Name the materials you would have in a schoolroom as the basis for teaching the history of Kansas property? . How did the Missouri Compromise contribute to the extension of slavery, and how did the compromise affect Kansas? 6. Name two books of travel, two histories, five works of fiction written by Kansans, and give the names of the authors. 7. How would you teach school-district and township history? s. Associate events in the history of Kansas with the following names: Andrew H. Reeder, John W. Geary, Robert R. Robinson, John Robinson, Mother Bickardykes. 9. What causes have contributed to make Kansas one of the greatest agricultural states in the country? 10. Draw an outline map of Kan- minas and the principal minerals are found ANSWERS 1. Great Britain, Spain and France. 2. To make it optional with the people of a territory whether they should have slavery or not. 4. Maps of the Louisiana Purchase and of Kansas; all accessible histories, pictures, statues, narrations, and stories. 5. It allowed Missouri to come in as a slave state. While it prohibited slavery in all the territory of the United States north of the 36 degrees 30 minutes north latitude, a later compromise in 1850 nullified this provision, and left slavery optional in the territory which is now Kanaas? 8. (a) The first Territorial Governor; (b) Third Territorial Governor; (c) Temporary President of the Wyandotte Constitutional Convention and later Chief Justice of the Supreme Court; (d) State of Kansas; (e) A famous nurse in the field during the Civil War 7. From the records, also the narratives of the oldest residents; from the record the territorial governor. 6. (a) “A Kauai Abroad,” by Prentis and “A Journey of a Jaya-hawk” by Morgan; (b) “The Conquest of Kansas by Missouri and Her” by William A. Phillips and “Kansas, Its Interior and Exterior Life” by Mrs. Sara T. L. Robinson; (c) “Walls of Men,” and “The Price of the Prairie” by Mrs. Margaret Hill McCarter; “A Certain Rich Man,” by William Allen White; “In His Steps,” by Rev. Chas. M. Sheldon; “The Story of a Country Town,” by R. W. Howe. 9. Its fertile soil; its good schools; its situation near great markets; the valuable work of its State Agricultural Bureau, which promotes the best methods in farming. 10. For the applicant. Emperor College is one of the old-fashioned schools that still has an annual freshman-sophomore class rush. This year the freshmen won it. Students at the college recently pasted multi-colored posters to the ribs of a horse that was grazing on the campus. Sounding Jargon of the Schools Cowper, Truth. Purdue finds reason to complain that 51 candidates for football is not enough from a student body of 30 from 2200. And K. U. turned out 39 from 2200. The Idea, University of Kentucky, reports that Coach Brumlage, a former K. U. football player, has much good material for the coming season. College Life, Emporia College, announces that the freshman class has 75 new members, and that the upper classes retain nearly all of their old students. Don't they ever graduate any of them? Kentucky University, after three years of consideration, has fallen into line with a new school of journalism. Dr. M. J. Rudwin, of Purdue, is peeved because his book, "Der Teufel in Den geistlichen Spielen des Deutschen Mitteralters," has been delayed by the European war. Depends on your point of view. Henry Coe Culbertson, president of the College of Emporia, is one of those who were in Europe when war broke out. He told of his experiences in chapel Monday morning. The K. U. chapel committee might avail itself of K. U.'s faculty college trotters. The launching of the University Y. M. C. A.'s campaign for membership calls for the enumeration of the reasons why every student should join the Association. First, it is a student organization to which every royal K. M. C. A.'s campaign for membership stands for service, it makes you work for the other fellow. The Tar Heel, University of North Carolina, reports that the football men have taken the pledge of abstinence. That isn't necessary in Kansas. One Thousand Members for the Y. M. C.A. The most encouraging thing the State Normal Bulletin can find in the football situation is that it is "far from poor." The Iowa State Student announces startling information in a top head: "Seven More Convicts to Arrive Toni-nrow." The president of Purdue requests the students to refrain from playing games on the campus on Sunday. The Board of Administration recently made the same request of the faculty members of the Oread Golf Club. The Iowa State Student announces in a headline that 2716 students are on the registrar's books. That ought to hold them down. But the Y. M. deserves more than mere membership. It deserves support. It stands for the best in the University. It is absolutely democratic; all its activities are planned for all the students. It presents you with a "K" handbook, which is not printed gratis. It operates for your convenience and pleasure an employment bureau at the university, an interim bureau, the Y. M. headquarters, socials, religious meetings, and banquets; all of these cost money. Its work is worth while: it promotes clean Christian manhood in the University and aggressive, helpful work for and by the students. We will have an expert presser on Saturday 26th, so bring in your suits Friday in order that we can dust and clean them ready for Sunday. Prince Albert suits and ladies skirts are special items. We can provide U. Shoe Shop and Pantatorium, 1342 Ohio. We guarantee satisfaction—Adv. 2 Divorce is the only life boat that is carried by the old ship Matrimony. —Ex. To the Faculty and Students Fielding—I hear the Senator's wife had a reception for the I. W. W. Fa—Now what is the old hen eating them old tacks for? Bub- Possibly she is going to lay a carpet. -Ohio State Sun Dial. Fielding—Yes—the idle women of Washington—California Pelican swallow collar tie up and stood before him with bated breath—California Pelican. Chicago Star Goes to Yale Harry- What made the whale swallow Jonah? "Hold 'Em!" That especially applies to Hart Schaffner & Marx Copyright Hart Schaffner & Marz HOLD these good clothes makers to the most exacting demands of high quality, late style, and excellence of tailoring-you'll find that they easily pass your expectations. Regal Shoes This young man here is wearing model 66—a double breasted coat, three button, two to button; lower pockets slanting. It's a popular style for fall. You men who want extra "snap" try this one. Merchants National Bank $18 and up. The home of Hart Schaffner and Marx good clothes Swede Wilson's For Billiards Phones 540 Student Headquarters SANITARY CAFE A Nice Clean Place to Eat LUNCHES - SHORT ORDER Across from Kress Store 916 Mass Want Adds Peckham's Mail your want ad with 25 cents enclosed to the Daily Kansan-want ads are payable in advance. WANTED—Stenographic work by student. Satisfaction guaranteed. 1315 Tenn. St. 9-2* WANTED—A student barber as once—Kaw Barber Shop, 910 Mass. St. 7-6 LOST- One pair of eye glasses. Return to Kansan office. Reward. LOST—Upon Sept. 17, a silver Z N bar pin. Please return to 1234 Miss. 8-5* Rent a N. 5 Oliver in perfect condition three months for $4.00. The Oliver Typewriter Company; Kansas City, Mo. e-o The cream that satisfies. Reynolds Bros.-Adv. FOR RENT—One double room. $10 per month; one room, single 8. 5. double $6; one small single $3. Student Union—Adv. Four varieties of ice cream at our fountain—Reynolds Bros. -Adv. LOST—New rain coat during registration. Finder please call Bell 291. 9-3 FOR RENT--One door stairs front room for boys, $10. 115 Park. 8-3" FOR RENT--One door stairs front room for boys, $10. 115 Park. 8-3" FOR RENT—Eight fine rooms, well lighted and heated, exceptionally well lighted, exceptionally faint rooms. J. M. Neville, office in Stubbs' building, across from Court House. B34 384. at Remember That Schulz makes Clothes 913 Mass. St. Lawrence, Kas. PROFESSIONAL CARDS W. C. M. CORNELL, Physician and Surgeon. Office, 819 Mass. St. Bell 399. Home 9342. Residence, 1346 Temp. St. Bell 1023. Home 639. J. F. BROCK, Optometrist and Speech- ologist 802 Mass. St. Bell phone 695. 802 Mass. St. Bell phone 695. HARRY REDING, M. D. M., Eye ear, nose and throat, Glasses fitted, Office, F. A. A. Bldg. Phones, Bell 113, Home 512. G. A. HAMMAN, M. D. Eye, ear and throat specialist. Glasses fitted. Satisfaction Guaranteed. Dick Bldg. DR. H. W, HAYNE, Oculist, Lawrence, Kansas. W, O'BRYON, Dentist. Over Wilton's drug Store. Bell Phone 517. J. R. BECHTEL, M. D., D. O. 833 Massachusetts Street. Both phones, office and residence. G. W. JONES, A. M. M. D., Diseases of the stomach, surgery and gyncology. Suite 1, F. A. A. Bldg. Residence, 1201 Ohio St. Both phones. DR. H. T. JONES, Room 12, F. A. A. Bldg. Residence 1130 Tenn. Phones 211. DR. H. L. CHAMBERS. Office over Sonite's Studio. Both phones. S. T. GILLISPIE, M. D. Office corner Vermant and Warren St. Residence 728 Ind. Phone 596. CLASSIFIED Ladies Tailor. Mrs. Emma Brown- Schulz, Dressmaking and Ladies Tailoring and Beauty Work 913 Mass. 913 Mess. Next door to Anderson's Bakery. Heid Caps The old reliable K. U. Barber Shop welcomes you fellows back and will be pleased to meet you and new recruits at the old stand, 727 Mass. St. Call and get acquainted.— Adv. Francisco & Co. Livery, Hacks and Garage 812 VERMONT STREET Phone 139 MRS ELILSON, Dressmaking and Ladies' Tailoring. Evening gowns a speciality, 1032 Vermont. Phone Bell 2411 West. ED. W., PARSONS. Engraver, Watchmaker and Jeweler. Diamonds and Jewelry. Bell Phone 717. 717 Mass. Jewelers A Good Place to Eat at Anderson's Old Stand Johnson & Tuttle Proprietors 715 MASSACHUSETTS STREET Mrs. M. Brockelsby-Wilson, Kierstor College of ladies tailoring and dressmaking. Over 909 Mass. St. Bell 2109. Plumbers PHONE KENNEDY PLUMBING 907 Mass Phone 6588 Mazda lamps. 907 Mass Phone 6588 Mazda lamps. Hair Dressers HAIRDRESSING, shampooing, scalp and facial massage, shampooing, hair goods, "Marinello" toilet preparations. For appointments call Bell 1372. Dress Shop 51. The Select Hair Dressing Shop, 927 Mass. St. Barber Shops Barry Samples Go where they all go J. C. HOUCK 913 Mass. GO WHERE you get the Best. Bob Stewart's Barber Shop, 838 Mass. St., Cafes For a good clean place to eat, where you don't get "rpyed" go to the MARKET CAFE, Room 1, Perkins Building. Millinery WANTED -Ladies to call at Mrs. McCormick's up-to-date millinery parlors to inspect our new line of hats. 831 Mass St. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN AURORA TODAY DANIEL FROHMAN Presents The Famous Players' Masterpiece The Scales of Justice Featuring Paul McAllister and Jane Fearnley. Complete in 5 Parts. Coming Soon, "One Wonderful Night" A STYLISH JACKET FOR A GIRL. The New Silk and Lingerie Waists are now ready for your inspection. New tango flare collar, long or short sleeves, lace trimmed silk waist in plain messaline and in Roman stripes and black white stripes. Weaver's The University of Kansas Offers over 200 courses BY MAIL through its Correspondence Study Department. Credit given for all college work. Address University Extension Division The University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas. R. E. Protsch The Students' · Tailor Go to the A. G. ALRICH PRINTING HOME BAKERY For Good Things to Eat C. M. Williamson Binding, Copper Plate Printing, Rubber Stamps, Engraving, Steel Die Embossing Seals, Badges 7444 MASS. STREET F. B. McCOLLOCH Druggist THE REXALL STORE On the Corner Bath caps, bath brushes, hand brushes and face brushes; the largest stock in the city at Barber's Drug Store, 909 Mass. St.-Adv. 847 Mass. St. Good evening, is your house organized yet? Send the Daily Kansan home. Young MAN This cut represents one of our Most Popular English Style shoes in Tan or Black, at $4.00 They are great values FISCHER Dont Miss This! "Paris When the War Broke" A remarkable letter from Samuel G. Blythe, who was on the spot, in this week's Saturday Evening Post. On Sale Thursday GRIGG'S Mr. Student, Let Us Introduce-only work on you to concentrate your attention upon the work in hand. HARRY V. E. PALMBLAD, one of the new instructors in German, was born in Sweden. He came to this country early in life, graduating from the Brooklyn Boys' high school. He took an A. B. from Columbia University in 1907. The next three years he spent as a principal of schools, meanwhile continuing his studies at Columbia and Yale. In 1910 he obtained his A. M. from Columbia. In 1911-12 he was University Fellow Germanic languages, and also learned in German in the external department, of Columbia. He was married in the spring of 1912, and subsequently took position as instructor languages in Western Reserve University, giving, among other courses, a graduate course in Isben. For two years he has been employed as an instructor in Columbia, both in the regular and summer sessions. Mr. Palmblad has contributed to the International Year Book and the International Encyclopedia on subjects relating to Scandinavian language and literature. Aside from his work as instructor in the University of Kansas he revise articles for the international Encyclopedia, and write a dissertation on Strindberg, to complete work for his Ph. D. from Columbia. PURDUE MAN GIVES SIX PRECEPTS TO STUDENTS The president of the Purdue Univers*v, Indiana, gave the following to the freshmen of his and orderly row hours for certain schedule for your 3, be industrious. The actual amount of work required of you is great and it is necessary that you apply yourself with unflagging in- 4. be punctual and prompt in meeting all appointments and al lduties. 5. complete each day's work in the day assigned to it. Do not let your work accumulate or put it off for some other day. 6. seek intimate contact and acquaintance with your instructors. They wish to help you but cannot do so if you are not within their reach. 7. eliminate from your reach all man-made objects. Choose that which is good and useful and in harmony with your purpose and put aside all else. INDUSTRIAL STUDENTS WORK UNDER BETTER CONDITIONS Bv Kenneth N. Keefer Olathe, Kana., Sept. 21.-Students in the industrial classes in the high school here are now receiving training in the new $18,000 building which was built for this purpose. Several hundred dollars worth of new equipment has been added and separates teachers for domestic use. The art room at Olathe now has one of the best equipped buildings for industrial training in the state. FOOTBALL PROSPECTS LOOKS GOOD By Kenneth N. Acock Olathe, Kans., Sept. 21.—New suits for the football team have been purchased by the athletic association of the high school. With six of the men from last year and considerable new material out for practice, the prospects for a winning team are good. By Kenneth N. Keefer Dr. Samuel C. Mitchell, formerly president of the University of South Carolina, and for the past year president of the Medical College of Virginia has become president of Delaware College. OLATHE HIGH ENCOURAGES SUNDAY SCHOOL WORK By Kenneta B. Olathe, Kans., Stats. 21—Credit for Sunday school work is now given by the high school. This school is the first in the state to make this incentive for Sunday school attendance. Students must be present ninety per cent of the Sundays in the year to get this credit. An examination will be given at the end of the year on the international lessons. Bv Kenneth N. Keefer Memorial Gate for Harvard Dr. Thomas E. Hodges has resigned the presidency of the University of West Virginia, having been nominated for congressman at large by the Democratic State Convention. Dean Frank B. Trott, of the college of arts and sciences, has been elected temporary president. Memorial Gate for Harvard Harvard has received an apportion- ment of the plane fuel. Pilots shocks for the construction of a gate and clock tower in memory of her ancestor, Governor Thomas Dudley, of the Massachusetts Bay Colony. Send the Daily Kansan home. SORORITIES ANSWER APPEAL TO SERVICE Settlement Work, Employment Agencies, Loan Funds, Part of Movement Service, with a capital S, is becoming more and more the key-note of the various women's college fraternities, as is shown by Sarah Gertrude Pomeroy in the current issue of the Independent, in an article entitled "The Service of the Women's Fraternities." When the fraternities were first formed it was for the purpose of mutual help, as in those days a college education for women was regarded as an experiment, she says. Those who desired a degree needed all the incentives possible which this cooperation and mutual understanding could furnish. At the present time, this aid has changed, especially in the larger national fraternities to one of civic work and activities in public services. In one fraternity settlement work is being undertaken, and a fund has been established, which each local chapter must help keep up. Each of the chapters each year offer a prize to the women of the college where it is represented for the best essay on a subject related to social service work. Another national fraternity maintains an employment bureau for its members. Trained women in philanthropic work are being sought out by this organization. Even before the National Pan-Hellenic Congress was formed many of the national fraternities carried on their own individual work for the betterment of college standards. Many of the fraternities have a scholarship fund with which they are enabled to aid any of the girls of their organizations with temporary loans, to allow them to complete their college course. In conclusion the author says, "The fraternity idea today spells opportunity. The condition of Greek letters on her symbolic pin is a constant reminder to the fraternity woman of a social privilege, broadly defined. She recognizes in her life power in her development which she makes influential in the lives of the present and coming generations of college women, and through which she may apply her own energy in the upbuilding of the community." OFFERS PRIZE $25 TO BEST WOMAN STUDENT A cash prize of twenty-five dollars for the best class work done by any woman student in the department of economics is offered by the Chi Omega sorority. The decision as to the best work is to be made by the professors of this department at the end of the school year. Last year the prize was divided between two students, one under the instruction of Prof. George E. Putnam, and the other under Prof. Victor N. Valgren. The division of the prize was necessary to each examine different examination, and it was impossible to decide which had done the better work. Miss Virginia Goff has charge of the matter for the Chi Omegas. NEW TENNIS COURTS NOW OPEN FOR WOMEN Five new tennis courts have been completed south of the gymnasium and will be ready for the women players as soon as the ground is dry. The courts were made under the direction of Dr. James Naismith. "See K. U. First." Why go to Kansas City to see a fashion show when we have one on the campus every day? A spectator on the steps of Green Hall can see examples of all the latest modes—at least all that have sufficient claim to beauty to attract the fastidious young women of Kansas University. A feature of the Freshman Frolic, the annual gift given by the women of the University for all new girls, will be a force entitled "The Burglar," which Maureen McKernan is coaching. The histrionic lights who will appear in this production are Helen Clark, Dorothy McKown, Laura Stewart, Helen Riddle, and Janet Thompson. The Frolic will take place Saturday night in Robinson Gymnasium. Theatrical Season Opens When tubbing, freshmen, and especially girls, care should be taken not to have the water too cold. Discipline is wholesome for the young, but cruelty belongs strictly to the European armies. There's a goodness in the goods. Reynolds Bros. Ice Cream—Adv. A large variety of ice creams, fruit ices and sherbets for Sunday delivery. Reynold Bros.-Adv. Real cokes at Reynolds Bros.—Adv. VARSITY Today Only Lloyd Ware Theatre. FRANCIS X. BUSHMAN IN "A ROYAL PATRONAGE" Twelfth Chapter "Million Dollar Mystery," also a Viagraph comedy. Piano and pipe organ music. TOMORROW, H. A. Dassauchef's famous comedy, "My friend from India," featuring Broadway's popular comedy Wales Perkins. KAW VALLEY ICE CREAM CO. 470 Either Phone 10 W.9th We specialize on clubs and fraternity orders. Let us handle that next order. ICE CREAM AND OYSTERS DANCE Why Perspire and be uncomfortable "NICTH" NON-PERSPIRE is guaranteed to stop perspiring beneath the arms. HARMLLE — TWO ODORS; VIOLET AND ROSE PRICE 50c FOR TAXICAB Call Either PHONE 100 PEERLESS GARAGE CLARK CLEANS LOTHES PUNCH TICKET $1.50 TEN PRESSES All Pressing Done by Hand] Phone 355 CLARK LEANS LOTHES CLARK CLEANS LOTHES 730 Mass St. CLARK LEANS LOTHES SPECIAL FRIDAY Rockefellow Sundae-"Very Rich" THE OREAD CAFE "JUST A STEP FROM THE CAMPUS" P. S. Buy your stamps here and save a trip to the P. O. One Million to Western Reserve One Million to Western Reserve Western Reserve University has received a bequest of one million dollars to be used in the school of medicine by the provision of the will of Liberty E. Holden. For up-to-date men and women 10 years K. 10. U. —Satisfactory results Satisfaction Guaranteed Arl H. Frost and KH1 J.Wilmhelsen, Agts. Cleaning, Pressing and Remodeling Club up to date men and women C. W. Steeper Discourse Football Rules Discuss football rules. That the ball is down where the progress ceases, and that, on an onside kick, if an eligible man touches the ball, every man on the field is eligible to recover it, was the decision of a meeting of football officials held in New York last Saturday. Invitation has been sent to the University of Louvain by the Senate of Cambridge University to move to Cambridge and continue its studies there. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Budder Society Brand Clothes "Hudder" Coat The Best all 'round coat made today The fabric is knitted and can be packed in a bag or trunk without showing a wrinkle. While very light, the character of the texture affords protection against cold winds and sufficient warmth against most any weather. It Stands Hard Service Sheds Rain, Sleet and Snow Comes in two attractive shades made on the beautiful Hudder model. Price $25 We are exclusive agents for this coat in Lawrence Ober's HEAD TO FOOT OUT FITTERS All drinks served in clean glasses at Barber & Son's fondship—Adv. Frank Koch "The Tailor" Full Line of Fall Suitings Shorthand and Typewriting Bookkeeping and Banking Penmanship and Spelling In fact, a complete commercial training can be had at Lawrence Business College Watkins National Bank Capital $100,000 Surplus and profits $100,000 The Student Depository MORGAN'S MEALS and SHORT ORDERS Sunday Dinners a Specialty Ice Cream Soda Confectionery SPECIAL MEAL TICKETS 1345 Mass. St. Bell 262 LEE'S COLLEGE INN Soup free with 25c orders. Roast young apple sauce .10 Roast leg of lamb DINNER MENU SEPT.25,1914 with green peas .10 Braised veal with jelly .10 Brownies with jelly .10 Cold lunch ham potato salad .10 A full line of salads. .10 K. U. K. U. Barber Shop and Bath Rooms The Only Electric Me- sorroom in the City 722 Massachusetts Street Razors Honed. Ground and Exchanged W. F. Weise, Prop The COLLEGE INN BARBER SHUBERT Matinee Wed. & Sat. MARGARET ILLINGTON in "Within the Law" Prices 28c to $1.50 NEXT: THE BIRD OF PARADISE Burt Wadhams K. U. Spirit Demonstration MU.NEB JAYHAWKS ABANDON CRIMSON AND BLUE Flashy 1913 Suits a Menace to Any Eleven Says Wheaton When the Jayhawker football team trots on McCook Field for its first game October 3, the players will be clad in navy blue jerseys and for the first time in years, the Kansas colors — crimson and blue — will not be worn on the gridiron. On Sunday the Kansas jersey yesterday. Coach Jack Wheaton is responsible for the change in colors. Last year the Kansans wore gaudy jerseys with crimson and blue stripes. Wheaton tabooed these outfits because, he said, "they are too conspicuous. A referee or an umpire is more liable to see a foul committed by a man in a loud-front jersey than in one of a dark color." The organization of a special volunteer class for juniors and seniors which will meet twice a week is being taught if there are enough applicants. Three hundred freshmen had taken their physical examinations from Dr. James Naismith up to this morning and there still remains a long list of freshmen. The regular freshmen and sophomore classes will start Monday. There's goodness in the goods Reynolds Bros. Ice Cream...Adv. THREE HUNDRED FRESHMEN HAVE BEEN EXAMINED A large variety of ice creams, fruit ices and sherbets for Sunday delivery Reynold Bros.-Adv. Four varieties of ice cream at our fountain—Reynolds Bros. —Adv. Real cokes at Reynolds Bros.—Adv The cream that satisfies. Reynolds tros..Adv. CAN'T HURT "DUMMY," SO HIT HARD--COACHES Send the Daily Kansan home. Tackling a Straw Man Some Real Work, Players Decide Decide "Hit it." "Don't look at it so long. It isn't pretty." "Hard there." "Ginger up." "Not so tender, that isn't a baby." "Beat it heavy," These and other equally severe commands were given by the Jayhawkcoaches last night to the men who were working on the dummy south of McCook Field. Satisfaction was expressed by the coaches over the results of the "dummy" practice. They said the men had shown the punch and that the other lines of the valley had better watch out. After a good, stiff practice at tackling, the men were given some instructions and work at charging. At the close of the afternoon, all the men were well hydrated for bath and rub and proclaimed yesterday's practice the hardest this year. Regular scrimmage will start early next week. No arrangements have been made regarding a University of Kansas soccer team for 1914. Manager Hamilton has turned over the charge to the Naimish, who will probably issue a call for candidates in a few days. Soccer Will Start Soon The schedule although not yet arranged will provide for three games to be played with club teams in neighboring cities. Neither Missouri or Nebraska will organize soccer teams this year. GOLF INSURED UNTIL FEB. Enough Money Raised Among Faculty and Students to Conserve Course for Five Months Enough money has been raised among the University students and faculty members to keep the Oread Golf course in shape until February 1. Clifford Altman and Allan Sterlin circulated a subscription paper and, yesterday, they had raised enough money to keep the grass cut this fall. Any student or faculty member will be given the privileges of the course until February 1 for three dollars, which is payable on demand. VETS MAY GET OPEN DATE Kansas City School is Bidding Hard for Game With Kansas, October 10 the Kansas City Veterinary College eleven which is coached by Dr. J. A. Reilly, athletic director of the K.C.A. C.a. may be the opponents of the K. U. Varsity on the open date. October 10. Manager W. O. Hamilton announced this morning that the "Vets" were making a strong bid for the game but it was doubtful whether or not the K. U. eleven could play the horse doctors because their school is not an educational institution of equal rank with the University of Kansas. are fast in color and steadfast in service. $1.50 up. Cluett, Peabody & Co., Inc. Makers ARROW SHIRTS WHEATON'S K. U. LINE STRONGEST IN VALLEY Nebraska and Drake Doubtful but Others are Shot to Pieces SIX OLD DEFENSE MEN BACK Reber, Strothers, James, Burton, Groft, and Keeling Will Serve as Kansas Outposts The Kansas line—the frontier which will protect General Wheaton's new backfield—is the division of the Jayhawker army which will be relied upon to win the football games this year. No team in the Missouri Valley will produce a line as strong as the K. U. guard unless Nebraska or Oklahoma shows remarkable development. Oklahoma's line was crippled by graduation, the Tiger line is shot to pieces, Washburn is light, the Agries have new material and Nebraska and Drake have not divulged the condition of their lines. Nebraska probably will have beef in its line but the football fans say the Kansas outposts are the strongest and most experienced in the Valley. With Reber and Strothman, the Knicks play like Mavericks, Grof guard and Keeling center, Kansas has six old men who are dependable. Just who Coach Wheaton will send in to fill Weidelein and Tudor's shoes is uncertain, but the line material looks good. Wheaton says Kansas will play a kicking game—a stubborn, defensive game. That sort requires a strong line and Kansas seems to have the requirement. With such men as Reber, Strothers, Burton and James, charging through the line and bearing down on punts, something is going to rip and the bleachers will pity the unlucky man who receives the boot. Send the Daily Kansan home. fitted waistcoat with long sleeves and wide-breasted hats. The sleeves are in a straight line, the hats are flat with a crown at the top. Coats, Suits, Dresses Skirts, Blouses. Sweaters and Corsets— Every garment we offer in the Suit Room has been selected with care and fore thought from makers and designers of the highest class. We are ready, as never before, to show you the authentic ideas in Women's wear. The "One of a Kind" Dress Suit or Coat is a feature of this department. You are safe in your individual choice. On Friday we will show some extraordinary suit values, at . $25 Onwes Bullene Hackman THE LATE FILM COPYRIGHT 1914 THE HOUSE OF KUPPERHEIMER THE "KLAVICLE" The Overcoat Sensation of the Year! Deep velvet collar and lapels, patch pockets, full kimona sleeves, and only two seams in the entire body of this coat! Copyrighted and tailored only by "The House of Kuppenheimer," and shown in Lawrence exclusively by R. E. HOUSE Successor to J.House & Son X 1. 2. 5. 4. 5 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN NUMBER 10 VOLUME XII. FIFTY MEN ANSWER TRACK TEAM CALL Candidates Meet on McCook Field to Discuss 1915 Prospects PLAN OUTDOOR CLASS MEET fatty men responded to the call of Manager W. O. Hamilton for a first meeting of the track candidates yesterday afternoon at McCook Field to discuss the prospects for the 1915 season. A dozen of last year's "K" men attended the meeting beside a large number of freshmen. To Hold Event Either October 7 or 14; Cross Country Will Start Soon In telling the men about the prospects for the coming season, Manager Hamilton declared that any one in average physical condition who was willing to really work would be able to make the team. "I can't guarantee that you will get your letter however," he added. Track Major Sport "Track is just as much of a major sport as football and baseball," Manager Hampton declared. "In fact the track can carry trips than any of the teams." "An outdoor interclass meeting is being planned for this fall on either October 7 or 14th. The date will be definitely announced as soon as the Missouri Valley cross country run at Ames is decided upon. Then there are the indoor meets against the Aggies, and Missouri, and the K. C. A. C. indoor meet at Kansas City and the indoor Western Conference meet. Have Schedule. "Outdoor meets are scheduled against Manhattan, Missouri, Nebraska, and K. U. Athletes will be entered in the Missouri Valley Conference meet, the Western Conference meet, the Relay Carnival at Des Moines and probably at the Penn games in Philadelphia." Cross country work will start with in a few days. This work will be done under the leadership of two captains, Rodkey and Hilton, both K men. One squad will leave the gym at 8:30 and the other at 9:00 three times a week the athletes who take them will be excused from gym work. At the conclusion of Manager Hamilton's talk, Captain Roy Edwards made a short speech to the men. A large basket of ham sandwiches furnished by Manager Hamilton finished up the program. ADVANCED GYM CLASSES WILL BE ORGANIZEI "The regular gymnasium classes will start Monday and all students will be expected to have their suits on." And Dr James Naismith this morning. FOOD LABORATORY AS A SCENE OF ACTION A special volunteer class for juniors and seniors will be organized which will meet twice a week, on Tuesday and Thursday at 4:30. The organization of an advanced class which will meet twice a week in the evening is also being considered. UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS FRIDAY AFTERNOON, SEPTEMBER, 25, 1914. "Variety is the spice of life." Perhaps this is best proven by a visit to the state food laboratories, and a glance at the activity manifest there. For there, if any place, can be found variety and activity. For example the workers in the laboratory this week have for some reason dried fruit, ice cream comes, baking powder and temperature beers. Truly isn't that a sufficiently varied assortment to promote some form of action? Ding in South America Ding in South America Oscar Dingman, president of the Enquiry last year, has a position with a large gold mining concern in Honduras. Send the Daily Kansan home. KICKING OUTLOOK FOR KANAS ENCOURAGING Who will do the punting and kicking for the Jayhawker football team? Since Coach Wheaton announced that Kansas would play a kicking game this fall students are wondering what he will do. The last week kickers were scarce but now the outlook is more encouraging. The kicking of Lindsay has opened the eyes of the fans who have watched the Varsity practice. Lindsay has an easy delivery and he sends the ball sailing on the chalk lines. Yesterday he averaged about forty yards and several punts cleared fifty. If Lindsay can kick that far under pressure, he stands a good chance of landing the booting job. Wood, the little freshman quarterback, is showing good form with the ball. Who Punts for the Jayhawkers? FIFTY FRESHMEN NOW OUT New Recruits Join First-Year Squad and go Through Brisk Work-Out Fifty first-year men reported for practice on the freshman field yesterday afternoon and Coaches McCarty and Weildlein sent the tyros through a brisk work-out. The scrubs were separated in squads which charged up and down the field, with heads back and knees in the air. The coaches kept the freshmen moving and after dismissing them ordered them up the Hill to the gymnasium on the run. FIRST CALL FOR WORKERS The University Daily Kansan: DROP IN ANY UNIVERSITY MAIL BOX. Committee Will Meet Students ir Myers Hall Sunday to Plan Bible Class Campaign A meeting to prepare for the launching of a big "Church Bible Class" campaign will be held at Myers Hall Sunday afternoon. Both the men and women students of the University and all ministers, Sunday School superintendents, and Bible class teachers are expected to be present and make it a banner meeting for the year. Track Starts at Harvard Signed... Track candidates held their first workout last Monday at Harvard University. The loss of several good men will be felt severely, and the students will hear that Alfred Shrubb, the English distance runner, will return to coach this fall, Dr. R. A. Schweigler, Rev. Henry E. Wolfe, Dr. Stanton Olinger, and Miss Ann Gittins, secretary of the Y. W. C. A., will tell the students why they should study the Bible, and a special musical program has been prepared. Pennsylvania State University had 1000 men enrolled in the work last year, and it will be made to place K. U. among the ten high universities this year, so you should be at Myers Hall at 4 p. m. Sunday, September 27. UNIVERSITY CLUB THE HOUSE? EN? Masons Mix Tomorrow Night University Masons will hold their annual mix at the Masonic Temple tomorrow at the building of all degrees among faculty and students are expected to be present. Please put me down for a year's subscription to the University Daily Kansan for which I agree to pay $2.50 from Nov. 1, 1914. Address FACULTY AT PLAY DROP IN ANY UNIVERSITY MAIL BOX ... Atlas -- 1914 Edition Themes Courses Library Reading J BERWICK AND PEP OLD CHAPEL WAYS RAMPANT AT ELECTION ARE NOW ABANDONED Senior Engineer Chosen Lead Rock Chalk Amid Cheers Pep, pep, and 912 votes for Jo D. Berwick, 272 for K. C. Doderidge, 5 for Richard Small for 1914 cheerleader were the big winners after convocation held after convocation at 10 o'clock this morning in Fraser Hall. Burwick and Dodderidge, who tried out on the stage had a hard time getting set for a Rock Chalk or an "Oh Me, Oh My," the crowd of students were so enthusiastic. As soon as either suggested in a gymnasium manner that the assembly indulge in a little cheering, the sebemby answered by washing without Never before in the memory of the present generation of students has so much pep been demonstrated at K. U. It is the opinion of all students expressing that Cheer-leader Berwick will have comparatively little trouble in getting, "Everybody Out." COOPER COLLEGE TEAM DEFEATS METHODISTS The football season in Kansan opened yesterday when Cooper College defeated Southwestern at Winfield, 7 to 2. The Moundbuilders' defeat was entirely unexpected as Cooper is one of the smallest colleges at the university and has never ranked high in the Kansas Conference. Southwestern beat the Kansas Aggies last year in the opening game of the season. The Plymouth Guild, of the Plymouth Congregational church, will give a social this evening at the church parliars. All students of the University are invited to come at 7:45. Former Cheer-leader Visits Here Volney H. Hilford, graduate of the school of engineering in 1912 and a former cheer-leader University yesterday. He is now engaged in the automobile business at Coffeyville. Plymouth Guild Social Sophomore Caucus Tonight There will be an open caucus of the class on Thursday at 7 oclock this evening. A ticket of class officers will be nominated. Send the Daily Kansan home. About 15 men reported last night for the Glee Club tryout. The women will have their tryout tonight at 7 o'clock in North College. Freshman Withdraws Lester, Smith, Freshman in the College of Owensville withdrawn from the University on account of sickness at home. Freshman Withdraws Dr. J. G. Kemp, of the mathematics department at Baker, spent Monday looking over the Hill, the guest room of the physics and astronomy department here. Committee Has Preacher Music and Choir—Come Either at 8:00 or 4:30 Devotional exercises of the year will be held either at 8 o'clock in the morning or at 4:30 in the afternoon. A University their will be organized and good music will be provided. A preacher from some part of the state will come to the University, will have an office and will conduct services at the University for one week. The above was the action of a committee of the faculty appointed to determine details of the chapel for this year. Many of the minor details of the arrangement have not yet been determined and at the meeting the chairman was authorized to appoint some of the committee which makes the work and report to the general committee later. Some of the members of the subcommittee will be students. DIRECTORY CONTAINS FULL INFORMATION Copy for the student directories will go to the state printer at once. "It is highly important that the names and addresses of the students be correct," said Registrar George O. Foster this morning, "or they will be incorrect the entire year as there will be no chance for revision later." The directory will contain the same information as it has for the last two years, but the present directories can not be easily improved upon. SOCCER GAMES Soccer football is expected to start for the 1914-15 season Tuesday afternoon when all students interested in the game are requested to meet at 4 o'clock on the field south of the women's tennis courts. WADDEL TO CRUMMY "WIBLE IS VERY SICK" K. U. Man Writes Home Suits and all equipment is furnished the players by the athletic association. A regular schedule of games will be held with each club in neighboring cities providing there are enough men come out for the sport. SOCCER GAMES ARRANGED SOON Vic C. Lednickey who went from the University to Honduras where he had a position with a gold mining company and then took another position as shift foreman in one of the largest mines in the world, recently passed the civil service examination and has been appointed by the Bureau of Science to make reports concerning mines in the Philippines. Philosonhers to Meet Philosophy Club, first regular meeting of the year Tuesday, Sept. 29, 7:30 p. m. Ad. 101. Election of officers and arrangement of program. Ledpickey to Philippines Pratt to Head Bureau Wallace E. Pratt, who took up government work in the Philippines three years ago has been appointed to the head of the Bureau of Science. C. Edgar Williamson, a senior in the College, got the following card from Alfred Waddel, who went from the University last year to teach in Syria. Waddel was accompanied by Elmer Wible, of whom he speaks: Naples, Sept. 7 Dear Crummy: This far on our way—To the war next. Crossing the Atlantic we saw two British cruisers. The "Suffok" stopped us, and we were held the evening of the 4th, in Gibraltar—Thrilling! Tell Willison I am one of those lucky mortals who is never seasick but poor Wible had it for three days. Your rough car, though Very rough sea, though Believe me this is a dear little burg "This is the life." Waddel. LEITZ METALLOGRAPH HERE Instrument One of the Last Ships to Leave a German Port Brought New Instrument One of the last ships to leave a German port for this country contained an instrument that is a decided addition to the equipment of the metallurgy department in the museum. An apparatus is a recent invention for the microscopical examination of opaque materials and is known in scientific circles as a Leitz Metallograph. A special room will be chosen for the instrument it will be used by the students in examining different steels. The course made possible by this new machine will be a great addition to the department, as many American factories are beginning to recognize the possibilities of this particular form of metal examination. PRINCETON PITCHER THREW FIRST COLLEGE CURVE William G. Murdock has an interesting article in the April number of Outing, entitled, "The First College Pitcher of Curves." It appears from this story that one Edmond Davis, of Princeton University, in the face of a bullpen opponent, adopt the curve ball. Pitchers in those days were somewhat hampered by the rules of the game. The odds were generally in favor of the batter. For instance, balls were called against him, but the batter could let three good ones go by before a strike could be called. Batter also could be called if the ball must be pitched, whether knee-high, waist-high, or shoulder-high. There was also a rule prohibiting the bending of the arm at the elbow, which of course prevented curved balls being pitched. Professors Join the French Two members of the faculty of the University of Pennsylvania are with the French army and one with the Austrian forces, thus leaving three vacancies in the members of the faculty. DO YOU RECOGNIZE IT? THE PUB WAS HAPPY TO BE A PART OF THEIR LIVING. K. U. Debaters Elect The K. U. Debating Society held it's first regular meeting of the year last night and elected the following officers: President, Harold Mattoon; vice-president, Roy Reynolds; secretary, A. K. Rader; treasurer, Jess Gardner; press reporter, Lloyd Whiteside, and representatives to the debating council, Henry Shinn and Harold Mattoon. The next meeting of the society on Thursday evening, will be a social gathering. Three College Essentials President Stone. of Purdue University, says there are three essentials to the freshman's life in school, including his health, and third, his smoals. The Pi Kappa Alpha fraternity announces a new pledge, Derek Doggett TOUCHES K. U. IDEALS IN ANNUAL ADDRESS Dr. Frank Strong Gives Talk to Students in Fraser Hall TREATS SEVERAL SUBJECTS Speaks of Scholarship, Student Government, Fraternities, and Sororities, College Spirit and War Chancellor Frank Strong for the twelfth time welcomed freshmen to the University in chapel this morning. He told them that higher scholarship would be expected, that student government in the University was on its last trial, that fraternalities and sororites were still in the experimental stage, and that college spirit, that is the real college spirit, was not based entirely on athletics but must take in the intellectual, spiritual, and religious life of the University as well. Councilmen Must be Leaders The Chancellor defined knocking criticism and said that the University welcomed sincere criticism but did not need any of the other. Greeks Face Responsibilities Speaking of Student government he warned the councilmen that they would have to be the leaders in the enforcement of all laws they passed. However, he commended the work of the Council up to the present time and said that he hoped and believed the University had the right kind of men on the Student Council this year. Some people think that we do not have college spirit here at the University of Kansas. Chancellor Strong says that this is a mistake and we really do have spirit here to a greater degree than most universities. However, he warned the students saying that the real spirit must take in every side of the University. He then asked the students to take more interest in the religious and moral life and spoke of its relation to athletics and other University ac American Schools Carry Burden Prof. C. A. Preyer of the School of Fine Arts played a piano solo and Prof. W.B. Downing sang before and after the Chancellor's talk. American Schools Carry Burden "The European conflict and the change in economic and commercial conditions place a new responsibility upon American universities. They must be the successors to European universities in scientific and historical investigation, in literary criticism, in the development of economic thought and the production of sound political and administrative leaders," said Cancellor Strong. "Who is going to take up and carry on the tremendous intellectual development in science for which for the past fifty years Germany has been largely responsible?" asked the Chancellor. "What universities are going to assume the burden that the great French schools are obliged to lay down? What institutions are to supply the place that in part the great English universities must now forego? "It is not a question of university buildings, laboratories, equipment and teachers only. What country is going to supply the vigorous, alert, young minds for higher intellectual training to take the place of those educated in industry many, and Russia are now sending to the battlefield to return no more? Here is the most serious loss of all and one that is well nigh irreparable. “There is no nation of the first class unaffected by this terrible conflict but one that has a strong country that the material for the leadership of the world must come. America and its universities may become the center of the greatest intellectual life that the next generation will know,” concluded Dr. Strong. Y. M. Classes at Haskell Two hundred men, in twelve distinct classes, have enrolled in the Y. M. C. A. Bible school at Haskell Institute. The classes will open October 8 under the superintendency of Con Hoffman, Y. M. C. A. secretary. The Y. W. C. A. classes will open at the same time. Send the Daily Kansan home. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Official student paper of the University of Kansas John Gleesner Editor-in-Chi Mansfield CANVAS LAN Portrait Edit EDITORIAL STAFF BUSINESS STAFF W. DYCHKE Roadness Manager Construction Manager CJAAS. S. STEPHENBACH ADVANTAGE REPORTORIAL STAFF Entered as second-class mail master Soprano (Ruben), of Kansas, under the act of March 3, 1925. Kauas, under the act of March 3, 1925. LRON HARB BROOKLYN GRIVER GIBBER GLUCKTON GLUCKTON CHANG CHARLES SWEET RUSK MILLER RUX MILLER FRANK B. HENDERSON LEBRON HARVEY HARVEY HARVEY CARPENTER CUPPER WARSHIP CAPPEL CHRISTOPHER PATTERSON CHRISTOPHER PATTERSON Published in the afternoon five times a week, the book was published in Kansas from the press of the department. 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 student further than merely printing the news by standing for the issue and speaking it out, to be clean; to be cheerful; to be charitable; to be problem solver; to be patient; to be the best of its ability; the students of the day. FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 1914. COUNCIL'S ACTION POPULAR All that we are is built out of what we have thought.—Dhammpada. The Chancellor announced himself as well pleased with the action of the Student Council in declaring that the smoking rule must be obeyed. "The Council is starting off well," he said. Students, too, while they may not like the rule, generally approve of the Council's action, and few violations of the rule were seen yesterday. START NOW FOR MEMORIALS The Council will find that by the rigid enforcement of the rule its prestige will be vastly increased. It is pursuing the right plan to restore student government to the favor the Council last year lost. Class offices are usually little more than an honor to be placed after a student's name in the Jayhawk, but with the precedent established by the class of 14 in erecting a memorial, other class executives find plenty of opportunity for real work. The time to begin is now, not after graduation, nor in the last few weeks of the year. KEEP THE MONEY HERE Comes now the announcement that student roaming houses are to be inspected by the state. The inspector will realize a tidy sum, and will probably find nothing in violation with the state laws. But if it must be done, why not appoint some needy student as inspector? THE OLD DEBT FIRST The class of 1913 is to be praised for the spirit that prompts it to erect a memorial after graduation, but would it not be better if the class as a whole would pay the debt the Jayhawker imposed on two of its members before it erects a drinking fountain? Every student should help the Y. M. C. A., if not by actual assistance, at least by leasing his moral support and joining the organization. Active religious organizations will elevate the moral tone of the school. Coach Wheaton has discarded the crimson and blue jersey because it makes the K. U. athletes conspicuous to the officials. Why not study the uniform of the 'invisible army of Germany?' Both K. U. and Haskell are having trouble with their football games October 10. Why don't the two teams settle the matter by playing each other on McCook on that date? We wonder how many freshmen have been sent down town to buy a nickel's worth of Hobab? An ant has been named for a K U. professor. There are honors and honors. In this column the Daily Kansan will print the favorite poems of faculty members, and of students when Ms. Templin was selected by Dean Templel). THE CALL OF KANSAS By Esther M. Clark Sufured here with beauty, and the sensuous sweet perfume My Favorite Poem Burne in from a thousand gardens, and the house of the wise. Awed by the silent mountains, and stammer The deep ocean pounding and tugging away at the shore I lie on the warm sand beach and hear above the cry of the sea, hear above the cry of the prairie, calling. The voice of the prairie, calling. Calling me. Sweeter to me than the salt sea spray, the fragrance of the summer rains; it's a sweet wonder! Nearer my heart than the mighty hills are the wind-swept Kansas Dearer the sight of a sky wild rose he the roadside's dusty way by the roadside's dusty way Than all the splendor of poppy fields Than all the splendor of poppy helix blaze in the sun of May, the first thing I noticed was, and the Gay as the bold pointseis, and is, the burden of nepper trees. The sunflower, tawny and gold and brown, is richer to me than these. And rising ever above the song of the nausea, nauseant sea; The voice of the prairie, calling Kansas, Beloved Mother, today in an alien land. Yours is the name I have idly traced with a bit of wood in the sand. The name that, spring from a scornful lip, will make the hot blood, stone. The name that is graven, hard and deep, on the core of my loyal heart. O, higher, clearer, and longer yet, than the boom of the savage sea. than the boom of the savage sea, The voice of the prairie, calling. Sounding Jargon of the Schools Cowper, Truth. Pained Senior. Mcdest Fairmount The Fairmount men have long been noted for their energy and capability —briefly, for their "pep"—Fairmount Sunflower. Primary Classes Take Note! The best apples can now be had at teachers' desks—Fairmount Sunflower. Show Us How Don't Lose Too Much Sleep In telling of a fire drill from the group's dormitory, the students "Some morning—early, too—drill will be repeated." Show Us How New Way to Pass up Seminars. Headline, Line 1 of Student. Public Ownership of Ghosts? Iowa State Spirit Breaks Out Friday.—Headline. Quarters for Fat and Tubby Large Men's Houses Prevail This Year.—Headline Grinell Scarlet and Black. Campus Opinion Last spring everyone was talking of the new plan to have each junior and senior student of the College have for his advisor some faculty member of that department in which the student was specializing. A fine plaz, no one will deny. But imagine my claibrin when, expecting an English professor to assist me to those courses which I needed most' I had parceled out to me an eminent member of the Physics department who, although he undoubtedly was highly versed in physically and why we in physicals signed my card when I had finished my lonesome struggle with it, still knew absolutely nothing about my needs in English. What, may I ask, happened to the plan for departmental advisors and why isn't it good enough to "put through?" DEPARTMENTAL ADVISORS To the Daily Kansan: THAT HONOR SYSTEM Daily Konsant to the Daily Kansan. I wish to correct a misunderstanding which may have given rise to an editorial in the Telegraph in reedition to Honor System. In last night's paper my name was wrongly given as being in any way connected with the present movement in the freshman class for the adoption of the Honor System in the University of Kansas. I knew nothing about it till the Kansan told me about it. I have a freshman brother who was asked by a committee of the member of a set of resolutions to be presented by the chairman of that committee to the class. The idea originated neither with him nor with me, and if the movement is on foot it is so far as I am concerned without any kind of faculty suggestion or advice. I am willing to say, however, that could the freshmen themselves originate and execute satisfactorily this system, that I think it would be much to their credit. I do not know that the students of my Alma Mater need any such thing as an organized system, and from them may be the idea of this committee. I do know, however, that when I have visited friends at Williams, Amherst, and Princeton, I have talked to them as they came out from the middle of an examination, that they were talking to their own classmates who were taking the same examination, and that neither of them was going to master what worth a second thought. I know that Amherst college men take their examinations home to their rooms whenever they wish to do so, and hand their papers to their instructors when they are through. The student opinion handles the subject of examinations, and rarely, if ever, a weakling disappoint his fellows. It has not been my experience that a Kannan is less skilled in moral fibre than the men of other states. Whatever the decision of the freshman class, I should very much regret that any person through so slight a misunderstanding should think that I would ever interfere in matters which do not concern me, though I should like men to feel that when I can help them, I am able to read and do about printing this communication, and do not do so unless the misunderstanding really exists. But kindly correct the impression wherever it does exist. My brother has been asked by strangers in my presence how he liked Amherst, as we both are used to the tangle of identity—we don't mind it. "Thy Camels Also" Plymouth church Sunday evening, 7:30--Adv. Yours very truly. Willard Wattles. "Hasn't your girl any class this hour? "Nope, it is only eight-fifteen and she doesn't get up until nine o'clock. It is still on her dresser."—Stanford Chaparral. "Thy Camels Also" Plymouth church Sunday evening, 7:30—Adv. "Power," and "Life." First Presbyterian church, 10:30 a.m. and m. 8 p., m. Sunday. Dr. Wm. A. Powell, pastor. Welcome.-Adv. Miss Innocence—Why do they cheer when a man gets hurt? Miss Gay-To keep the co-eds from hearing what the injured one says.-Wisconsin Sphinx. "Poor Mrs. Bond" Plymouth church Sunday morning, 10:30—Adv. Molly—Don't you think a girl should, marry an economical man. Dolly—Yes, but it is awful being engaged to one—Yale Record. The cream that satisfies. Reynolds Bros.—Adv. A large variety of ice creams, fruit ices and sherbets for Sunday delivery. Reynold Bros.-Adv. There's goodness in the goods Reynolds Bros. Ice Cream—Adv. MORGAN'S C. W. Steeper Ice Cream Soup Confectionery SPECIAL MEAL TICKETS 1345 Mass. St. Bell 262 Cleaning.Pressing and Remodeling Club Ice Cream Soda Sunday Dinners a Specialty Satisfaction Guarantee Arl H. Frost and Karl J. Wilmensen, Agts In fact, a complete commercial training can be had at Shorthand and Typewriting Bookkeeping and Banking Penmanship and Spelling Arth Frost and Kary J. Pulkhaman, Inc. BELL 1434 - 024 - 124 For 10 years K. U.-Satisfactory results Satisfaction Guaranteed Lawrence Business College Watkins National Bank Capital $100,000 Surplus and profits $100,000 The Student Depository SHUBERT Matinee Wed. & Sat. MARGARET ILLINGTON in "Within the Law" Price $26 to $1.00 Wed. $1.00 NEXT: THE BIRD OF PARADISE "Thy Camels Also" Plymouth church Sunday evening, 7:30—Adv. "Poor Mrs. Bond" Plymouth church Sunday morning, 10:30—Adv. COPYRIGHT BY ED. V. PRICE & ORG. The Little Schoolmaster Says: "You may duplicate a suit price,but you can't duplicate a Price suit" Who is Nana Taullor? Ed.V. Price & Co. Tailoring Is Beyond Imitation COPYRIGHT BY €10 V PRICE & CO SAMUEL G. CLARK 707 Massachusetts St. Eldridge Hotel Building Compare cost with convenience and certainty and you'll have no other kind of clothes. Swede Wilson's For Billiards Phones 540 May We Measure You Today? —and at a price that is easily within your allowance, we offer the most satisfactory tailored-to-order clothes you can buy. Student Headquarters SANITARY CAFE A Nice Clean Place to Eat LUNCHES—SHORT ORDER Across from Kress Store 916 Mass. WANTED I can get you 8 per cent interest on $200 or $300 for 8 months or 1 year with first mortgage Call. Bell 1913. 10-3* Want Ads Mail your want ad with 25 cents enclosed to the Daily Kansan—want ads are payable in advance. WANTED—Stemographic work by student. Satisfaction guaranteed. 1315 Tenn. St. 9-2* LOST—Upon Sept. 17, a silver Z N bar pin. Please return to 1234 Miss. 8-3* WANTED—A student barber at once—Kaw Barber Shop, 910 Mass. St. 7-6 FOR RENT—Eight fine rooms, well lighted and heated, exceptionally well lighted, exceptionally fine frat rooms. J. M. Neville, office in Stubbs' building, across from Court House. Bell 384. LOST—One pair of eye glasses. Return to Kansan office. Reward. FOR RENT - One-down stairs front room for boys, $10. 115 Park. 8-3* FOR RENT--One double room, $10 per month; one room, single 5. double $6; one small -single $3. Student Union.-Adv. LOST—New rain coat during regist- ration. Finder please call Bell 291. 9-3 Rent a No. 5 Oliver in perfect condition three months for $4.00. The Oliver Typewriter Company, Kansas City, Mo. e-9 MARLEY 2 1/2 IN. HIGH an ARROW COLLAR CLUETT PEABODY & CO.TROY.NX J. F. BROCK, Optometrist and Special Office 802 Mass. St., Bell phone 691 PROFESSIONAL CARDS W. C. M. CONNELLE, Physician and Assistant Physician Home 8342, Residence, 1346 Tenn. St. Bell 1023, Home 639. HARRY REDING, M. D. E, Eye, ear, nose and throat. Glasses fitted. Office. F. A. A. Bldg. Phones, Bell 513, Home 512. G. A, HAMMAN, M. D. Eye, eye, Satisfaction, Guaranteed. Dick Bldg. DR. H. W. HAYNE, Oculist, Lawrence, Kansas. J. W. O'BRYAN, Dentist. Over Willson's Drug Store. Bell Phone 507. J. R. BECHTEL, M. D., D. O. 833 Massachusetts Street. Both phones, office and residence. G. W. JONES, A. M. M. D., Diseases of the stomach, surgery and gyncology. Suite 1, F. A. A. Bldg. Resi- tence, 2011 Ohio St. Both phones. DR, H. L. CHAMBERS. Office over Squirrel's Studio. Both phones. S. T. GILLISPIE, M. D. Office cor- tors S. T. GILLISPIE, M. D. Resi- dence II, Phone 5865, Phone 5865, MRS ELLISON, Dressmaking and LADIES Tailoring. Evening gowns a specialty, 1032 Vermont. Phone Bell 2411 West. DR. H. T. JONES, Room 12, F. A. A. Bldr. Residence 1130 Tenn. Phones 211. CLASSIFIED Ladies Tailor. Mrs. Emma Brown- Schulz, Dressmaking and Ladies Tailoring. Phone Blake Browne. Next door to Anderson's Bakery. Francisco & Co. Livery, Hacks and Garage 812 VERMONT STREET Phone 139 Johnson & Tuttle PROSPECT 715 AMC BUCKETSTEEN STREET A Good Place to Eat at Anderson's Old Stand Mrs. M. Brockelsby-Wilson, Kiester College of ladies tailoring and dressmaking. Over 909 Mass. St. Bell 2109. Jewelers ED. W, PARSONS, Engraver, Watchmaker and Jeweler. Diamonds and Jewelry. Bell Phone 717. 717 Mm Plumbers PHONE KENNEDY PLUMBING 807. Masse. Phone 8058. 937. Masson. Phone 658. Hair Dressers HAIRDRESSING, shampooing, scalp and facial massage, shampooing, hair goods, "Marinello" toilet preparations. For appointments call Bell 1372. Home 51. The Select Hair Dressing Shop, 927 Mass. St. Barber Shops Go where they all go J. C. HOUCK 913 Mass. GO WHEN you get the Best. Bob Stewart's Barber Shop, 838 Mass. St. Cafes For a good clean place to eat, where you don't get "xyped" go to the MARKET GAFE, Room 1, Perkins Building. Millinery WANTED -Ladies to call at Mrs. McCormick's up-to-date millinery parlorts to inspect our new line of hats. 831 Mass St. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN MONDAY TUESDAY AURORA DANIEL FROHMAN Presents the Powerful Domestic Drama AFTERMATH With VIRGINIA PARSONS and OWEN MOORE Complete in Four Parts. :-- First Show 7:25—Second Show 8:30 Coming Friday, "One Wonderful Night" FEATURING FRANCIS X. BUSHMAN The University of Kansas Offers over 200 courses BY MAIL through its Correspondence Study Department. Credit given for all college work. Address University Extension Division, The University of Kansas, Lawrence, Kansas. KAW VALLEY ICE CREAM CO. 170 Eicher Phane 10 W. 9th 470 Either Phone We specialize on clubs and fraternity orders. Let us handle that order. ICE CREAM AND OYSTERS DANCE NON-PERSPIRE Why Perspire and be uncomfortable "NITH" is guaranteed to stop perspiring beneath the arms HARMLESS — TWO ODORS; VIOLET AND ROSE PRICE 50c Burt Wadhams The COLLEGE INN BARBER F. B. McCOLLOCH Druggist THE REXALL STORE 847 Mass. St. On the Corner K. U. Aorsons Honed. Ground and Exchanged W, F. Weise, Prop Remember That K. U. Barber Shop and Bath Rooms The Only Electric Massage Machine in the City 727 Massachusetts Street Razora Honed. Schulz makes Clothes 913 Mass. St. Lawrence, Kas. Coat Styles for Fall and Winter Loose swagger styles that will appeal to the tastes of the College Set. Come to our Suit Room and look them over; try them on. Balmacaans at $10 and $15 The New Russian Dresses A comfort and convenience the season through---of serge with combination sleeve and basque effect of satin. $9.00, $12.00, $15.00, $18.00 Party Coats, Dancing Dresses, Suits, Waists and Lingerie Sash Ribbons of Wide Black Satin. The Stiff Collar and Cuff Sets. Dainty Ruchings, Pleatings and Neckwear. ear. Phoenix Silk Hosiery in 20 Shades. Onnes, Bulline & Hackman WEARING OF COTTON TO SHOW PATRIOTISM Nation-wide Bargain Sale Planned to Help American Business Are the women of Kansas University patriotic enough to wear cotton this winter? 0 Sounds foolish, doesn't it? But perhaps it won't when you have heard the explanation. Financial stringency threatens this country because many people, anticipating hard times, are hoarding their money. The cotton industry is in danger because the war has killed the exported crops and goods. Unused houses are full, and the cotton factories are only running half time or less. Will Stimulate Trade Will Stimulus In order to relieve the situation, the "Buyer cotton" movement was instituted, with President Wilson's approval. Now comes Genevieve Clark, the Speaker's daughter, with a new plan. Her idea is to have a week in October designated, on some day of which the drygoods stores in every town in the country shall sell cotton goods of all kinds at cut prices. The successes, a great deal of hardened money will be taken into circulation, and the cotton mills will have work for a long time to come. Kansas Women to the Rescue The plan looks perfectly reasonable on the face of it, and it may be supposed that Kansas women, who are constitutionally patriotic, will support it because a reality takes part in it itself—what is something else again?" Abe often says to Mawrass. The very thought of cot-times one shiver, remembering that long cold stretch between Thirteenth street and the Museum, and that other one from the Gym to the Mining building. However, that remark about wearing cotton this winter was purely facetious. American warehouse have enough woolen goods on hand to last this winter in the office and to freeze to death in order to help the country. If the Lawrence merchants agree to sell cotton at bargain prices on a certain day, University women had an excellent opportunity to lay in for new spring, thus being fore-handed, economical and patriotic all at once. DORMITORIES AT HARVARD Sanitary Apartments Have Been Furnished for Freshmen by College A freshman dormitory is the latest innovation to be tried at Harvard. Freshmen entering this fall may take penn in one of the finest college dormitories in existence. For years Harvard has been careless about the housing facilities offered its students and the new plan is an experiment of President Lowell to meet the need. Ojections to the system because of its uniformity and on account of the possibility of overcrowding are offered but not all students will take care of those students who have heretofore been without proper housing. Fach suite of rooms is provided with its own bath and is completely furnished. The rental price runs from $595 to $200 per year with board room. The guess on the total K. U. score is now on at Carroll's. It's free. Get in on it...Adv. **Fountain** Self-tilling for $1.00 to $6.00. "Moores" Non-leakable $2.50 to $5.50. "Hurds" Stationery. We frame pictures. Let us frame yours. WOLF's BOOK STORE, 919 Mass. St.-Adv. Just received, a fresh shipment of Huyler's famous chocolates. Carroll's.-Adv. Buy the young lady a box of Huyler's Allegrette. We deliver. 65c the nound, Carroll's.—Adv. Fountain Pens The Washburn College will hold a sophomore-freshman sack scrap this season. The old reliable K. U. Barber Shop welcomes you fellows back and will be pleased to meet you and new recruits at the old stand, 727 Mass. St. Call and get acquainted. Adv. "Thy Camels Also" Plymouth church Sunday evening, 7:30—Adv. There's a goodness in the goods Reynolds Bros. Ice Cream—Adv. A large variety of ice creams, fruit ices and sherbs for Sundae delivery. Reynold Bros.-Adv. MYER'S HALL HAD NO DRONES LAST WEEK Social Events Kept All Y. M. C. A. Members Busy During Enrollment Week Business was the keynote of the University Y. M. C. A.'s doings on the Hill the opening week, of the term, from the first Stunt Night, Monday, to the big Freshman-Blowout, Saturday evening. Business was occupied in planning or exerting a project of interest to the students. The greatest gathering of the week, numerically speaking, was the football rally Wednesday evening, where 800 "studs" gave vent for the first time this year to their enthusiasm for the gridiron sport. Presence of the new students lent additional flair to its affair. A close connection in popularity was the vaudeville and concert Tuesday evening, which drew a crowd of 250. Euthesiasm again rose to a high pitch Thursday evening, when twenty Y. M. members distributed the much-anted "KC" books to 700 men students. Throughout the week, the employment bureau took care of some 700 men who needed work-directed many new students to rooming houses and obarding clubs, and along with the information bureaus at institutes at the railroad mills, established at the life less mature for the homeless freshmen. Con Hoffman, secretary of the University Y. M. C. A. has been working overtime. WASHBURN HAS COUNCIL But it is Different From That of Kansas—Has Member of Faculty on it Though close geographically and rivals "footballly" the Washburn College at Topeka, and the University of Kansas have the university student councils, as will be seen in brief of the student government there. "The Student Council is the student governing body of Washburn. It is composed of four members from the senior class, three from the junior class, two from the sophomore class and one from the faculty. These representatives are chosen by the student body as provided in the constitution. The principal powers of the Council are control of oratory and debate, interclass athletics, and of supervision of student elections." Sophs Win Scrap For the second time in the history of the school, a sophomore class won the annual freshman-sophomore flag rush at the College of Emporia. The scrap was held last week on Schaffner Field and at Lake Mergendahl, and the usual flag scrap conditions of rain and mist persisted. Thirty-five men including nine former members of the Varsity squad have reported for practice at Lincoln, Nebraska. "Power" and "Life." First Presbyterian church, 10:30 a. m. and 8 p. m., Sunday. Dr. Wm. A. Powell, pastor. Welcome.-Adv. Wife—What time did you get in last night? "Power," and "Life." First Presbyterian church, 10:30 a. m. and 8 p. m., Sunday. Dr. Wm. A. Powell, pastor. Welcome.-Adv. Wife—But I sat up till twelve. Hubby—But I sat on the front steps till you retired so as not to disburse you. Harvard Lampoon. Hubby—Eleven-thirty... The cream that satisfies. Reynolds Bros.-Adv. Ferdy--You are not like most other girls I know. Sylvia (selviya)-No? Fanny No.-Most of the others tan, but you can trickle--Princeton Tiger. Four varieties of ice cream at our fountain--Reynolds Bros.-Adv. Real cokes at Reynolds Bros.—Adv. "Did you follow everything in the show?" sh声 "Couldn't. There were fifty in the chorus alone." - Cornell Widow. Four varieties of ice cream at our fountain—Reynolds Bros.—Adv. Real cokes at Reynolds Bros.—Adv. "Poor Mrs. Bond" Plymouth church Sunday morning, 10:30.—Adv. clothes. Clerk—How long? 18-I want some winter under- clothes. 19k I don't want to rent them. I want to buy them... Princeton Tiger. Banana-nut ice cream at Wiedemann's.—Adv. VARSITY Today Only Lloyd Ware Theatre MY FRIEND FROM INDIA HADUSOUCRENTS FAMOUS (COMEDY), featuring WALTER PERKINS, principal conductor in the Broadway production for three successful seasons as the original agitator. European War Albo raven Promenade, Nes Figli. Prima Negra, European War New York. The concordance of the World Special Piano andPipe Organs Music. Pictures Every Day. : Something New in FOR TAXICAB Call Either PHONE 100 PEERLESS GARAGE CLARK CLEANS LOTHES Phone 355 CLARK CLEANS LOTHES PUNCH TICKET $1.50 TEN PRESSES All Pressing Done by Hand ] 730 Mass St. CLARK CLEANS LOTHES CLARK LEANS LOTHES sauce .10 Minced ham and potato salad .10 LEE'S COLLEGE INN DINNER MENU SEPT.26,1914 Soup free with 25c orders. Roast beef and brown gravy .10 Frankfurters and sauerkraut .10 Veal croquettes, brown gravy.10 Breaded veal with cream Go to the HOME BAKERY For Good Things to Eat S. M. Williamson 933 Mass. S R. E. Protsch The Students' Tailor A. G. ALRICH PRINTING Binding, Copper Plate Printing, Rubber Stamps, Engraving, Die Embossing, Badge Bag 744 MASS. STREET L GOOD FOR $1.10 LEE'S COLLEGE INN Good for 30 Days Only Date ___ Name ___ 10 10 10 10 E 10 10 10 A $1.10 for $1.00 E GOOD FOR $3.3 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 10 10 10 10 10 Lee's College Inn Good for 30 Days Only DATE ... NAME ... 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 S 25 25 25 25 $3.30 for $3.00 These tickets are good for meals, short orders, drinks and ice cream. Good Anytime—Day or Night UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN 1234567890 The greatest variety of patterns makes this store the most popular shirt and neckwear store in town. Soft French cuff shirts have the "call" among good dressers again this season. $1.00 to 5.00 We are showing some patterns by "Manhattan" in beautiful silks. imported flannels and crepe cloths. Also many beautiful cross.stripes. Hundreds of neckwear patterns, 50c, 75c and $1. Y Ober's HEAD TO FOOT OUTFITTERS Frank Koch "The Tailor" Full Line of Fall Suitings Complete line of Tobacco, Cigars, Pipes ALSO MANUFACTURES OF Pierson's Success, Hand Made, Merchants Robert Hudson Cigars Aug. J. Pierson 902 Mass. WHEN DOWN TOWN National Bank Hiawatha Cafe LUNCH AND MEALS The Oread Cafe Leads Others Follow The Oread takes Pride and Care in the selection of all eatables. Everything is served from a clean, sanitary, up-to-the-minute kitchen by two long experienced lady cooks, making the eats taste like "Mother's." You are invited to inspect our kitchen. "THE TASTE TELLS." SUNDAY SUPPER SEPT.27.1914. Cream of Tomato Soup. . . . . 01 Fancy Sliced Tomatoes. . . . . 10 Head Lettuce and Tomatoes. . . 10 Stir-fried Tomatoes. . . . . 10 Rice Olives. . . . . . . . 10 Chicken Broth with Rice . . . . . TO ORDER STEAKS AND CHOPS Special Porterhouse Steak for...(1) ...40 Extra Sirloin Steak (Special Cut)...(2) ...75 Extra Sirloin Steak (Special Cut)...(3) ...1.25 Extra Sirloin Steak (Special Cut)...(4) ...1.50 English Mutton Chops, Each...15 Pork Chops (extra nice) with cream sauce. Spring Lamb Chops, Each...10 Our Steaks and Chops are Broiled on a Modern French Steak Our Steaks and Chops are Broiled on a Modern French Steak Broiler Making Them Unusually Good. READY Individual Chicken Pie. .20 Stuffed Pork Tenderloin, Brown Sauce. .15 Boiled Chicken Legs With Rice. .15 Fried Cat Fish With Potato Chips. .20 Roast Beef, Brown Gravy. .10 Roast Leg of Lamb with Currant Jelly. .10 Roast Pork Ham with Apple Sauce. .10 French Fried Potatoes. .10 Lyonaise Potatoes. .05 Minced Brown Potatoes. .05 New Spinach with Egg. .05 Escolled Fresh Tomatoes. .05 Mashed Sweet Potatoes. .05 C Creamed Slaw. .05 Golden Wax String Beans. .05 OYSTERS. DESERTS Oyster Cocktail .15 Fancy Select Raw, % doz. .20 Cream Stew, % doz. .35 Milk Stew, % doz. .35 Fried in Butter, % doz. .35 Banana Split. .15 Rockefellow Sundae, "Very Rich". .15 Grape Float. .10 Virginia Sundae. .10 Carnation Sundae. .10 Fresh Peaches and Ice Cream. .10 Swiss Chocolate Sundae. .10 Cherry Pie with Whipped Cream. .10 Cubar Tart. .10 Sliced Pineapple a la mode. .10 Banana and Ice Cream. .10 Iced Coffee. .05 Coffee. .05 Bottled Milk. .05 Iced Tea. .05 Hot Chocolate. YOUR PATRONAGE IS APPRECIATED. Reserve Your Booth Early. Bell Phone 5921. THE OREAD CAFE E.C.BRICKEN,Owner MICHIGAN NEEDS LINEMEN Yost Has Five Forward Passers He Would Like to Trade for Active Outposts If any of the big eastern elevens that saw proof of the advantages of the forward pass in the Army-Navy game last fall are trying to develop some good heavens, they can secure them by making a trade. Fielding H. Yost, of Ann Arbor, Michigan, will swap five good forward peggers for five active linemen. Yale, the Navy, and several other eastern schools have made a speciality of developing linemen, thinking a strong defense position would be more effective than they are strong there, while Yost has specialized in developing forward passers. This fall he has more than he can use. OREAD GOLF COURSE TO BE READY IN A WEEK Grass mowers two of 'em—began work yesterday cutting the green on the Oread golf course. The grass is high in several places and it will be a week before the golfers can play without losing their "goutfies." The entire course will be mowed, ditches cleaned, and greens cut and rolled. The committee appointed to lead the course had collected $100 yesterday. "Have you any valid reason for hanging around that convent the way you do?" If you like banana-nut ice cream try ours, Wiedemann's—Adv. Columbia has established courses in extension teaching in several neighboring cities for students who can attend in the late afternoon, evenings, and Saturday mornings. The work offered will include degree requirements in mining, engineering three years of mining, engineering an chemistry; courses in commerce, accounts and finance; secretarial studies; practical optics, agriculture. Columbia Extends "Nun."—Minnesota Minne-ha-ha. Our banana ice cream is different from others. The taste tells, Wiedemann's—Adv. Orange ice, made from the fruit. Wiedmann's.—Adv. "Power," and "Life." First Press- bysterian church, 10:30 a.m. and m. 8 p. m., Sunday. Dr. Wm. A. Powell, pastor. Welcome.-Adv. More School Days There To overcome conditions now prevalent, the board of education of New York City has recommended that the school year shall consist of two hundred days of actual teaching and that each payroll should be prepared upon the basis of one-two hundredth of a year's service for each day of actual service. Like eating fresh oranges. Orange ice, at Wiedemann's—Adv. Nut butter cups, fresh and crisp, at Wiedemann's—Adv. BOND LINES MEN UP IN SCRIMMAGE WORK Kicking and running down on the ball was the most important part of the practice on McCook Field yesterday afternoon. Coach Bond had charge of the squad and after the usual preliminaries, Bond lined his men up, seven in a line, and sent them down on punts. Lindsay, Wood Russell did most of the booting. The kicking of Lindsay was spectacular. Seven Against Seven Go Down on Punts; Lindsay's Kicking a Feature After the kicking, Bond took the line candidates to one side of the field and they bucked heads until they were winded while the back aspirants ran with the ball, dodging a line of players. Have you guessed on the total football score? It's free, at Carroll's.-Adv. A few minutes tackling the dummy was followed by routine practice. Coach Wheaton was not on the field yesterday. "Poor Mrs. Bond" Plymouth church Sunday morning, 10:30—Adv. Box stationery. Standard qualities. At Carroll's.-Adv. Teachers College of Columbia University has decided to place its work with a single exception upon the graduate basis. It prepares to combine itself to "the preparation of the supervisors and administrators and the equipping of the teaching staffs of professional faculties." Huyler's, Allegretti's famous creams, exclusive agency at Carroll's. "Power," and "Life." First Pressbyterian church, 10:30 a. m. and 8 p. m., Sunday. Dr. Wm. A. Powell, pastor. Welcome--Adv. If you like milk chocolate, try our's. See the difference. Wiedemann's.-Adv. The official football schedule free for the asking, down at Carroll's.— Adv. FOOTBALL! "Thy Camels Also" Plymouth church Sunday evening, 7:30--Adv. "Poor Mrs. Bond" Piltymouth church Sunday morning, 10:30—Adv. -Adv. Waterman fountain pens, $2.50 up at Carroll's.'-Adv. Haskell vs. K.C. University ON THE Haskell Field Students! Thirty years headquarters for cigars, periodicals, high grade pipes and stationery, at Carroll's, 709 Mass. St.-Adv. Most of the freshmen are buying their black gym suits and shoes at Carroll's because they get standard goods. Why not you?—Adv. See Kennedy's Braves in Action Notice Freshmen! The place to buy your black gym suits and shoes is here. The others do,why not you? Saturday, 3 p.m. Admission 50c 709 Massachuestts Street CARROLLS Benjamin Correct Clothes The Well Groomed Young Man— No matter who he is from, always wears a BENJAMIN. The materials fashion into Benjamin clothes represent the most exclusive patterns of foreign and local wearers, and so varied in appeal as to meet every taste and need. Styles are absolutely authentic, workmanship perfect, and the finished garment is a masterpiece of the tailors art. They cost no more than common clothes. Johnson & Carl EDWIN CLAIR & MILK A New Eng- lisher in Town, in Tan or Black Leather, from $4.00 to $6.50, at STARKWEATHER'S Sunday Menu Ice Creams Vanilla, Strawberry, Caramel Nut, Chocolate, Brown Bread. A special on ORANGE. 4. (20) Ices Apricot Ice 0. Phone us your Sunday order. We are glad to deliver when you desire. Reynold Bros. Bell 645 Home 358 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN VOLUME XII CHEATING NOT TO BE TOLERATED BY '18'S UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS MONDAY AFTERNOON, SEPTEMBER 28, 1914. NUMBER 11. Freshmen Pledge All Members to Refrain From Unfair Class Methods WILL STAND FOR EFFICIENCY Home Class Will Work for Individual Enterprise in Class and at "Second; that it thoroughly dorses the principles of the student, honor and unreservedly pledges itself to the support and furtherance of those principles within the student body of the University of Kansas; Fedging all members to retrain from cheating in all forms of class and study while at the University was the import of resolutions passed at a meeting of the freshman class in Myers's Hall Friday afternoon. The resolutions passed were those prepared by the committee appointed at the Freshman Blowout held in Myers Hall during the week of enrolment. The resolutions submitted by the resolutions submitted by the committee and passed by the class. "It being the opinion of the honor system committee of the class of 1918 that the adoption in class and school work of the honor system which is in operation in many of our American colleges and universities is a benefit to the class of 1918, the committee submits the following resolutions for the expression of the class: "Be it resolved: First; that the class of 1918 does hereby declare itself absolutely and unconditionally opposed to all forms of cribbing, cheating and dishonesty in class and enterprise, and that the tending toward the discouragement and destruction of individual efficiency and enterprise of its members. "And lastly, that' individually as well as collectively the members of the committee to assess the responsibility of the observance of the above resolutions." STUDENTS SHOULD OBSERVE PRAYER DAY Chancellor Strong Hopes University Will Heed Wilson's Proclamation "It is a good thing, it is a fine thing," said Chancellor Frank Strong this morning when asked what he has to say of October 4th as general Sunday for the students of the University in response to the general proclamation of President Woodrow Wilson calling on the people of the United States to unite in prayer for the relief of war hitter Europe. Women Will Work in Gym "I hope the entire student body will observe this day of prayer at the churches of Lawrence," the Chancellor continued. Next Sunday will be his First Sunday of what will be known this year as "go to Church Month." Women wilt with lusty gym class at the values of the faculty. At the wives of family men, will be held every Monday evening at seven o'clock, commencing this evening. Swimming, dancing, and general gym work will provide amusement. All interested persons are requested to come out for it. Girls' Tennis Will Start According to Marjorie Hiers, Missouri Valley and Central Western tennis champion, the University Girls' Tennis Association will be organized within the next few days. The team will hold field days ready for use at the present time, and things are expected to boom from the moment of their completion. Echoes From Estes Park Reports from delegates who attended the convention at Estes Park will be heard at the weekly meeting of the Y. W. C. A. tomorrow afternoon in Myers Hall. The meeting will convene at 4:30. All Out for Freshman Caucas . With the honor system as the basis of their ticket, freshmen will meet to nominate officers tonight. The meeting will be an open caucus in the Student Union at 7:00 o'clock. Professor Hill Pledges Acacia The Acacia fraternity has pledged Prof. Howard T. Hill, of the department of public speaking. Paradise Lost, Book 2 "So he with difficulty and labor hard Movd on, with difficulty and labor he." STUDE FALULTY DAYHAMK NIRLOY FRESHMEN GET ACQUAINTED Smith College Women Have Frolic so Students May Know One Another A "freshman fricie" closely resembling the "freshman fricies" at K. U. was given under the auspices of the student council at Smith College recently. Practically every freshman end entering student was taken under the wing of some upper-classman and introduced to as many of the girls of her own class and of other classes as possible. Soon after the beginning of each year it has been the custom at Smith as at K. U. for the W. Y. C. A. to give a frolic where the freshmen girls and new estering students may meet in one evening. Freshmen are in one evening. Funny stunts, refreshments and a lantern parade have usually formed the program. PUT OUT SECOND TICKET Sophmores Head Ninamees With Adrian Lindsey's Name at Open Caucus Held Friday Night Adrian Lindsey, president; Archie Walters, vice-president; Bessie Ulrick, secretary; Homer Harriet, treasurer and John Moore, hop manager, was the ticket nominated at an open caucus of the sophomore class held on Wednesday evening. About seventy-five members of the class were present. SHEA WOULD MAKE MANY IMPROVEMENTS TO CAMPUS Roads of the University campus will be paved with asphalt next year if the plans of John M. Shea, superintendent of buildings and grounds materialize. Minor improvements, in the form of new cement walks on various parts of the campus, and a refilling of the library cut-off are being considered. New entrances to Prazer Hall are planned, and the adjoining boatier to the plant was ordered at the last meeting of the Board of Administration but the details have not yet been worked out. Leon Montague, freshman engineer, and Lind Anderson, freshman College, spent the week-end in Atchison with friends. Dalvin to the Keltz Keltz fraternity held initiation Saturday night for Dick Dalvin, of Echo, Oregon. Dalvin to the Keltz Drake Wins First Game Drake took a 19 to 0 game away from Drake and Clark Saturday afternoon. Drake raised chiefly upon the forward pass. Orchestra to Meet Drake Wins First Game The University Orchestra will meet in North College for rehearsals at 7:30 a.m. on Monday, March 19. LADY TO JANITOR— "HAVE YOU A DIPLOMA" Gary to Instruct Caretakers The hitherto neglected but undeniably important profession of the janier is to receive attention in the night schools at Gary, Indiana, to the joy of the flat dweller and the intellectual improvement of the proverbial tyrant of the multiple home. Courses are offered, some giving general work and some such special studies as chapaperone, infant feeding, early childhood, general courses include courtesy, sanitation, ventilation and economical use of fuel—all calculated to rejoice the heart of both landlord and rentor. DEAN TEMPLIN NAMES CHAPEL COMMITTEES Faculty and Student Members Will Work Out Plan Later Committees for the new chapel plans were announced this morning by Dean Olin Templin, chairman of the executive committee. Following are the committees and the members: Executive; Dean Olin Templin, chairman; Prof. J. N. Van der Vries, Prof. L. E. Sisson; order of service; Dr Arvin Liu, C. S. Skilton, Earl A. Blackman, Student. Prof. Eugenie Ancic, Student. Prof. E. M. Brigham; announcements; Prof. E. M. Brigham University Marshal, Chairman, Con Hoffman, Y. M. secretary, Anne Gittins, Y. W. secretary and students, Hugo T. Welch and Elmer R. Arnid. The committees will now work out the details of the plan and at an early date will put the new plan in office M. E. STUDENT PASTOR DELAYED BY DEDICATION Erection of a new church at Chattamoga, Tenn., and the reluctance of the board to let him go, have detained Rev. Gordon Bennett Thompson, the new University pastor of the Methodist church until October 1. He will have charge of the University Sunday school at the Methodist church. The committees will now work out the details of the plan and at an early date will put the new plan in operation. The devotional exercises will be held in B in the morning or 4:30 in the afternoon has not yet been determined. DRAY WAGONS CONVEY STUDENTS DURING STRIKI Several big dray wagons hauling students from the city to the Normal was the experience at Pittsburg for several weeks. The Normal school is located some distance from the city on the opposite side and the motormen and the conductors on the street railway went out on a strike the school was left isolated. HOOK WORMS INFEST KANSAS First Death Reported From Dread Disease Puts State Health Department Into Action Hook worms furnish the latest source of annoyance to Dr. S. J. Crumbine, secretary of the state at the School of Medicine at the University. The first death from this disease which has occurred in Kansas for a number of years has just been reported. While it is believed that the victim contracted the disease before coming to Kansas, there is nothing clinically to prevent its spread in the state if once started. Kansas is a prone source from sewage pollution which causes the disease, but Dean Crumbine is taking no chances and will make a thorough investigation of the case and all conditions which might cause further trouble. HARSH TO RETURN SATURDAY Jayhawker Editor-in-Chief Brings Back New Ideas for This Year's Book Editor Leon Harsh, of this year's Jayhawker, will be in Lawrence Saturday, according to a letter received this morning by Manager Blair Hackey. Harsh is at present working on the Chicago Herald. "Harsh has a number of new ideas, and also some taken from the annuals put out by in eastern schools," said Hackney today. "Along with a few ideas I picked up while down in Texas, we are going to get out a quite cosmopolitan book." laughed the business manager. Hackney requests that the seniors see him at Green Hall this week at 8:00, 10:30 or 1:30 about paying their fees. WILL ELECT OFFICERS FRIDAY Politics to Terminate at End of Week —Petitions Must be in Tomorrow "YOU ARE RIGHT; OREAD IS BEAUTIFUL" Election of class officers will be held Friday according to president of the Student Council, Vic Bottomly. All candidates must have their petitions to Bottomly by tomorrow noon. The petitions must bear twenty-five names and be accompanied by fifty cents to defray the expenses of the election. The polling places will be announced tomorrow. On another page appears the rules regarding voting. Pittusburg Has Lectures The Pittsburgh State Normal has established a course of lectures at Independence. These will be given on Saturdays and students attending them will be allowed five hours credit toward graduation. Iowa Man Commends Scene W. R. Boyd, president of the Iowa State Board of Education, made the statement in the Daily Kansan office Thursday afternoon that he considered the University campus and the state to be the most beautiful that he had ever seen. Mr. Boyd accompanied by W. H. Gemmil, secretary of the Iowa Board, is touring the Middle West visiting each university. Wednesday they visited Washburn College and the Kansas State Agricultural University; they left for Lincoln, Nebraska, to visit the state university there. Mr. Gemmill says that he will uphold Mr. Boyd's statement t concerning our campus. CONVENTION OF CITY LEAGUE HERE SOON Organization Will Make Lawrence Its Home First Week in October The convention will be welcomed to the city by Mayor W. J. Francisco and to the University by Chancellor Frank Strong. Wednesday morning will be given over to reports of the officers and committees. The first part of the afternoon session will be taken up by reports of cities, including statements of their achievements and problems. At 3 o'clock, Peter Atchner will lead railway commissioner of Cleveland, Ohio, under Mayor Newton D. Baker, and closely associated with Tom L. Johnson in his contests for municipal self government in Cleveland, will address the convention. Two hundred or more persons interested in better municipal government in Kansas and the United States will gather at Lawrence October 26 to attend the Sixth Annual Convention of the League of Kansas Municipalities. At 4 o'clock meetings of the departments will begin. A mixer will be held at Fraternal Aid Hall in the evening. Thursday will be taken up by a discussion of various phases of modern city government. Committee meetings, a discussion of municipal ice plants by Hugh J. Cooper, commissioner of Public Utilities of Fort Worth, a committee of committees, and the election of officers will take up the Friday morning session and Fred C. Trigg, editor of the Weekly Kansas City Star will speak at the afternoon meeting. This is the first time the convention of the League of Kansas Municipalities has met in Lawrence. All meetings of the convention will be held at the floor of Riding Gymnasium, except the mixer, Wednesday evening. CAPTAIN JONES WANTS MORE MEN IN K. N. G.'S Company M. still has places in its ranks for a limited number of new recruits, according to Cap. F. E. Jones. Although the present 'enlistment' about seventy is more than 60%, there is still room for about ten men. There will be drill on the basketball floor of the gymnasium tomorrow evening at seven. All students will participate in a competition to Capt. Jones at that time. Quill to Meet Members of the Quill club will meet at 4:30 o'clock this afternoon in Room 211 Fraser. An editor and a managing editor will be elected because of the failure of Ferguson and Root, former editors, to return to office. The meeting will determine whether the Quill Magazine will be published this year and all who are interested should attend the meeting. Has Large Attendance Pittsburgh State Normal this year will have the largest attendance in the history of the institution. Approximately 100 students will be enrolled for the year. Juniors Will Caucas Tonight The junior class of the University will meet tonight in open caucas in Fraser Hall, to nominate candidates for the class ticket. John Dean, Jr., a freshman in the College, spent the week-end at his home in Topeka. Richard Small , a College sophomore, spent the week-end in Kansas City. MAMMA CAT SWEARS AT FRESHMAN GIRLS Mother, Calling Babies, Shocks First-Year Women at Gym Affair Friday IS INTERRUPTED PROGRAM But Janitor Plays the Hero and Takes Mean Thing Away and Play Proceeds Fluff, a mother cat, in whom mother instincts were stronger than histrionic ambitions, came near breaking up the girls' freshman frolie, in the gymnasium Friday night. Because she had left her three small daughters at home, she objected violently to the marriage of a faire "The Burglar," and scratched clawed, wailed, and cried for her freedom. Three girls tried to master her but were unsuccessful. The audience got "next" when the cat, imprisoned in a bag, under the stage, watched the girls swairing violently. The junior, Mr. Miller, had to settle the turbulent feline. Preceding the farce, Katherine Redding, assisted by Lillian Wolfe, gave a Thumb dance. A general mixer followed ending in a lantern held over the floor where the girls marched down past the Chancellor's house, to Tennessee street, where they held an enthusiasm meeting. They were aided and abetted by the men living along the course of their march, who came out in the rain. "We went to U." Two hundred and fifty women of the University attended the frolic. Y.M.-Y.W. CAMPAIGN STARTS WEDNESDAY Committee Will Assemble at Banquet in Myers and Then Visit Students Launched with the idea of enrolling the bigger majority of K. U. students in Bible class work, the Y. M. and Y. W. C. A. Bible study campaign will begin on Wednesday evening. The aim of the committee will be to call upon every student in the University and solicit his interest and assistance in the promotion of the study of the Bible. The movement will have its official beginning at 6 p. m. Wednesday, when the 200 members of the committee will all meet for a banquet. The campaign will be a twenty-eight hour affair, and will be pushed with all possible skill and efficiency. At the meeting held yesterday in Myers Hall, at which 200 members of the committee were in attendance, the general proposition of the campaion was discussed by the following speakers: Rev. H. E. Wolfe, Prof. R. A. Schwegler, Dr. Stanton Olinger, and Miss Anne Gittings. PARADE IS RIGHT, SAYS CHANCELLOR Night Shirt Procession Good for University if Students Act Properly “If the students will refrain from lawless acts down town, I believe the parade next Saturday night will be a fun one,” said Chancelor Strong this morning. "The nightshift parade is usually a good thing. It has been the custom of the University for a good many years and I can see no harm in it if the students will commit no offenses. We should have no invasion of the rights of others. I hope the Student Council will have some direction of the matter." ELECTRICALS TO-MEET WEDNESDAY EVENING Electrical engineers will meet for the first time for student branch of the A. I. E. E., Wednesday evening, at 7:30 o'clock in the lecture room of Marvin Hall. Prof. G. C. Shaad will examine and new men may become acquainted with the other electricals. Cider and doughnuts will be served. NIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Official student paper of the University EDITORIAL STAFF JOHN GLEISSNER Editor-in-Chief MARK HAWKINS Sport Editor CALVIN LAMBERT BUSINESS STAFF REPORTORIAL STAFF LLOYD HARRIS THEODORE GIBBON GEORGIE CULTAYAN CHARLES WALTER CHARLIE SWETT RIX MILLER RIX MILLER Frank B. JENDERROH FRANK B. JENDERROH HELEN HAYES HELEN HAYES Wm. S. CAMP Wm. S. CAMP JOHN FERROH SAM IAN FERROH J. W. DYCE CFO Business Manager M. L. MIDDLETON CFO Business Manager S. STUFFVANT Advertising Manager Entered as second-class mail master stopper of the mailmaster system of Kansas. Kansas, under the act of March 3 Subscription price $2.50 per year in ad ance; can use phone, fax or mail. Phone, Bell K. U. 25 Address are at UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Lawrence, Kansas Published in the afternoon, five times a week. It was sent to Kansas, from the press of the department The Daily Karen aims to picture the kind of students who go to Kenya, to go further than merely printing the news in print media. She wants to be clear; to be cheerful; to be charitable; to be clean; to be care MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 28, 1914. Behold congenial Autumn comes the Sabbath of the year—Logan JOHNSON ON SMOKING Perhaps the Board of Administration agrees with Ben Johnson in regard to smoking. In "Every Man In His Humor" we find this: Ods me! I marle what pleasure or felicity they have in taking their rugish tobacco. It is good for nothing but to choke a man and fill him full of smoke and embers. USE THE BALLOT The election of cheer-leader by ballot at a chapel convocation is a far better method than the one heretofore employed, but it is by no means perfect. The logical way to elect the cheerleader is by ballot, at the time of the class elections, in the same way that other officers are elected. Doubtest this plan will be followed next year. The result of the election last week was so overwhelming that there was no room for doubt, but it may not always be that way. PAY YOUR DUES The Student Council has made no campaign for members for the Student Union, but already a good number have joined. The billiard tables will arrive this week, and then a big campaign for membership will be started. Why not save the Councilmen the unpleasant necessity of personal solicitation by coming in unasked? You will eventually anyhow, for all good students do. And a permanent Union is an impossibility unless the present Union is well-supported. NO NEED TO WORKY A Lawrence minister, in his Sunday morning sermon, criticised a story that appeared in the Daily Kansan last week to the effect that Coach Wheaton had decided that the football players should no longer use the crimson and blue jerseys because it made the men conspicuous to the officials. Readers of the Daily Kansan know that in doing this Coach Wheaton does not contemplate teaching the men any "dirty playing." Unintentional violations of rules are inevitable, and if the officials do not detect them, so much the better for Kansas. Offside plays are common. The K. U. players will play clean ball, as they always have. Also, if they make an offside play, and can get away with it, they won't ask the referee to penalize them. STUDENT GOVT ON TRIAL Student government is on trial this year, the Chancellor told the students in his annual welcome in chapel Friday. Student government will be a failure at the University unless the students get behind the Council and the W. S. G. A., and take an individual responsibility. There must be some sort of regulation, and self-government is certainly more to be desired than faculty control. Every student owes it to the University and to the rest of the students to obey the rules—especially the 10:30 date rule and the smoking rule, which have been most flagrantly violated in the past. The Council cannot enforce the rules unless backed by student sentiment and there can be no student sentiment until everyone feels his own personal obligation. The Highbrow Mary is a highbrow, for she's been away to college. And she has picked up quite a lot of ornamental knowledge. Mother's manners are pass and father's are, lost as horrid. theirs are just as hard. Do they? Mary comments on them in a manner Old folks don't know how to eat. And their meals are obsolete. Old folks don't know how to dress, and Mary is explaining What to wear and how to act when they are entertaining. Dad must throw his pipe away and wear his coat at dinner; Ma must buy a poodle dog if she would be a winner. They must learn the icy stare And shake hands up in the air. But this course of training is at most but temporary. Fate is going to play a neat and nifty joke on Mary. When she marries—and she will, for sure, some day or other She will be old-fashioned like her father and her mother. Can't be all-fired polite When you're married. Ain't it right? THE CHEERLEADER What is your leader's job? Our Daily Quiz Q.—What is a cheer leader? A. A large and powerful voice, re-enforced by extremely active arms and legs. Q. —Why is a cheer-leader? A—To enable the four thousand last football machine to work efficiently. Q—What are the essential qualities of a good cheer-leader? A.-Strong lungs, stronger nerve, powers of endurance, popularity, and elation. Q—Where are most of our cheerleaders recruited? Why? A—From among the laws, because they are long on yelling. Q—Why did we elect an engineer this year? A. —Just for a change of variety, as it were, so to speak. Q. —What does a cheer-leader get out of his office? A—Nothing but a lot of work, a little fleeting fame, and a little red love. Q. —Then why does anybody want to be cheer-leader? Trend of Colleges for Women A. —Maybe the new man knows "What can you do?" pertinently and persistently asked Dr. Scott Nearing in an address given before the graduating class of a prominent woman's college. "What can you do?" This is the interrogation of the Age. And every woman's college is now being forced by the young women who come within its walls for enlightenment to answer this most vital question: "What do you prepare us to do?" Charles Erwin Reitzel in Harper's. (The Kansas recently printed parts of an article in the Nation condemning vocationalism in the schools. The matter is treated from the other side in the following.) Society in general, and the college woman in paticular, have found that women are real human beings and as such are capable of doing real human work. Therefore when the freshman she does not seek the course that will fit her solely for idle leisure and "cultured" pink-tie conversation. She has a purpose in view, a heart-deep desire to attain and accomplish something while in life, and a need for affairs. The modern college woman feels growing within her the spirit of an innate individual power that demands expression. She knows full well that women are capable of achievement and refuses power to women who do idle or idle parental existence. She has been convinced that it is possible for her to apply her talents to human needs and social betterment. Therefore during the last decade the American colleges for women have been hard pressed to maintain prestige, are being compelled to meet the needs of the progressive woman. When in 1855 the Regents of New York State for the first time gave charter rights to a woman's college whereby it might offer degrees and five courses of study similar to those given to men, the presidents of other colleges throw up their hands in hostilities. The same educational system were being besieged by female insurgents. One college president wrote: "A few dreamers I understand are trying to develop a college for women in the village of Elmira. The idea of giving woman a man's education is too ridiculous to appear credible." While delivering a public address a professor of philosophy in a well known eastern college said: "I am informed that a charter has just been issued in New York State for the forming of a woman's mind, that a foolish effort being made to groom men on the platform before an audience. To my mind this borders on the vulgar." Dr. M. P. Jewett, who in 1861 was organizing for Mt. Vassar the now famous college which bears the latter's name, also received criticisms similar to those quoted. Nevertheless, against colossal odds of ridicule and ostracism, women have made good; they have proven conclusively their right to a college education. Though closely restricted in the past to certain prescribed and narrow fields, they have, without a doubt, given revenge, uniformly demonstrated that they possess the innate power to achieve. Let us see how the colleges have broadened, even with accelerating speed, to meet the growing demands of women. When we compare the prescribed courses of study in that first college with the present day curriculum we are astonished at what three score years practically all lines of work have gradually opened to the worthwhile woman graduate. Here are the courses of study outlined in a woman's college catalog dated 1855: Theology, Philosophy, English, Greek, Latin, Mathematics What a contrast when we read the new catalog of the same institution! We find in addition to the above such courses are: Commercial Law; Interest in Household Building; Accounting and Cost-keeping; Modern Languages; Standards of Living; Food and Cooking; Sewing and Design; Household Economics; Architectural Designing; Biology; Chemistry; Physics; Social Problems; Physical Culture; Music; History; Administration of Income. The trend of this college, in fact the trend of all colleges for women, is toward this broader education. An education in which is demanded a specific preparation for an independent student that will prepare the student to meet the urgent and manifold needs of our present social order. We heard much last year concerning college traditions, and we always hear of college spirit. Let us at least have a few college customs of which we may be proud and not ashamed. Let us at least stand, in greeting the Chancellor when he enters chapel. Our failure is not from the lack of a wish to show the Chancellor the honor which is his due, but from the lack of a general understanding on the subject, and of initiative. On last Friday, a few arose, but finding themselves alone, and naturally not wishing to be conspicuous, sat down again. Let us no longer be guilty of this gross shortcoming; and at the next chapel exercise, as the Chancellor enters, lets US ALL ARISE! Lester F. Ward, the great Sociologist, tells us that two factors, and only two, are necessary for achievement: capacity and opportunity. During the last fifty years women have given conclusive proof of their capacity. However, during this period our college women have prepared the education that prepares for meeting opportunity when opportunity presents itself. Only recently, very recently, have the bars of restriction been broken. Campus Opinion LET'S STAND UP Editor Daily Kansan: MORGAN'S MEALS and SHORT ORDERS Sunday Dinners a Speciality Ice Cream Cones a Speciality SPECIAL MEAL TICKETS 1345 M. St. BELL 262 Watkins National Bank Capital $100,000 Surplus & profits $100.00 The Student Depository L. E. Palmer's Fragrant Perfumes Lasting and Pleasing McCulloch's Drug Store. A Study for Cubs WHAT DID YOU DO WITH THAT MONEY? HOW TO BEARD THE BOODLER IN HIS DEN YOU ARE THE SOCIETY EDITOR! HOW TO BLAME MOST EVERYTHING ON SOMEONE WHO ISN'T AROUND GO OVER AND DO THE SHUTTLE, AND THEN INTERVIEW TARRIVING PRESENTER OUT A COLUMN OF BRAIN ON THIS MEADOW BUTT INTO ITS THAT WEIGHTING AND NIVEA CURSE TO THE MANUET-AND HURRY FOR DRESS IN TEN MINUTES HOW TO BE A GENTLEMAN ALTHOUGH A SPIRITING EDITOR. HOW TO DO FIVE THINGS AT ORCE HOW TO GIVE THE TARRIVING FELLOW A BUT YOURSELF A BOO BOUT HOW TO DODGE A JRIBER (OR A TOUCH) HOW TO GET A CIGAR WHAT DID YOU DO WHAT FOR MONEY! HOW TO BEAR THE BOOLEDEN IN H I WHAT CAN YOU DO WITH THAT MONEY! WHERE'S THE GUY THAT WRITT THAT PIECE ABOUT ME! HE JUST WENT OUT! HOW TO STEALD THE BOODLERS IN HIS TANK! HOME ARE YOU THE NEW EDITOR? HOW TO BLAKE MOST EVERYTHING ON DOLLAR MUSEUM GO OVERS AND DO THE SNUFF, AND TREM WITH VIEW THAT TRIVIWING. PRESIDENT GET A COLUMN OF BREAD ON THAT WEEDING BUTTON TO THAT MEETING AND THINE CHEESE TO JANUET-AND HURRY BRACK HEAD PRESS IN TEN MINUTES. NOSS/RA HOW TO DRAW A THREE COIN ON THE MORNING AFTER HOW TO BE A GENTLEMAN ALTough A SPORTING EDITOR. HOW TO DO FIVE THINGS AT ONCE. A WUSUNDI GIVE THIS TO THE OTHER TELLURES BUT LIKE A ROAD OUT. HOW TO DOSE A JR. BE (MR. A TOUCH) HOW TO GET A CIGar Lectures Sent Out "Lectures Delivered at the Merchants' Week," is the title of a bulletin that is being sent out to all the merchants of the state by the extension office of the university. A bulletin contains the entire speeches of each of the men on the program. Universities Vary Coaching A man being attacked by a hand. Lord Baltnum Pound Paper Quality the best: 25c McCulloch's Drug Store. Universities of the East have several methods of coaching this year. Harvard is backed by Haughton who has lead their teams to victory for several years past. Princeton will change the policy which she has Want Ads Mail your want ad with 25 cents enclosed to the Daily Kansan—want ads are payable in advance. FOR RENT- Rooms and board for girls, 1145 Indiana. Phone Bell 1512. 11-3* Familiar Campus Views WANTED—Stenographic work by student. Satisfaction guaranteed. 1315 Tenn. St. 9-* At Yale the captain is in charge of the team and all the old football men are welcome to come back and coach. FOR RENT—Eight fine rooms, well lighted and heated, exceptionally well lighted, exceptionally fine fret rooms. J. M. Neville, office in Stubbs' building, across from Court House. Bell 384. WANTED -1 can get you 8 per cent interest on $200 or $300 for 8 months or 1 year with first mortgage. Call Bell 1913. 10-3* Rent a Near. 5 Oliver in perfect condition three months for $4.00. The Oliver Typewriter Company, Kansas City, Mo. e-o WANTED—A student barber at once—Kaw Barber Shop, 910 Mass. St. 7-6 LOST-Brindle bull pup answering to name of Juke. White wuzzle, feet, and tip of tail; ears clipped. Missing since Thursday. Notify Acacia house, 1541 Tenn., and receive reward. 11*3* FOR RENT--One down stairs from room for boys, $10. 115 Park. B-3.8* followed for the past few years. This year she will have old heads to guide. "Snake" Ames and Don Herring will be the leading lights. FOR RENT—One double room, $10 per month; one room, single $5. double $6; one small single $3. Student Union—Adv. LOST—Upon Sept. 17., a silver Z N bar pin. Please return to 1234 Miss. 8-3* LOST—New rain coat during registration. Finder please call Bell 291. 9-3 LOST-One pair of eye glasses. Return to Kansan office. Reward. XTRY! XTRAY! $1.50 up ARROW SHIRTS for every occasion. Color fast -guaranteed satisfactory. "Insist on arrow." Inc. Makers PROFESSIONAL CARDS W. C. M. CONNELL, Physician and Surgeon. Office, 819 Mass. St. Bell 399, Home 9342, Residence, 1346 Tenn. St. Bell 1023, Home 639. J. F. BROCK, Optometrist and Specialist in Scientific Glass Fitting. Office 802 Mass. St. Bell phone 695. HARRY REDING, M. D. Eye, ear, nose and throat. Glasses fitted. Office, F. A. A. Bldg. Phones, Bell 513, Home 512. G. A. HAMMAN, M. D. Eye, ear and throat specialist. Glasses fitted. Satisfaction Guaranteed. Dick Bldg. DR. H. W. HAYNE, Oculist, Lawrence, Kansas. J. W. O'BRYAN, Dentist. Over Wilson's Drug Store. Phone 507. J. R. BECHTEL, M. D., D. O. 833 Massachusetts Street. Both phones, office and residence. G. W. JONES, A. M., M. D., Diseases of the stomach, surgery and gynecology. Suite 1, F. A. A. Bldg., Residence, 1201 Ohio St. Both phones, 35. DR. H. T. JONES, Room 12, F. A. A. Bldg., Residence 1130 Tenn. Phones 211. DR. H. L. CHAMBERS. Office over Squirre's Studio. Both phones. S. T. GILLISPIE, M. D. Office cor- S. T. GILLISPIE, M. D. Office cell Residence 728 ind. Phone 596. Mrs. Emma Brown- Schulz, Dressmaking and Ladies Tailor- ing. 913 lines. St. Next door to Anderson's Bakery. MRS ELSON, Dressmaking and Ladies' Tailoring. Evening gowns a speciality, 1032 Vermont. Phone Bell 2411 West. CLASSIFIED Ladies Tailor. As well as Lowneys Always guaranteed Fresh Proprietors 715 MASSACHUSETTS STREET LIGGETTS BOSTON CHOCOLATES A Good Place to Eat at Anderson's Old Stand Johnson & Tuttle Pro proprietors H W Mason StREET McCulloch's Drug Store. Mrs. M. Brockelsby-Wilson, Klester College of ladies tailoring and dressmaking. Over 909 Mass. St. Bell 2199. Jewelers ED. W. PARSONS. Engraver, Watchmaker and Jeweler. Diamonds and Jewelry. Bell Phone 717. 717 dass. Plumbers PHONE KENNEDY PLUMBING CO., for gas goods and Mazda lamps. 937 Mass. Phones 658. Hair Dressers HAIRDRESSING, shampooing, scalp and facial massage, shampooing, hair goods, "Marinello" toilet preparations. For appointments call Bell 1372. Dress Home 51. The Select Hair Dressing Shop, 927 Mass. St. Barber Shops Go where they all go J. C. HOUCK 913 Mass. GO WHERE you get the Best. Bob Stewart's Barber Shop, 838 Mass. St., Cafes For a good clean place to eat, where you don't get "ryped" go to the MARKET CAFE, Room 1, Perkins Building. Millinery WANTED - Ladies to call at Mrs. McCormick's up-to-date, millinery parlors to inspect our new line of hats. 831 Mass St. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN KAW VALLEY ICE CREAM CO. 470 Either Phone 10 W. 9th We specialize on clubs and fraternity orders. Let us handle that next order. ICE CREAM AND OYSTERS THE FLOWER SHOP Cut Flowers of the Worth While Quality 825 1-2 Massachusetts St. Phone 621 The University of Kansas Offers over 200 courses BY MAIL through its Correspondence Study Department. Credit given for all college work. Address University Extension Division The University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas. DANCE Why Perspire and be uncomfortable "NITH" NON-PERSPIRE is guaranteed to stop perspiring beneath the arms. HARMLESS — TWO ODORS; VIOLET AND ROSE PRICE 50c F. B. McCOLLOCH Druggist THE REXALLSTORE 847 Mass. St. On the Corner K. U. Barber Shop and Bath Rooms The Only Electric Mac 272, Massachusetts Street 727, Massachusetts Street Ground and Exchanged. W. F. Weise, Prop Student Union Barber Shop F. M. TIDROW, Prop. Everything up to Now All Standard Tonics 1200 Tenn. SANITARY CAFE Student Headquarters SANITARY CAFE A Nice Clean Place to Eat LUNCHES - SHORT ORDER Across from Kress Store 916 Mass. COLLEGE INN BARBER Schulz makes Clothes Burt Wadhams The Remember That C. W. Steeper Cleaning, Pressing and Remodeling Club For up-to-date men and women 10 years K, K, K results in satisfaction Guaranteed ArH F, Hort and Karl J. Wilhelmhaus, Arts K 913 Mass. St. Lawrence, Kas. Shorthand and Typewriting Bookkeeping and Banking Penmanship and Spelling In fact, a complete commercial training can be had at Lawrence Business College The Acacia fraternity has pledged Howard S. Barnard, a sophomore in the College. Nebraska Uses Kansan Mr. A.R. Powell, chemical engineer,'14 is now on the staff of chemistry in the University of Nebraska Eight hundred students have enrolled at DePauw University this year, about the same number as last year. GUARANTEE If the heating element in this Heppont Electric iron power deflector will volc circuit before (five years from constitution) mail element to nearest office, and we dishray mail question* part to you. FREE. Pacific Pacific Heating Co Franklin Press, Secv. E.H. Richardson, Secv. Lawrence Railway & Light Co. [ ] TALK, READ AND THINK WAR East is War Crazy While West is Mildly Interested, Says Professor Whidaker War, victory and advance, retreat and defeat—these are about the only words one hears on the streets of eastern cities, according to Prof. A. W. Whitaker of the department of militarry who was in the East this fall. Professor Whitaker was somewhat surprised when he returned at the lake-warm attitude of the western people. "We people in Kansas know there is a war going on in Europe," said the professor "but we are not very deeply interested. In the East large extras are coming out every few minutes and the people on the streets are all reading as they walk "We might show a little more interest, but I am glad that we have not gone war crazy as the Eastern people." Plays the Bowersock Theatre Offers A list of attractions at the Bowersock Theatre for the year appears below. Addition and alterations will be added as the season progresses. This list will be run in the Daily Kansan for two issues that the students Oct. 3—Climax Oct. 10—Wizard of Wiseland Oct. 24—Peck's Bad Boy Oct. 26-27—Annette Kellerman Epilogue Oct. 18—Seven Keys to Baldpate Nov. 4—Both St. Denis Nov. 6—Icechuck & Perlmutter Nov. 9—Hanky Panky Nov. 18—Oh Oh Delphine Nov. 30—Call of the Cumberlands Dec. 1—Howe's pictures Dec. 10—Today Dec. 19—Spendthrift Jan. 5—45 Minutes From Broad way Jan. 9—When Dreams Come True Jan. 12—Blue Bird Jan. 15—Lady of the Slipper Jan. 22—Bringing Up Father Jan. 25—Pair of Sixes Jan. 29—High Jinks Feb. 12—Nearly Married Feb. 18—Firefly Feb. 24—Howe's Pictures Mch. 2—My Best Girl Apr. 12—New York Grand Opera Company, A nice line of fruits. California Fruit Stand.-Adv. WOMEN WILL PLAY TENNIS Dr. Alice Goetz Would Have All Women of the University Participate in Athletics. Dr. Alice L. Goetz is anxious to have all the women of the upper classes participate in some kind of athletics and invites all women terested to come to the gymnasium this afternoon for a tennis meeting. Nets and racquets will be furnished all the women of the University who wish to play tennis this year. The only requirement is that they furnish tennis balls. The Haskell Indians went on the warpath Saturday afternoon and ambushed Kansas City University, 82 to 0 at Haskell Field. The Redskins ran beautiful interference and tossed several spectacular passes. The K.C. players did not threaten the Haskell goal. meeting. Freshmen and sophomores may get their gymnasium credit playing tennis or by swimming. The College of Emporia turned the football game with the deaf mutes from Olathe into a track meet Saturday, winning in an astonishingly quarterback made 6 touchdowns and kicked fifteen goals. BERT KENNEDY'S REDSKINS WIN BY BIG COUNT Your Drinking Water George W. Adams, of Carlsbad, New Mexico, a student in the law school last year, visited friends on the hill today. Mr. Adams is on his way to Chicago, where he will study law at the University there. RUSSELL STARS IN EMPIORIA'S FIRST GAME Former Grad Here Your Drinking Water When you drink McNish's aerted distilled water, you may be assured of the very best. Phone 198..Adv. This Will Show With Whom You Vote Below is reproduced Article IV of the rules of the Student Council for election of class officers. This will show students with which class they will vote. Election will be held a week from next Friday: Engineering School: All students having credit for 27 hours work, shall vote as sophomores. All students having credit for 70 hours work, shall vote as seniors. All students having credit for 107 hours work shall vote as seniors. College: All students having credit for 20 hours work shall vote as sophomores. All students having credit for 50 hours work shall vote as juniors. All students having2 credit for 80 hours work shall vote as sen- Law: All students having credit for 17 hours work shall wear as sophomores. All students having credit for 44 hours work shall wear as juniors. All students having credit for 73 hours work shall wear as seniors. 14 hours work shall vote as seni- Pharmacy: All students having credit for 26 hours work shall vote as sophomores. All students having credit for 62 hours work shall vote as juniors. All students having credit for 98 hours work shall vote as seniors. In the two year course each student shall be given 72 hours additional credit after his first year in the Pharmacy School. PROTECT In the three year course each student shall be given 36 hours credit after his first year in the School of Pharmacy. This shall not hold if the student enters the Pharmacy School with 17 or more hours credit. with 12 or older Medics. All first year medies shall vote as juniors. All students completing 26 hours work in the School of Medics shall vote as seniors. Note: This shall not conflict in any way with students holding degrees from K. U, or other colleges. Fine Arts. All students having credit for 16 hours work shall vote as sophomores. All students having credit for 40 hours shall vote as juniors. All students having credit for 64 hours work shall vote as seniors. Graduate Students:. All students holding a degree from K. U. or any four college shall vote as seniors. Students entering K. U. from other schools shall vote in the class in which their credit hours place them. Special Students: All special students shall carry 10 hours work before being classed as freshmen. Special students having work shall be classified within the school in which they are the major portion of the student. If a student changes schools, the difference in the number of hours required between the two schools to vote as sophomore, shall be multiplied by the number of years enrolled and added to, or subtracted from his credit hours. All students not having enough credit hours to vote as sophomores shall vote as freshmen. THOUSAND MEMBERS WANTED Fresh salted peanuts, best quality. California Fruit Stand.-Adv. Y. M. C. A. Committee to Visit Every Student in Effort to Enroll Banner Membership "One Thousand Members," is the slogan of the University Y. M. C. A, beginning this week. Within the next few days, every student in the University will be given an opportunity to take out a membership in the University association. The cost of a membership ticket is optional, but it is not customary to pay less than a dollar for the privileges enjoyed. Committeemen of the Y. M. met last night to arrange for a systematic canvassing of the student body. The European war deprived two professors in the chemistry department of a trip this fall. Prof. W. A. Whitaker and Prof. F. B. Dains had made arrangements to attend the meeting of the American Chemistry Society which was to have been held in Monterey, the last of this month. The meeting was indefinitely opposed because of the number of German-American chemists who would be unwilling to enter English governed country. War is Upon Us!! Grad Back on Hill Miss Olive Sherrad, '12, was a visitor at the University Wednesday. Miss Sherrad is in the drug business in Kansas City. MONDAY TUESDAY AURORA DANIEL FROHMAN Presents the Powerful Domestic Drama AFTERMATH With VIRGINIA PARSONS and OWEN MOORE Complete in Four Parts. :-- First Show 7:25—Second Show 8:30 Coming Friday, "One Wonderful Night" FEATURING FRANCIS X. BUSHMAN FOR TAXICAB Call Either PHONE 100 PEERLESS GARAGE C LARK LEANS LOTHES Phone 355 PUNCH TICKET $1.50 TEN PRESSES CLARK CLEANS LOTHES All Pressing Done by Hand ] CLARK CLEANS LOTHES 730 Mass St. We Want Your Kodak Work We do developing and finishing. We carry all sorts of Kodak supplies. Raymond's Drug Store 819 Massachusetts St. CLARK CLEANS LOTHES Francisco & Co. Livery, Hacks and Garage 812 VERMONT STREET Phone 139 CORONA with you with. Instructors Student! Here is a tip for using the computer: The Corpse has the full width universal key board, back spacer, find out on the bip machines, found on the bip machines, found on the bip machines, much as the bulky office typemakers. If you can find these ware and write for the illustrated booklet. Go to the HOME BAKERY We Good Food to Eat SHUBERT Matinee Wed. & Sat. Morrison & Bliesner Phones 164. 701 Mass. St. R. E. Protsch The Bird of Paradise THE DRAMATIC VALUE OF THE PRICES -25C TO $1.50. WED. Tue. $1 Next. Sam Berman in "The Bell of Bond HOME BAKERY The Students' Tailor For Good Things to Eat C. M. Williamson 933 Mass. St. Palmer's Garden Glow Perfumes $2.00 Per Ounce Say But Its Nice PRINTING McCulloch's Drug Store. 2019年高考语文模拟试题 A. G. ALRICH Binding, Copper Plate Printing, Rubber Stamps, Engraving, Steel Die Embossing, Seals, Badges 744 MASS. STREET $30 TO California Oregon Washington AND British Columbia Low Fares to Other Points On Sale Sept. 24 to Oct.8,1914 Very liberal stop-over privileges. Tickets good in all restraining charts on campus and are valid to all California common pots. Rock ballast tickets, insurance safety. Fired. Santa Fe W. W. Burnett AGENT Lawrence, Kans. Lowney's Chocolates --- McCulloch's Drug Store. VARSITY Today D. W. Griffith's Masterpiece, Featuring Blanch Sweet and Twenty-five Biograph Stars in John Howard Payne's Immortal Song, Complete in Six Reels; a Perfect Picture- "HOME SWEET HOME" Only The Best Photoplay Ever Shown in Lawrence. Special Piano and Pipe Organ Accompaniment. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN ↓ LADIES' MANNISH TAILORED BALMACAAN COATS They've a certain swagger that's not found in ordinary ladies' coats. Exclusive patterns, fine all wool fabrics, mist, sleet and snow proof. See them in our window. PRICES $12.50 to $20 Ober's HEAD TO FOOT OUTFITTERS College Inn Barber Shop Hours Friday 7:30 a. m. to 8:00 p. m. Saturday 7:30 a. m. to 9:30 p. m. Other Days 7:30 a. m. to 7:00 p. m. Closed for all Football Games Frank Koch "The Tailor" Full Line of Fall Suitings Merchants National Bank 'Twas Ever Thus Complete line of Tobacco, Cigars, Pipes ALSO MANUFACTURES OF Pierson's Success, Hand Made, Robert Hudson Cigars Aug. J. Pierson 902 Mass, WHEN DOWN TOWN Hiawatha Cafe LUNCH AND MEALS FOR I WILL Capture THIS MONSTER JAYHAWK AND SCATTER THIS BONES TO THE — WASHBURN WHAT DID YOU SAY, LITTLE ONE? JAYHAWK MALLOY WASHBURN ICHABODS CRYING, "BEAT K. U." Congregationalists Working Hard to Win From Jayhawkers November 7 "Beat K. U.," is the old war cry of the Washburn Ichbods which, is again resounding in Topeka. The Congregationalists turned the trick in 1912 but failed last year. This fall, Coach Cray has a face, fax, with many men, men and seven new men of high school fame in his trenches. The Kansas-Washburn game promises to be an interesting engagement. The Kansas line looks stronger than Washburn's but the Ichabods have a whirwind backfield and a brilliant quarterback. Washburn dopsters say they will win but it is too early to nauseep these fine days and may hop out of the bushes and surprise the descendants of Ichabod Washburn. OREADERS WILL DECIDE DEFINITELY ON GOLF C. OF E. TO PLAY VARSITY The Oread Golf Club will meet tomorrow night for the annual election of officers and to decide definitely who will be maintained this fall and winter. Early Poindexter, a member of the freshman football squad, sprained his ankle playing tennis Saturday. Coffee and sandwiches. California Fruit Stand- Adv. Football Man Hurt Presbyterian Will Fill the Open Jayhawker Date, October 10, on McCook Field The College of Emporia, last year's Kansas conference champions, will play the Varsity football team on McCook Field Saturday, October 10. Manager W. O. Hamilton received a cap from Coach Granger today. The Presbyterians refused to sign with the Jayhawkers last week but after inflicting a 105 to 0 defeat on the Olathe deaf mates Saturday, Emporia reconsidered and came to terms. The Presbyterians have a fast backfield with a medium weight line. They won every game in the Kansas conference last year but were defeated decisively by the Haskell Indians and Colorado College at Colorado Springs. CORNHUSKER REGULARS DEFEAT YTROS, 38 TO 7 BEEF NEEDED BADLY IN MISSOURI LINE Nebraska's season does not start until next week, but Coach Steimlin lined his regulars against the freshmen Saturday and walloped the tyros, 89 to 7. The Work of Herod, in hardwood and Heikur, the old students who did much to humble the Jayhawk last year, was the feature of the game. The forward pass was used for the first time this season at the University of Michigan in a game between the first and second teams. The first team scored 21 points on the second. Forward Pass at Michigan But Tiger Coaches Have Hundred Men Out for Practice Daily Good home made pies. California Fruit Stand...Adv. with the largest football squad in years out for early-practice on Rolls Field, Coaches C. E. Brewer and H. F. Schultze are laboring to build a line for the Tiger gridiron machine this fall. Losses in veteran material have been heavy and leave the Missouri University coaches scrambling for their defense of Tiger pizzak. Captain "Lie" Clay at guard and "Jake" Speelman at end are the pivots about which Missouri hopes are being made. At the first practice almost a hundred men reported for work. Most of the material has had minor experience in back-field work, which is already cared for by veteran Tiger's team. The defense, the ark, the Kansas City city, is back in school. Clinton Collins, who served in several games at quarterback, is leading the race for the job this year. Shirley Lake, who has done much time in high school and at Mistlethorn athletic facilities, nalfuck and quarter, is adding strength to the appearance of the backfield. Linemen Are Needed But the great weakness Missouri coaches are facing is the lack of experienced linemen. Line material is very mediocre just now and somewhat scarce, too. Schulthe had devised a scheme of his own to develop and toughen his line material. Upright posts, heavily padded with mats, are placed far enough apart to give two men room enough to face each other without contact. In the small space, it takes lots of fight to keep an opponent from getting through and more fight on the other side. And Schulthe watches the work and a man is told when he is making a failure of his tryouts. Schulte has another little hobby he is pleased to work on just now—the work of developing a center. Zimmerman has not returned to school and big "Mike" Gallagher is graduated. It is up to "Indian" Schulte to find a good man for that difficult job. He has been working in person with several candidates lately, but still is looking for the logical man. Meanwhile Brewer is in charge of me, so we are meeting out for backfield positions. Brewer will develop the backfield for the present and Schulte will take care of the line, until the coaches are ready to put the parts of their machine together for the first tryout. Brewer has had his men practice at kicking, passing and running with the ball all this week. The Material is Light The great old trouble with Tiger teams for years past, the light weight of the candidates on places on the team, shows its evidence more than ever this year. The average weight of the candidates out on Rollins Field now is lighter by almost five pounds. The coaching staff is hunting all through the school to find heavier material. Among the new men brought out is Jimmie Kemper, brother of the Kansas City lad, Croshy Kemper, who has held his position so capably in HARD WORK AND NO PLAY FOR JAYHAWKERS Wheaton Starts Scrimmage Work and Team Rests for Strenuous Week The Jayhawk had its first taste of real football Friday afternoon when Coach Wheaton divided his squad into two teams and sent them into a hard scrimmage. The teams bucked up and down the field, running and tackling until after 6 o'clock. The coach announced a vacation Saturday and advised his men to go out to Haskell and see "the track meet," referring to the Indians' game with Kansas City University. It is all work and no play hereafter with the Kansas squad. The first name is but five days away and the hybawkers will need some stiff work a get into condition for the game. Will players play aggressive football and probably willive Wheaton's defense a severe test Saturday. NOTRE DAME END TO TOPEKA Eastern Football Star to Coach Washburn Line This Year—Will Assist Gray An indication that the Notre Dame style of play will be used by Coach Gray's proteges at Washburn was given recently when Paul Newwers appeared on the field to take charge of the line men. Newwers won his letter at Notre Dame last fall, being chosen also as all-state end. He is a Topeka man and will assist Coach Gray through-out the season. Ray Wolfe, the husky guard, is not expected to be in the game for several weeks on account of a badly twisted knee received Tuesday afternoon in a practice scrimmage. Jam Janny, the basketball guard on last year's team is being worked out at guard. SEVEN THOUSAND SEE SOONERS BEAT NORMALS Bennie Owen's Sooners opened the season in Oklahoma Saturday by defeating Central State Normal, 68 to 0. Only two of last year's regulars, Jake Anderson and Tashkak, appeared in the line-up. Thousand people saw the game. ICHABODS PRACTICE WITH FRESHMEN Washburn played a practice game with the freshmen at Topeka, Saturday and pierced the recruits' rate. Richahabs are badly crippled according to correspondence, but they presented a formidable line-up Saturday. the line in the last year. Jimmie is somewhat tall, but has considerable weight with it and his brother's reputation to help him along. His brother was graduated from Missouri University last year, after two years of service on the gridron. Weight and beef is what the Missourians need. It is noticeably lacking on Rollins Field. Try our hot lunch, chili a specialty. California Fruit Stand..Adv. FOOTBALL Opening Game---Wm. Jewell vs. K. U. McCook Field, 3:15 o'Clock, Saturday, Oct. 3 Student Ticket Coupon No.1 admits.Tickets 50c. Reserved seats 75c. Parade starts South Park at 2:30 you are invited to join the parade-seats reserved for those taking part. Special section for University girls. Get a Season Athletic Ticket Now, on Sale at Registrar's Office. Forty Attractions $5. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN VOLUME XII. FATE HANGS OVER POLITICIANS' HEADS Friday Will See Overwhelming Victories and Ignomious Defeats Galore NUMBER 12. ALL TICKETS IN THIS NOON UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS TUESDAY AFTERNOON, SEPTEMBER 29, 1914. Vic Bottomly, President of Studen Council, Has All Parties Ready for Ballots The following petitions had been turned into Vic Bottomly at noon Names of all candidates for class officers have been filed with the Student Council. The ruling of that organization was that the names of ambitious students had to be in its hands not later than noon today. Senior Class: President, Don Joseph, Butch Stuewe, and Clarence Edgar Williams; vice president, Orn Patter and Chas. Holmes; treasurer, Lefty Sproull and Buster Coolidge; secretary of the club; Junior play manager, Duke Kennedy. Junior Class: President, Dick Burton; vice president, Frank Chimery; secretary, Blanche Mullin; treasurer, Smith; prom manager, Mul-Toylw. Sophomore Class: President, Lawrence Miller and Adrian Linsley; vice president, Jack Bond and Arch Walters; treasurer, Fred Rodkowski and Hooker; president, Mike Hinton and Bess Ulrich; hop manager, Geo. Yeokum and John Moore. Freshman Class: President, Frank Fierbian, Alden Tornell, Randell Burroughs, Jas Barclay; vice president, Kerry Sanders; land, Pat McCall, and Bruce Baker; secretary, Alice Davis, Gladys Adams, Grace Windsor, and Betty Waldo; treasurer, William Roester, Nate Haug, Ray Rockwell, and David Davis. The following ticket is the first prior ticket you nominated from class last President, Willard Burton; vice-president, Howard Adams; secretary, Stella Simmons; treasurer, Ira Elsner; president, Ryan Davis and Alexander Creighton. Petitions for each of the above candidate have been submitted to Student Council but through a miss were not included in the above list. Shaler Sends a Message Home BRUSSELS PEACEFUL REPORT TO K. U. MINER War Millard Shaler, a mining engineer is in Brussels, Belgium, where he is employed by the Guggenheim Mining Syndicate. In a letter to his father, C. C. Shaler of Lawrence, he says that conditions at the autocities in Belgium are greatly exaggerated and that conditions in Brussels are nearly the same as in time of peace. Most of the shops are open and the people are attending to the regular routine of their business, service, however that most continue and letters have to be sent to London and mailed from there. Far Less Than Usual Number on Hill This Year Due to Europe's There is to be a graduate famine at the University of Kansas in 1915. No, no, senior, don't get excited, it's a glass graduate famine and it's worrying Professors Cady, Dains and company to no small degree. Some time ago the department of chemistry gave an order for a shipment of graduate tubes, the price to be $18 on the shipment. Just before departure, it was to be killed in the department was notified that the price must be $175. The European war is assigned as the reason, for practically all etching and marking on the graduates is done by skilled European ambassadors. But when we continue, till it will be impossible to get any chemical equipment at all. Prof. E. H. S. Bailey, who was severely injured this summer while stepping off a street car, is expected to return to Lawrence the first week in October. He has partly recovered from his injuries and is able to meet his classes after Christmas. Professor Bailey is now in Detroit. BAILEY WILL RETURN EARLY IN OCTOBER COMMISSION TO SEE PRISON IN MINNESOTA Visit to Stillwater to Complete Tour of State Penitentiaries BLACKMAR IS A DELEGATE Appointee of Governor Hodges Wil Attend National Penal Congress at St. Paul Final inspection of state prisons will be made the latter part of this week, when the prison commission, of the University of Kansas; John R. Mulvane, Topeka; R. W. McClaughley, Leavenworth; W. H. Haskell and J. E. Porter of Kansas City. The officials from Minnesota to visit the state penitentiary. The Minnesota prison is the most modern and best equipped state prison in the United States. The administration under Henry Wolfer, present warden, is responsible for the remarkable success of the institution. Many Prisons Visited The commission will not visit any more prisons after this trip, having already made a thorough inspection of the state prison at Lansing and federal prison at Leavenworth. Some of the members have visited a number of penitentiaries in the United States during the past three years. The state architect, Charles H. Chandler, will go with the commission. After the visit at Stillwater, the members will attend the National Prison Congress at St. Paul. Professor Blackmar has been appointed a delegate to the convention by Governor George H. Hodges. LAWS ARE LESS NUMEROUS Enrollment Shows Decrease of Twenty-Five From Number Taking Work Last Year So far, the enrollment in the School of Laws shows a decrease of twenty-five students, as compared with that of last year. Last year 184 were enrolled, whereas only 159 have entered this fall. Uncle Jimmy Green, Dean of the School of Laws, said that the students are entering the courses each day and that there is a possibility of the present number being swelled to more than last year's number. This semester there are fifty seniors, fifty-one middle, thirty-one seniors and twenty-seven un- seniors. In addition, forty-sixteen-five junior, thirty-eight middle, and thirteen unless and specials. "Three of our students have been lost already on account of the war," Dean Green said this morning. "Two students are missing on account of conditions at home." The first regular meeting of the K. U. branch of the American Institute of Electrical Engineers will be held Wednesday evening, September 30, in the Marvin Hall auditorium. This will be a "get-together" meeting and all Electricals are urged to be present. Professor Sahad will talk on the A.I.E.E. Refreshments will be served. Electricals Will Meet MEDIC BUILDING PLANS ARE NOW UNDER WAY Legislature Must Pass on Disposal of Robinson Estate Before Work Starts HOSPITAL TO REMAIN AT K. C. Medies Will Still Spend Last Two Years at Rosedale Branch of School Architects are preparing plans for the new Medic Building at the University of Kansas. While this is so, it does not insure a new building at once, as the next state legislature must pass on the disclosure of the esse consortia, and so on, which will eventually go toward the erection of the new building. Governor Robinson, the first governor of Kansas, was a physician. When he died, his estate passed to his wife, with the understanding that upon her death, it was to go to the University of Kansas for the oceeneer and during the School of Medicine. Mrs. Robinson died last year and the estate must be disposed of before the University will benefit from it. Administrators Disagree The opinions of the people in charge vary, some desiring to sell the property outright, devoting the proceeds to the new building, who would borrow money from borrow money on the property and put up the building on borrowed capital. The estate has an income of between $7,000 and $10,000 a year and this would pay off the interest on the loan as well as pay off the debt on the loan in twenty years. In case the state legislature decides the matter in its next session as it is expected to do, and work starts on the new building at once, a long felt want will be filled, according to the faculty of the School of Medicine. The Rosedale branch will be continued after the new building is completed and the last two years of the building will be written off on there as it has been in the past. CROSS COUNTRY MEN START WORK OF SEASON A squad of twenty cross-country athletes took their initial work-out yesterday afternoon under the direction of Captain Edwards. Because it was the first work of the season only a short distance was run. Captain Edwards announced this morning that from now on there would be a squad out every afternoon, leaving the gymnasium either at 3:30 or 4:30. The men will be led by Rodkey and Hilton the two Kmen appointed captains by Manager Hamilton last week. K. U. Grad Safe in Boston Lawrence friends of Miss Edith Bideau received word from Boston that she has arrived in America after many futile attempts to get out of prison. She has been studying voice in Florence, Italy, under Madame Barrachia. "I must mix myself with action lest I wither by despair." — Tennyson, Lockaleen Hall Washburn Dean to Chicago W. R. Arthur, dean of the Washburn law school, will give a course of lectures to the students of the John Marshall law school of Chicago this winter. Washburn Dean to Chicago OOF! malop_ The Forty-member-One-Paper Club --- Faculty to Exercise Faculty to Exercise A meeting of all men of the faculty will be held at the gymnasium next Monday night at 7:30 for the purpose of organizing a class in gymnasium work for faculty men. Faculty Women at Gym. Thirty people were present last night at the first meeting of the new faculty and they were the faculty and the wives of instructors. Miss Adams has charge of the class. Give me the sporting page Whose's paper is that, anyway? What's the Chancellor just to say about it? KANSAN Collins GIVES REASONS FOR STUDY OF SCRIPTURES "For Sake of Education, Morals, Mind, Spirit and Ideas" —Goodman DINGMAN'S MINE MAY HAVE TO CLOSE WAR Fifth, for the sake of his ideals, since Jesus announced a revolutionary ideal of life which is wholly contrary to the natural bent of unaided human nature—the supremacy and final victory of selfishness. Fred S. Goodman, chairman of Bible study work in the W. M. C. A. of the United States, has outlined the reasons why a student should study the Bible. The churches of Lawrence and the University of Colorado have also listing his reasons in the Bible study campaign now in progress on the Hill. Fourth, for the sake of his spirit life, since there is no literature which so fully satisfies soul hunger as the records of the experiences of great men with God, which are found in the Scriptures. First, for the sake of his education, since the Bible is universally recognized as the greatest religious classic in all literature. See Supplies Carried on Mules The European war is affecting K. U. graduates all over the world. Oscar Dingman, last year's president of the graduate mining engineer, writes from Honduras that the mine in which he is employed may have to shut down because the war has deprived trade conditions in Central America. Dingman is 180 miles back in the interior and makes the trip on a burro. He remarks that "it is rather slow going." All the supplies for the mine are carried in on mule trains and this accounts a great deal for the high cost of mining in Central America, Dingman says. Mr. Ellis B. Noyes, '74, has given his library of Civil Engineering books to the engineering library of the University. A number of new Electrical Engineering books from Electrical Engineering have also been added to the library this year. Engineers Get Books Theta Tau to Meet Theta Tau, honorary engineering fraternity, will have initiation at the Kappa Sigma house Thursday, October 8, for the pledges: Smee, C. H. Harding, Bill Brown, and Clyde Vanderlip. The Philosophy club will meet in Administration Building tonight at 7:30 for the purpose of organizing. LAWRENCE WATER BAD; M.D.'S WILL VACCINATE Dr John Sundwall Advises Students to Take Precautions Against Typhoid The University School of Medicine will soon be prepared to vaccinate all students who desire to have the serum administered against typhoid fever. Dr. John Sundwall called attention to the condition of the larvae and stressed that advised all students to take the precaution of vaccination. "The value of vaccination as a preventative measure is known to practically everyone." said Doctor Sund wall this morning. "The United States army is a fine demonstration of the success that has attended the war on machine-borne typhoid fever killed more men than all other things combined. In contrast to that, is the fact that during the last two years while the troops have been maneuvering around the Mexican boundaries, only one case of typhoid has developed. Vaccination of the soldiers is given as the reason for such sort of reports come from all countries of the world where vaccination has been tried." Over two hundred students were vaccinated last year and none of them were inconvenienced to the extent that they had to miss classes. The treatment this year will be similar to that of last and will be given in three doses. The first dose contains 500 million typhoid bacilli while the second and third doses each contain 1000 million bacilli. An announcement will be made soon as to the time and place when students may receive the vaccination. The vaccine will be furnished by the state board of health and the first treatment will be given in the office of Dr. John Sundwall in the basement of the Museum, Friday afternoon from four to five. The treatment acts as a preventative for three years. A preliminary meeting for the organization of the University of Kansas branch of the American Society of Mechanical Engineers will be held in the auditorium of Marvin Hall at 4:30, Thursday, October 1. Mechanics to Organize Prof. H. A. Rice, who is making an investigation of road laws in several of the middle-west states, is exerting pressure University by the middle of the week. Nu Sigma Nu. honorary medical fraternity, announces the pledging of Elmer L. Whitney, Cecil M. Burhrel R. Johnson and Walter S. Priest. Admit Women to Medical School For the first time the University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine will admit women to its classes. Owing to the war, there is a decrease in foreign students. Two Pennsylvania professors are serving in the war. WILL PUT KANSAS ON THE MAP IN POETRY University Poet-Instructor to Publish Volume of Verse Strictly Kansan INTERESTS EASTERN AUTHORS K. U. Graduate's Compilation Will be Out Nov. 1—Harry Kemp Writes Feature Poem To put Kansas on the map in poetry, "Sunflowers—A Book of Kansas Poems," will be issued November 1 by Willard Wattles, a graduate, now instructor in rhetoric at the University. Kansas, a Moulder of Thought For the past three years Wattles has been collecting the best lyrical poems written by Kansans about war in the Civil War in a single volume and do for Kansas in verse what John Burroughs has done for New York, James Whitechomb Riley for Indiana, Sidney Lanier for Massachusetts, and New England poets for New England. "The poems, collected from many authors, all interpret the significance of Kansas as a moulder of thought and leader of opinion, picturing the prairies and sweeping horizons that have developed men's spiritual natures in a peculiar way," says Watson. "The poem is a state of mind and laughed at for her eccentricities; but Eugen Ware was right when he said that Virginia, Massachusetts and Kansas "Will live in song and oratory While all the others, with their idle claims. Will only be remembered as mere names!" Kemp's "Kansas" is Feature Has Sunflower Cover Design The volume, which will be published by the Journal-World Company, will be illustrated by Ivan Shuler, a graduate of Fairmount and Harvard. The book spent three years in eastern art institutes and now has a painting in one of the best Belgium art museums. The margins and illustrations will reproduce typical Kansas scenes and wild flowers. The book will contain about 200 pages, with a cover design of a sunflower stamped in gold on green silk cloth. Kemp's "Kansas" is feature The feature poem of the volume which was written by Kemp's Kansas, which was written specifically the book when Kemp was lived in Helmetta, N. J. Esther Clark's "The Call of Kansas," with special illustrations, Walt Mason's "I's Morning Here in Kansas," and "Each in His Tongue," by William Herbert Carruth, are also given special prominence. Other poems by living authors will be contributed by Albert Bigelow Paine, William Allen Allen, Kate Stephen, William C. Gale of the New York Evening Mail, Nicholas Lindsay and C. M. Harger, Ellen Allerton, Eugene F. Ware, Richard Realf, SdI Miller and other early poets will also be represented. Eastern Friends Interested Of Wattles' eastern friends who are taking an active interest in the publication of the book may be men, women, or both. Bynner, Rose O'Nell, Ray Stannard Baker and the Springfield Republican. During the past three years Wattles has had many poems in the Smart Set, Harper's Weekly, Independent, the Christian Register, Springfield Republican and the Literary Digest. EXTENSION DIVISION NEEDS YOUR DISCARDED MAGAZINES Copies of the Outlook, Independent, Current Opinion, Review of Reviews, Survey, and the World's Work are needed by the extension division of The Wall Street Journal upon its package library system. Five thousand package libraries have been sent out during the past year and to handle this work, it is necessary to have many numbers of the standard magazines. The extension division of The Wall Street Journal who can give any copies of these magazines notify it by telephone. Botany Club to Meet The Botany Club will have its first meeting Wednesday at 4:30 o'clock in the lecture room of Snow Hall. Election of officers and a discussion of plans for the year will be held. Circulation Man is III Ross E. Busebank, a junior in the College and circulation manager of the Daily Kansan, is confined to his home in Lynden with an attack of pneumonia. NIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Official student paper of the University EDITORIAL STA JOHN GLEISNER Editor-in-Chief MARK MAYER Manager of Media CALVIN LAMBERT Sport Editor BUSINESS STAFF REPORTORIAL STAFF J. W. DYCK Business Manager C. J. SMITH Corporate Marketing S. SUPERSTEIN Advertising Manager LEGO HARBER BREAKER HARBER HUGHERT HARBER GLACIAT GLAUTON HELEN HAYER CHARLES SWEET WM. S. CAGY CITRONEL TERRYSON RILEY MILLER SAM AMLINER Entered as second-class mail matter Secretary. Kansas, under the act of March 8. Kansas, under the act of March 8. Subscription price $2.50 per year if adance; one month only. Phone, Bell K. U. 25 Address all communications to UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Lawrence, Kans. Published in the afternoon five times a week, and in the evening three times a day. Ranassa, from the press of the department The Daily Kansas aims to picture the undergraduate student going on to further or merely printing the news in books, holding a press, to play no favorites; to be clean, to be cheerful; to be charming; to be patient; to solve serious problems to user heads; in all, to serve the best in the ability studies of the university. TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 29, 1914 To succeed, the candidate must be a gentleman by nature, and a scholar by education.—Colton, Lacon. CONCERNING POLITICS Politics is—or are—once more rampant on our erastweil peaceful campus. Caucuses, conventions and primaries are as thick as flies, and it would be impossible to heave a brick into a group of students without hitting at least three candidates. The war, the chapel outlook, and even the football situation have been relegated to positions of minor importance, and will not receive due consideration while the fight is on. And how like the little busy bees do the candidates buzz around amongst the shy and elusive voters, the "peepul" of this little state. The hand shaking, the honied smiles, the sweet spirit of friendliness that pervades the air—how truly remarkable they are. Down with booders! Avant the pork barrel? Nix on the nut bar! One particular zealous worker was heard to approach a freshman girl and urge her to use her great influence among the seniors in behalf of his candidate for senior president! He eveh went so far as to hint at future benefits in the way of Hershey nut bars and the like. Horrors! Is our pure and free democracy to be undermined by the insidious wiles of such persons? Heaven forbid. HELP THE MEN YOU ELECTED Leon Harsh, editor-in-chief of the Jayhawker, comes back to Lawrence this week. Throughout the summer Harsh has worked on ideas for the new book. Some of them are original; some are taken from other anuals. While the editor-in-chief has outlined the material to go into the Jayhawker, its business manager, Blair Hackney, has gotten in touch with national advertisers and reports the business end of the book in a flourishing condition. Editor and business manager are doing what the class of 1915 elected them to do—getting out a creditable annual. The class is in a position to help the two men they elected by going down into the basement of Green Hall and paying their six dollar fees. Seniors, help the editor and business manager get out your Jay hawker! BE CHEERFUL. GIRLS Dr. Stanley J. Krebs complains that too many women are cheerful in the parlor and not enough in the kitchen. This is interesting if true. "Cheerfulness," he says, "will do three things; it will drive away the gout, it will make one live long, it will make one good-looking and attractive." Do you get that last? If so, put two and two together and you get this; be cheerful in the kitchen and you will be good-looking in the parlor. Now that is worth while. Most women in the University of Kansas have had more or less experience in the kitchen and judging from appearances, one might say that they must have all been pretty reasonably cheerful. How much more so they might have been if they had realized the importance of it. If any girl doubts the efficacy of cheerfulness in the kitchen as an aid to beauty, she can satisfy herself by making a test at the first opportunity. SYSTEM IN STUDY Nothing is more abhorrent to the average student than a lack of system in his studies. There can be little excuse for an unsystematic course, yet there are many of them in the University. Unless they can understand the assignments, know where they are in the work, and feel that they are accomplishing something, students will not do good work. They cannot keep themselves interested in a course that is continually "balled up," where the instructor never catches up with the assignments, and does not conduct classroom business in a business-like way. THE HONOR SYSTEM The first year students deserve credit for having passed resolutions in support of the honor system. They have accomplished as much as the entire student body did last year, after endless agitation. If 18 really is so very much interested in the honor system the matter should not be allowed to rest with the mere passing of resolutions Some plan-there are several-should be adopted, which will show material results. RHODES SCHOLARSHIP A feeling that the present system leads every so often to a loss of interest in the Rhodes scholarship plan is undoubtedly the dominant force behind the determination of the trustees to make a change in the method of choosing the scholars from this country. Hereafter there will be elections from two-thirds of the old idea of elections from all the states two years out of three will be abandoned. This new plan will insure to Oxford an uninterrupted flow of American students and should put an end to the lethargy that prevails here when ever a so-called lean year is upon us. At best the trustees seem to be having their troubles maintaining a continuous interest in Cecil Rhode's vast enterprise and we offer our advice to normalize it. It was only last year, it will be remembered, that the Oxford regulations were relaxed to the extent of excluding American candidates for scholarships from entrance examinations in Greek—Boston Transcript. EACH CITY A SCHOOL UNIT EACH CITY A SCHOOL UNIT While the great wave of enthusiasm for industrial education is sweeping the country it might be well remembered that the problem is varied and difficult of solution. It is apparent, for one thing, that in the matter of training its boys and girls for the work-a-day life each city and district must set up its own standards and work out its own salvation. Industrial education in San Francisco and in Boston is by no means the same thing. Every community has its special conditions to meet. Fall River, for instance, must give large recognition to the textile interests, and Attleboro must remember that jewelry working is its greatest industry. And so it is that National City city administration of Industrial Education is performing a real service in the survey it is making of the situation in various cities. Richmond, Va., where the society's next meeting will be held, is one of the first to be favored with what may well be called a municipal inventory. —Boston Transcript. THE CATHEDAL AT RHEIMS The Notre Dame cathedral at Rheims was built in 1311. It was one of the finest extant specimens of medieval Gothic architecture. The west tower had two smaller towers and 500 statues; a great doorway crowned by a gallery of statues of French and rose window of colored glass which was world-famous for its beauty. The interior was decorated with beautiful tapestry, sculpture, and paintings, and contained what was supposed to be the oldest clock in existence. It was here that the French kings were crowned. THE CATHEDRAL AT RHEIMS A Pioneer Church By Mrs. Sara T. D. Robinson (The description of a pioneer church, by the wife of the first governor of Kansas, who was the donor of the University of Kansas gymnasium, is especially interesting at this time. The description is that of the Plymouth Church in the Church in Congregationalism. The church will shortly celebrate its sixtieth anniversary. The selection is from a collection made by former Vice-chancellor Carruth.) Kansas Classics We attended crenur, now strangely everything appeared! The hall where the meetings are held is in a two-story wooden building. It is simply boarded with cottonwood, and that, to a person in this country, is explanation sufficient of its whole appearance; for the sun here soon curls the boards, every one shrinking from every other, leaving large cracks between. For a desk to support the gilded, morocco-covered Bible, sent to the Plymouth church, a rough box turned into an end of the hall was used. The singers, with serapire, were seated upon one side of the preacher, while upon the other side, also fronting the desk, were other seats,—rough boards, used until the settees were finished. All this seemed rough and uncut, and at the first moment we felt that two thousand miles lay between us and the pleasant sanctuaries of our fathers, where they tread the aisles of soft carpets, listen to the aisles read from its resting room, reeling organ's decrivious knits. But when we沉浸 in the persuasive, winning tones of the preacher, the same heavenly truths which will render one's life here as holy elsewhere, let us so will it, we felt that New England was in our midst. We realized more fully the truth, which has been pervading our thoughts for many days, that "a man's life consisteth not in the abundance of things which he possesseth." Happiness does not consist in the furnishings of the upholstered, in gray tenets in the grass, in green tents as in palace hall." Most of us have come to this faraway land with a mission in our hearts, a mission to the dark-browned race, and hoping here to stay the surging tide of slavery, to place that barrier which utters in innistakable language, "Thus far shalt thou go, and no farther." This mocks our hearts to each other, and it once we recognize a friend actuated by like sympathies and hopes. Chasing the Glooms She—But we can't dance upon the carpet. I took a kiss the other night, He—But this is a rag carpet, my ear. —Stanford Chaparrel. “Are you going abroad on a fellowship?” My conscience hurt me so, alack, I think I go tomorrow night And put the darned thing back.— Vermont Ye Crabble. "No, on a cattle ship."—Harvard Lampoon. 15—"When you "strike" a moment to "spare." —Vermont Ye Crabbe. '18—When is the best time to go bowling? Light- Do you know why they don't have wounds on the C. VIII and XII? "He fell in love and broke his engagement." —Columbia Jester. Bright -Sure, because they reckleck -Vermont Ye Crable. "How did I know your wife wanted to wear a first?" -Vermont Ye Beans "Young man, how dare you swear before my wife?" "What is Jones limping around for?" Physics Prof.—What makes the earth go around? Dad-I don't know what you mean, my son. Stude—Three bees, four gin fizzes, two highballs, Stanford Chapelleau. He—Why are you so distant? She—Because you are so close. What? Father—What does "con" mean? Son—Continued. Father—Continued? Love makes the world go around, but money lubricates the track. -Exx. Son—Yes. Continued next semester. Wisconsin Sphinx. Six-year-old—Pop, what did Kelley do? Kid-I told some boys that Bill stood on his head and they said "Like Kelly did."—Pennsylvania Punch Bowl. "A frinede is never known until a man have neede." -Phn Heywood, Proverbs $P^{\prime}$, I. CLASS ELECTIONS NORMAN 2 for 25 ta "NORMAN" The NEWEST ARROW COLLAR Cluett, Peabody & Co., Inc. Makers Students' Shoe Shop P. O. Burget, Prop. 1107 Mass. St. Good Work a Specialty. Prices right. We also repair and cover parasols. A Good Place to Eat at A Good Place to Eat at Anderson's Old Stand Johnson & Tuttle Proprietors 715 MASSACHUSETTS STREET R. E. Protsch The Students' Tailor WANTED I can get you 8 per cent interest on $200 or $300 for 8 months or 1 year with first mortgage Call Bell 1913. 10-3* MILLS TAX MILLS TAX Want Ads Mail your want ad with 25 cents enclosed to the Daily Kansan—want ads are payable in advance. WANTED—A student barber at once—Kaw Barber Shop, 910 Mass. St. 7-6 FOR RENT—Rooms and board for girls. 1145 Indiana. Phone Bell 1512. 11-3* FOR RENT—Two rooms for girls, at 127 Iodle. BELL 1281W. 11-3 FOR RENT--One down stairs front room, for boys, 10. 115. Parking. 8-3* LOST—Now rain coat during registration. Finder please call Bell 291. 9-3 LOST-- Brindle bull pup answering to name of Juke. White muzzle, feet, and tip of tail; ears clipped. Missing since Thursday. Notice Acacia house, 1541 Tenn., and receive reward. 11-8* She gave me eyes, she gave me ears; And humble cares, and delicate fears: —Wordsworth - The Sparrow's Nest LOST—One pair of eye glasses. Return to Kansan office. Reward. Give her a good box of chocolates and she will appreciate them. Wilson's Drug Store has a full line of the best makes and kept in a large refrigerator case—always fresh—Adv. Football season. You will want to take snap shots of the games. Squires sells Kodaks from $2.00 up.—Adv. Haskell's Big Home Game Your only chance to see the Haskell Indians in a real football game on the home grounds will be next Friday when the Redskins clash with "Big Bill" Hargiss' Normalites. IN THE FALL THE YOUNG MAN'S PANLY A young theologian named Fiddle. Refused to accept his decree . Without being Flood D. D. —Pennsylvania Punch Bowl. Refused to accept his degree. "For," said he "Tis enough to be Fiddle Without being Fiddle D. D THE FANFEST. The Victrola opens your door to all the music of all the world She has at her command the world's greatest opera artists—always ready to oblige with their arias and concerted numbers. The hostess who has a Victrola in her home can entertain her guests regally. She can entertain her guests with stirring band music or superb instrumental solos, and can at will furnish the latest dance music to add to their enjoyment. Wouldn't you like a Victrola in your home? You can easily get one. There are various styles of the Victrola from $15 to $200, and terms can be arranged to suit your convenience. Terms to suit purchaser Bell Bros. Music Co. R. D; KRUM, Mgr. WE RENT PIANOS PROFESSIONAL CARDS W. C. M. CONNELLE, Physician and St. Bell 1023, Bell 399, Honorary 8942, Residence 1346 Teen. St. Bell 1023, Home 639. HARRY REDING, M. D. M., Eye ear, nose and throat. Glasses fitted. Office. F. A. A. Bldg. Phones, Bell 513, Home 512. Surgeon, Office, 819 Mass. St. Bel 399, Home 3842, Residence 1346 Tern. St. Bell 1023, Home 639. F. J. BROCK, Optometrist and Specialist in Scientific Glass Fitting. Office 802 Mass. St. Bell phone 695. G. HAMMAN, M. D. Eye, ear Satisfaction Guaranteed. Dick Bldg. Satisfaction Guaranteed. Dick Bldg. MRS ELLISON, Dressmaking and Ladies' Tailoring. Even gowns a specialty, 1032 Vermont. Phone Bell 2411 West. DR. H. W. HAYNE, Oculist, Lawrence, Kansas. J. W. O'BRYON, Dentist. Over Wilson's Drug Store. Bell Phone 507. J. R. BECHTEL, M. D., D. O. 833 Massachusetts Street. Both phones. office and residence. DR. H. L. CHAMBERS. Office over Dr.'s Studio. Both phones. G. W. JONES, A. M. M. D., Diseases of the stomach, surgery and gynaecology. Suite I, F. A. A. Blldg. Resistance, 1201 Ohio St. Both phones. DR. H. T. JONES, Room 12, F. A. A. Bldg. Residence 1130 Tenn. Phones 211. CLASSIFIED Ladies Tailor. Jewelers S. T. GILLISPIE, M. D. Office cor- nector 728 Ind. Phone: 5066. Residence 728 Ind. Phone: 5066. Mrs. Emma Brown- Schulz, Dressmaking and Ladies Tailor- ing. Suits and Dresses. Phone Phone B141 913. Mass. St. Next door to Anderson's Bakery. ED. W. PARSONS, Engraver, Watchmaker and Jeweler, Diamonds and Jewelry, Bell Phone 717. 717 Mess Victor How Manufacturers Work Mrs. M. Brockelsby-Wilson, Kiester College of lady tailoring and dress-making. Over 909 Mass. St. Bell 2109. Plumbers PHONE KENNEDY LUMBING 907 Maseh. Phones 658. 937 Maseh. Phones 658. Hair Dressers AIRDRESSING, shampooing, scalp and facial massage, shampooing, hair coats, "Marinello" toilet preparations. For appointments call Bell 372. Home 51. The Select Hair Dressing Shop, 927 Mass. St. Barber Shops Go where they all go J. C. HOUCK 913 Mass. GO WHERE you get the Best. Bob Stewart's Barber Shop, 838 Mass. St. Cafes For a good clean place to eat, where you don't get "rupped" go to the MARKET CAFE, Room 1, Perkins Building. Millinery WANTED -Ladies to call at Mrs. McCormick's up-to-date millinery parlers to inspect our new line of hats. 831 Mass St. Shoe Shon FORNEY SHOE SHOP, 1017 Mass. St. Don't make a mistake. All work guaranteed. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN LAST DAY AURORA DANIEL FROHMAN Presents the Powerful Domestic Drama AFTERMATH With VIRGINIA PEARSON and OWEN MOORE Complete in Four Parts. : : : First Show 7:25 - Second Show 8:30 COMING WEDNESDAY: Hortiesta Crossman in "The Unwelcome Mrs. Hatch" We Want You to See Our New Dress Skirts The styles are, so different and pleasing, especially the accordian pleated and the Russian Tunic with combination. A full line of colors in all the new weaves—crepes, chudda, poplin and many other new fabrics. 1310 Company 16.13.14 Prices Range from $5 to $15 WEAVER'S Style Show Oct. 8, 8 p.m. KAW VALLEY ICE CREAM CO. 470 Either Phone 10 W. 9th We specialize on clubs and fraternity orders. Let us handle that next order. ICE CREAM AND OYSTERS SENIORS "Butch" Steuwe FOR PRESIDENT The University of Kansas Offers over 200 courses BY MAIL through its Correspondence Study Department. Credit given for all college work. Address University Extension Division, The University of Kansas. Lawrence, Kansas. $30 TO California Oregon Washington AND British Columbia Low Fares to Other Points On Sale Sept. 24 to Oct. 8, 1914 Very liberal stop-over, pritificates. Tickets allow visitors to stay at the inn or sleeper tourist from Lawrence to all California common points. Rock ballet tracks, insuring safeties. Fired-up cab drivers. Santa Fe W. W. Burnett AGENT Lawrence, Kans. Student Headquarters SANITARY CAFE A Nice Clean Place to Eat LUNCHES - SHORT ORDER Across from Kress Store 916 Mass C. W. Steeper Cleaning, Pressing and Remodeling Club For up-to-date men and women 10 years old. Satisfaction Guaranteed At H. Frost and Karl J. Wilmhuisen. Agts. K. U. Razors Honed. Ground and Exchanged W. F. Weise, Prop Barber Shop and Bath Rooms The Only Electric Massage Machine in the city with both Street Shorthand and Typewriting Bookkeeping and Banking Penmanship and Spelling Lawrence Business College Penmanship In fact, a computer is a commercial train that can be had at College Dance Frank Koch "The Tailor" Full Line of Fall Suitings COME ONCE A WEEK AND HIKE AT 10:30 Friday, October 2 I F. A. A. Hall . . 75c University Women Will Recognize Rules made by Former Associations Although it will be several days before the central organization of the Women's Rooming-house Association is ready for business, the various houses in the student district may organize as soon as they wish, and elect their respective chairmen. While the house rules are left to the discretion of the women in each house, it is wished and expected that they should include the two recommendations by the W. S. G. A. for the 10:30 o'clock rule and the week night date rule. It is also desired that the house chairmen shall be responsible girls, who will see that the rules are kept. Mrs. Brown or any member of the Women's Student Government Association will be glad to advise the girls who wish to have house government but have had no experience. A specialral organization will be taken October 5 when the house chairmen will hold a conference with Mrs. Eustace Brown. Y. M. MEN HAD VARIED WORK Association Cabinet Carried on Occupations from Farming to Bug-Hungry and Selling Brooms Life was varied for the members of the University Y. M. C. A. cabinet during the summer months. Occupations engaged in were from farm work to official bug investigator for the University. Hal Coffman spent his vacation in the harvest field and at his home in Emporia. Vie Bottomly worked for a real estate company in Montana Harry V. McColloch and John M Johnson, sold books in Iowa. H. T Weddell played baseball in various parts of Kansas and Nebraska Fred L. Soper was a field agent in Minnesota in charge of a number of salesmen for the railroad Company. Frew W. Poos after the late wartime work expedition in the harvest fields and was later with Prof. S. J. Hunter, in Colorado and Arizona, on a bug hunting expedition. Ernest E. Blincoe after the Estes Park conference worked in the harvest field and sold life insurance around Fort Scott and attended the K. N. G. encampment at Fort Riley. Don Joseph spent the summer in the harvest field and on the farm, George H. Vansell was in the employ of the department of entomology. Claire L. Deitrich worked on ranch equipment. Miller was a field agent for the Ever-Wear Aluminum Company with Kansas City as his headquarters. Williard A. Burton worked in harvest and for the Helm Commission Company in Kansas City. McKinley H. Warren attended the Estes Park conference, sold brushes and brooms in Colorado, later attended the secretary's commission and then worked in Estes Park until school commenced. Leland Thompson had charge of his father's clothing store in Marion. TO CELEBRATE BIRTHDAY WITH BIG PROCESSION Two gigantic processions will be one of the main features in Brown University's one hundred and fiftieth anniversary to be held October 12 to 15. There will be fully one thousand and students and alumni in the academic procession and over three thousand in the torch light parade. Facilities of the School of Horticulture for women at Ambler, near Boston, have been overtaxed by the greatly increased number of applications for admission. This year's enrollment more than doubles that of last year and a nearby house has been obtained as a residence, and two new greenhouses for practical work will be completed in a week or two. Plans have been drawn for new buildings, but the money necessary to erect them has not yet been raised. Another feature of interest will be three performances of "The Provoled Husband" on the three first days of the celebration. Two days will be dvoted to the religious history of the college and will include university sermons by President Faune, and two Brown graduates, the Rev. Clarence Barbour, of Rochester, N. Y., and the Rev. Thomas D. Anderson of Brookline, who is secretary of the corporation. Many Want Horticulture Private telephone booth at Grigg's Both phones...Adv. Rest room for tired students.—Griggs's.—Adv. "Meet me at Griggs."—Adv. Below is reproduced Article IV of the rules of the Student Council for the election of class officers. This will show students with which class they will vote. Election will be held a week from next Friday; This Will Show With Whom You Vote Engineering School: 'All students having credit for 27 hours work, shall vote as sophomores. All students having credit for 74 hours work, shall vote as juniors. All students having credit for 107 hours work shall vote as seniors. College: All students having credit for 20 hours work shall vote as phomores. All students having credit for 50 hours work shall vote as unions. All students having credit for 80 hours work shall vote as senators. Law: All students having credit for 17 hours work shall vote as sophomores. All students having credit for 44 hours work shall vote as juniors. All students having credit for 71 hours work shall vote as seniors. Pharmacy: All students having credit for 26 hours work shall vote as sophomores. All students having credit for 62 hours work shall vote as juniors. All students having credit for 98 hours work shall vote as seniors. In the two year course each student shall be given 72 hours additional credit after his first year in the Pharmacy School. In the three year course each student shall be given 36 hours credit after his first year in the School of Pharmacy. This shall not hold if the student enters the Pharmacy School with 17 or more hours credit. Medics: All first year medics shall vote as juniors. All students completing 26 hours work in the School of Medicine shall vote as seniors. Note: This shall not conflict in any way with students holding de- guments or holding signs. Fine Arts: All students having credit for 16 hours work shall vote as sophomores. All students having credit for 40 hours shall vote as juniors. All students having credit for 64 hours work shall vote as seniors. Graduate Students.: All students holding a degree from K. U. or any other college shall vote as seniors. Students entering K. U. from other schools shall be charged for hourly credit hours place them. Special Students: All special students shall carry 10 hours work before being classed as freshmen. Special students having 16 hours work shall be classified within the school in which they carry the major portion of their work. Special students change schools, the difference in the number of hours served between the two schools, will vote as sophomore, will be multiplied by the number of years enrolled and added to, or subtracted from his credit hours. All students not having enough credit hours to vote as sophomores shall vote as freshmen. Fresh salted peanuts, best quality California Fruit Stand.—Adv. Save your photos by having them framed at Squires Studio. Prices will be right.—Adv. Plays the Bowersock Theatre Offers A list of attractions at the Bowersock Theatre for the year appears below. Addition and alterations will be added as the season progresses. This list will be run in the Daily Kan-den for two issues that the students may clip it. Oct. 3—Climax Oct. 3 - Climax Oct. 10 - Wizard of Wiseland Oct. 24 - Jack's Bad Boy Oct. 28-27 - Annette Kellerman Pictures. Oct. 28—Sever, Keys to Baldpate Nov. 1—Roth St. Denis Nov. 6—Potach & Perlmutter Nov. 9—Hanky Panky Nov. 18—Oh Doh Delphine Nov. 30—Call of the Cumberlands. Dec. 1—Howe's Pictures Dec. 10—Today Dec. 19—Spendthrift Jan. 5—45 Minutes From Broad- Jan. 9—When Dreams Come True Jan. 12—Blue Bird Jan. 15—Lady of the Slipper Jan. 23—Bringing Up Father Jan. 25—Pair of Sixes Jan. 29—High Jinks Feb. 12—Nearly Married Feb. 18—Firefly Feb. 24—Howe's Pictures Mch. 2—My Best Girl Apr. 12—New York Grand Opera Company. A nice line of fruits. California Fruit Stand—Adv. Your Drinking Water Your Drinking Water When you drink McNish's aerated distilled water, you may be assured of the very best. Phone 198-Adv. A new shipment of films at Squires Studio, 1035 Mass. St..-Adv. WED. Today Only VARSITY WED. Today Only Charles Dicken's Initial Book The Chimes Featuring Tom Ferris and entire David Copperfield cast, produced by the Shubert Theatre Attraction in five reels. FRIDAY: "The Bond of Love" all star Yale student cast by Yale Dramatic Association. FOR TAXICAB Call Either PHONE 100 PEERLESS GARAGE CLARK LEANS LOTHES Phone 355 CLARK LEANS LOTHES PUNCH $1.50 TEN TICKET PRESSES All Pressing Done by Hand CLARK LEANS LOTHES 730 Mass St. CLARK LEANS LOTHES Particular Cleanning and Pressing FOR PARTICULAR PEOPLE Lawrence Pantatorium MANY ENROLL AT COLUMBIA Columbia Gets Many Students be cause War Interferes with Foreign Study Last year the enrollment at Columbia was 10,000. This year the minimum is expected to be 13,000. More than 5,000 students enrolled in the summer school. Enrollment at Columbia University is expected to be unusually large this year, owing to the fact that the war in Europe will prevent many students from studying abroad this winter. As a result many of the courses will be changed and made similar to those of German educational institutions. A course in industrial chemistry will be offered almost identical to the courses given abroad. The engineering school will be put on a graduate basis. Courses in accounts and commerce will be emphasized and the students will be given the opportunity to untangle the accounts of many large corporations. Another field which is being built up includes courses in the spoken languages. Arabic, English, French, German, Greek, Irish, Italian, Modern Hebrew, Rumanian, Russian and Spanish will be offered. The seismograph, indicator of earthquakes and like disturbances of Mother Earth, has rested quietly in its vault in the basement of Fraser Hall this summer. Only twice has it indicated disturbances of any sort; the first time at 2:17 p. m. August 8th, when it registered a slight disturbance that evidently occurred on the Peninsula of Lower California; the second, at 11:33 p. m. August 21. University authorities were unable to decide exactly where this slight disturbance took place; it is thought, however, that it was either in the West Indies, or along the valley of the St. Lawrence river. SEISMOGRAPH SIZES BUT TWICE DURING VACATION All toilet articles, perfumes, soaps and etc., for the ladies at Wilson's Drug Store.—Adv. Our banana ice cream is different from others. The taste tells, Wiedemann's.-Adv. Send the Daily Kansan home Go to the HOME BAKERY For Good Things to Eat C. M. Williamson 933 Mass. St. A. G. ALRICH PRINTING Binding, Copper Plate Printing, Rubber Stamps, Engraving, and Embossing, Balsa Badges 744. MASS. STREET Francisco & Co. Livery, Hacks and Garage 812 VERMONT STREET Phone 139 S. R. HANKS Tom Mulloy Football "K" Man Candidate for Junior Prom Mgr. "Bert" vs. "Bill" At Haskell next Friday a real football game will be played for the first time in years between Bert Kennedy's Redskins and Bill Hargiss' Normalites. Don't fail to see it. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Freshman Caps all ready Safety First一 get yours now Johnson & Carl A Real Foot Ball Game Not a track meet nor a runaway but a good hard football game will be played at Haskell next Friday at 3 p.m. when the Indians meet the State Normal of Emporia. MORGAN'S MEALS and SHORT ORDERS Sunday Dinnera a Specialty Ice Cream SPECIAL HEAL TICKETS 1345 Mass. St. Bell 262 Watkins National Bank Capital $100,000 Surplus & profits $100,000 The Student Depository Swede Wilson's For Billiards Phones 540 SHUBERT Matinee Wed & Sat The Bird of Paradise The Bird of Paradise THE DRAMATIC NOVELTY OF THE PRICES--25C TO $1.50.WED.MAT.$1. Next: Sam Bernard to "The Belle of Bond Merchants National Bank Complete line of Tobacco, Cigars, Pipes ALSO MANUFACTURES OF Pierson's Success, Hand Made, Robert Hudson Cigars Aug. J. Pierson 902 Mass Bell no Longer Runs Students at the University of Pennsylvania no longer hear the old class bell in the west wing of College Hall. The building was condemned and the wing removed this summer. Have you seen the swell smoking room at Grigg's? It's yours to use.—Adv. If you like banana nut ice cream try our's. Wiedemann's.-Adv. War Lectures Given at Oxford A short course of lectures, dealing with the cause of the European war, is being arranged at Oxford University. Nut butter cups, fresh and crisp, at Wiedemann's.—Adv. Look Over Your Suit TUXEDO after we have Cleaned and Pressed it, and it will remind you of when it first came from the tailor's hands—when garments back into their original perfect shape and take out every spot and stain without the least injury to the cloth. We call for and deliver garments to our customers. We acknowledged to be very reasonable. BOULTINGHOUSE CLEANING HOUSE VARSITY TOYS WITH TYROS IN SCRIMMAGE PHONE 670 1024 MASS. ST Wheaton's Men Go Through and Around McCarty's Green Material at Will COACH EMPHASIZES KICKING Wheaton Working Out Men in To Practice—Woods and Lindsey Doing Most of Booting Two hundred students saw the Varsity and freshmen engage in a friendly scrimagem on McCook Field yesterday afternoon. After an hour of kicking practice, Coach Wheaton called in the scrubs and Coach McCarty selected the most promising to check the Jayhawker advance. The tyres did fairly well but Wheaton's backfield showed speed and broke through for long gains. Gainers while Coleman and Lindsey punctured the green line several times. Coach Wheaton is emphasizing the kicking principle to his allies and Lindsey and Woods punted down the field while the team charged an imaginary foe. Who will constitute the lineup? What will Jewell be a - question and it will be several days before the regular line-up would mould into shape. Specialseatsarebeingarranged on both sides of field for this game. Plenty of auto space will be reserved. END TO WINDOW JUMPERS The honor system, as applied to "window jumping," was the object of a spiritful appeal by Dr. James Naiad. The students in hygiene yesterday in Snow Hall. "I will be glad to give you all the instruction in 'window jump' your team will apply to one of these please refrain from its use in the class room." The first meeting of the class was held yesterday at 4:30. Because of the large class, a division will be made. All students whose names be included in the regular Monday session, the remainder meeting on Thursday. Dr. Naismith Pleads for Honor System to Hold Freshies in Hygiene Class Dates and Teams on K.U. Schedule The football schedule is now complete, and runs as follows: Oct. 8—William Jewell at Lawrence. Oct. 10—Emporia College at Law rence 3 p. m. Friday, Oct. 2 Oct. 17—Drake University, at Des Moines. See what "Big Bill" Hargiss and his team can do with Bert Kennedy's Red Skins. It will be a good stiff game, and perhaps your last chance to see Haskell here. THEMES FOR DEBATE READY FOR COUNCIL Oct. 24—Kansas Aggies, at Law- rence. Big home game at Haskell Oct. 31.-Oklahoma University of Lawrence Emporia State Normal $ ^{v}_{\mathrm{s}} $ Haskell Indians Nov. 7—Washburn University, Tonkea Admission 50c FOOTBALL Nov. 14—Nebraska University, a Lincoln. Nov. 21—Missouri University, Lawrence. "I'll see you at Grigg's."—Adv. All freshmen that would make good line men are requested to report to McCook as soon as possible for try-out for freshmen football. Coaches McCarty and Widelein. A school of journalism has been installed at the University of Montana this year. News writing, short story writing, photophy producing and marketing of manuscripts will be taught. Notice to Freshmen MONROE DOCTRINE ON LIST Program This Year to Be Varied by Readings and Musical Numbers New Courses Are Offered by the Department of Public Speaking Interest in this year's debating program has already received its impetus by the arrival from Oklahoma of subjects from which debatable questions may be selected. Themes submitted to the Kansas council are: American History, English and Monroe Doctrine, Single Tax and the Minimum Ware Legislation. As yet the council has held no meeting, but as soon as the various debating societies have elected their representatives a meeting will be held to consider questions for debate. Sub-committee members are expected within a few days. The usual questions as to debatable subjects will be submitted to Missouri. Music and Readings This Year Music and Readings This Year Outlook for a victorious team this year is splendid. To vary the usual monotony of continuous debate, musical numbers and readings will increase to the program to accelerate interest. "Kansas University is among the first universities in the United States, in placing its department of public speaking on a basis with other departments," said Arthur MacMurray, head of the department today. Universities of Michigan and Chicago have given them the department encouragement and are increasing their "facilities for teaching the course. Additional Courses Named Two new courses in the department here have been added and the enrollment is three times the enrollment of last year. Oral interpretation and extemporaneous speaking are the two new courses. One hundred fifty students are enrolled in the courses and it is probable that that number-will be swelled as enrollments have not ceased. TO PEACEFUL K. U. FROM WARM MEXICO Student Will Enroll in College After escaping the hostile Mexican lines and enduring the hardships of Mexican travel for several weeks, he was arrested in Port Hudson, editor of the Mexican Herald Mexico City, Mexico, arrived at the University today and is enrolling in the College. He made a short stop in Cruz, presumably to take in the war situation. Paul Hudson was formerly a student at the University and his father was the founder of the Topeka Capitol University. The management man in Kansas for many years. The Alpha Chi Sigma fraternity held a house warming at 1614 Kentucky, yesterday, in honor of the faculty members and parents of its members. The out of town guests were Dr. C. Seibel and Mrs. F. C. Seibel, and Mrs. John Reber and Mr. and Mrs. J. F. Waike, all of Kansas City. Our banana nut ice cream is different from others. The taste tells us. Y. W. C. A. WORKERS WILL GO TO HONOLULU In accordance with plans to increase the efficiency of the Young Women's Christian Association of Honolulu, the board of directors has been authorized to secure two women in the leadership of various cities to take positions on the staff. Miss Leonore Anderson, at present working in Minnesota, will take charge of the physical training department of the association and Miss Cora Barney, a graduate of the Y. W. C. A. national training school in New York will fill the position of economical secretary. "RECOVER THAT FUMBLE AND GET THAT TROPHY" A very unusual trophy has been offered by the Indiana University Alumni Association. It is to be awarded to the member of their football team who recovers the most fumbles during the season. The Association in a meeting recently decided that too many games are won and lost by fumbles at critical moments and have offered the trophy as an inducement to recovering them. If you like milk chocolate try milk powder. Soak the difference. Wiedemann's—Adv HALLOWEEN TREASURES Craig Out of Game Omrs. Bulllene Hackman Nearly 100 Out for Practice Manager Hamilton is confident that Saturday's affair is going to be a big success. The merchants and citizens of the city have promised at least twenty automobiles to be in the line. These with those of the city are expected to bring the number up to nearly fifty. With anything like the weather of this week the attendance is expected to be close to 3,000. Jayhawk Feathers "Every student of the University should be in the parade Saturday instead of going directly to McCook and manager W. O. Hamilton, this morning." Red Craig was kicked in the leg in scrimmage yesterday and is limping around with a Charley Horse. The injury may keep him out of the game, will play a role to the Kung-sa squad as Craig was working well behind the line. URGES STUDENTS TO APPEAR IN PARADE Detwiler's Shousef Still Snort. An X-ray picture of Captain Detwiler injured, should failed to show the extent of the injury received when he dived for a ball last week. Another picture was taken yesterday. While the shoulder is still sore, it will not keep Detwiler off the gridiron. Manager Hamilton Would Have Everybody Go From Park to McCook Nearly 100 Out for Practice Thirty-two Varsity men reported two varsity teams, Coach McCarty led fifty-four freshmen on the field, making a total of ninety-three uniformed players on McCook Field. Lyra French Model Corsets $3.50, $5.00 and $6.50 American Lady Corsets The new models for fall are the embodiment of grace and daintiness. The model shown is of suede with low bust, long hips, an ideal model for slender or medium figures, and sells for $350 $1.00 to $3.50 Freshmen Run Punts Coach Wheaton called in eight husky freshmen and lined them up to receive Lindsey's kicks while a squid charged them. One whitefies evaded four Varsity men and was almost away when the smash occurred, a famine hit him in his tracks—one of the prettiest tackles of the evening. Other American Lady Corsets in models for every type of figure at Three Injuries From Practise Three Injuries From Practise The scrimgage yesterday was rough in spots and three injuries so severe that he was knocked cold, and Gray, a Varsity man, was slightly injured. Craig also received a bad kick. Touchdowns Through Freshmen Touchdowns Through Freshmen In the scrimmage work, Coolidge and Woods showed class in breaking up a long run for a touchdown and Coleman broke through once and stretched over the goal. Jane—Hopelessly, papa.—Princeton Tiger. voice (from above)—Jane, is that fellow? voice Miss Sui Wang, a Chinese woman who received her degree from Northwestern University last year, talked with women of Grinnell College last week. like eating fresh oranges, orange ice. at Wiedmann's.-Adv. ENGINEERS FOLLOW MANY PROFESSIONS Marvinites Are Lawyers, Editors, Preachers, Pharmacists, Farmers and Level Sighters Twelve men who have been graduated from the School of Engineering of the University of Kansas have become proficient enough to have positions as professors in engineering schools in the United States. The chief engineer of the Santa Fe, R. A. Rutledge, is also a grad from the Hill, in class of 1890. Two of the assistant chief engineers of the Santa Fe spent four years here. Of the men who are following the three divisions of engineering, twenty-three are electrical, fifty-four are civil, ten are mining engineers, and sixty-one have seen fit to simply call themselves engineers, according to the last Alumni number of the Graduate Magazine. There are not at all local. Four of them are students in Harvard, Yale, Cornell and Kansas. Two are residents of Manila, Philippine Islands. One of them may be addressed at Kenawa Telesa-Diva, via Stanley, Congo Belle, African; one at Neregina, Guajacu, Mexico and one at Honolulu, Hawaii. Three men who have been graduated from Marvin Hall are lawyers, one is a preacher, three are editors, two are pharmacists, thirteen are farmers, and three are real estate dealers. The engineers have the same number of men in the government service as the lawyers, thirteen in each case. There are five times as many bankers who are lawyers as engineers and engineers as many lawyers as the preachers. Seventen engineers are in business for themselves and thirty-five lawyers. Orange ice, made from fruit. Wiedemann's...Adv. "I NEED $10.00 MORE YOUR SON JOHNIE Students Write Home "Dear Father—I need some more money—may be a very truthful statement if made by some of the firms in the industry. The war has not confined it's increase in the high cost of living to board bills and imported toys, but has extended it's influence in a starting manner into the realm of chem- Many of the second-year chemies find that it would have been a decided saving for them to have purchased their chemical supplies, because they must be used in the term last fall. Many of the imported chemicals can not be obtained in this country now at anything like the prices they could have been then. Therefore, these chemicals must be procured to raise the laboratory prices. Hence the letter goes home to pa. Parker pens, 10 per cent discount, Harber & Son's Drug Store. —Ackroyd Skin Cure for Barber's Itch, ange, dandruff and all skin affec- ones. 50c at Barber & Son's.'-Adv. Chancellor Strong spent an hour on the side-lines yesterday watching the scrimmage work and kicking practice. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN VOLUME XII. WOMEN WILL MARCH IN OPENING PARADE They Have Asked for a Place in the Procession to McCook UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON, SEPTEMBER 30, 1914. LINE TO FORM IN SOUTH PARK NUMBER 13 Manager W. O. Hamilton Will Ar range a Place for Women in Marching Columns Women at the University have asked that they be allowed to march in K. U's annual opening football parade next Saturday afternoon. Mrs. Eustace Brown, advisor of women has asked Manager W. O. Hamilton to allow the women to march and he has arranged to make a place in the procession for them. If the women turn out to student body and this, thinks Manager Hamilton will encourage the team considerably. Besides the women in the parade will be the men, faculty, Lawrence business men, and dozens of down town football followers. Following notices sent out by the state and local health authorities, the University of Pennsylvania made vaccination compulsory this year, and many students seeking to enroll were forced to drop out of line until they received their vaccines having submitted recently to a successful operation. They were sent to their physicians or to the student physicians to have the work done. The line will form in the park and will march over the down town streets. Seats will be reserved for those in the parade. VACCINATION BUG BITES U. OF. P. UNDERGRADS CALLS BASKETBALL MEN Manager Hamilton to Look Over Material for His 1915 Quin- tet Soon $100 PRIZE OFFERED FOR BEST PEACE ESSAY Van der Vries, forward, Greenlees and Weidlein, guards, are not back in school. Coach Hamilton however has captain Stuffy Dummie, Lefty Sproull for Ohio State and Kyle 1915 will be arranged at the meeting of the basketball managers of the Missouri Valley conference the first week in December. Although the basketball season does not officially open until after Christmas, Manager W. O. Hamilton expects to call the candidates for the Varsity five together in a couple of weeks. With five K men back in school and a number of promising bromins from the teams, the prospects for a repetition of last year's Missouri Valley championship are good. The Lake Mohonk Conference on International Arbitration has offered a prize of $100 for the best essay on the subject of "International Arbitration," by a student of any college or of the University of Kansas. The current conducted by the society last year brought out forty-one essays. The essays should show an understanding of international arbitration both in connection with and apart from the Hague Confferences. Information may be secured from H. C. Johnson, Lake Evan, Lake Kane, Waukee, December 1; from that time, until April 1, at 3531 Forthenth Street, Washington, D. C. Delegates to Come Basement Museum, Friday from 4 to 5. Typhoid Inoculation Acceptances from the cities which have been invited to send delegates to the Municipal convention which is to be held in Lawrence October 7, 8, and 9, are beginning to come in to the office of the secretary, Prof. C. H. Talbot, of the extension division of the University. Classes at Washburn University opened with a large enrollment. Owing to the fact that all students in the law school will not enroll until graduation, it is expected can not be figured up. It is expected to exceed last year's. COUNCIL MAKES MOVE FOR MILL TAX LAW Men's Governing Body to Organize County Clubs to Further Legislation WILL MAP OUT CAMPAIGN President Bottomly Says Association Will Draw up Definite Working Plans Because the legislature meets this year, and a bill providing for a mill tax for the state educational institutions will be introduced, Victor Bottomly, president of the Student Council, announced today that the Council would take steps immediately after the election to form county clubs, whose purpose, primarily, will be to boost the measure. From the clubs formed, a federation of club officers will be organized, those business it will be to map out plan of campaign. The various districts are formed from their districts are fully informed as to the merits of the measure. Heretofore the federation of clubs has been an independent organization, with councilary initiative to get the federation perfected. Bottomly thinks that a more stable organization can be formed. "There is no doubt," he said, "but that the measure is a good one, and that it will] eventually become a law. The people must understand its adjoining implications. County clubs are a good medium for disseminating the knowledge." STUDENT TICKETS WILL NOT BE SOLD AT GATE Manager Hamilton announced this morning that all students who wish to be admitted to the game Saturday on student tickets must buy the same from the office of the registrar before the game as they will not be on sale at the field. Up to this morning only 242 regular and seventeen guest tickets had been purchased. The regular gate admission will be charged Saturday unless students have their enterprise tickets. M'CARTY WANTS BIG MEN Tyro Coach Says He Needs More Beef to Put Against the Varsity Coach Leon McCarty wants big freshmen to come out for the class team. Last night there were about six who resembled the accepted idea of a football man, and a hundred and one who weigh about 100. "These light men may have the speed, but we want heavier men to go against the Varsity in this week's practice," said the coach. The freshman no man is sure of his place and men who come out now have as good a chance as anyone to win a position. The fifteen making the squad will be rewarded with their class numerals, be admitted to all the games, get the benefit and experience of expert coaching and will probably be given a chance to play at the championship. This first year training has been found invaluable by many Kansas football heroes. The results of it are seen in many a sophomore try This first year training has been found invaluable by many Kansas too. It can be seen in many a sophomore trying for a place on the Varsity. Persons who have rooms available for rent to the delegates to the municipal convention are requested to call C. H. Talbot, secretary, at K. U. 101, stating location, number of rooms, and the price. Rooms for Delegates Needed SIXTEEN WILL SING FOR K. U. THIS YEAR Professor Downing Please With Aggregation of Voice Artists Long snaky coils of black smoke rose high on the horizon southwest of Mount Oread this morning. Week-old geology students fearlessly declared it a volcano, and experts declared it a second Vesuvius. They looked, quaked and listened for the inevitable eruption. AND TERROR SMOTE THE WATCHERS ON THE NOSE Lo, even classes were forgotten as they stared and thought of home and mother. Dates were forgotten like last summer's haircuts, and no fair co-eed took John and Bill to task for their neglect. Even tickets were not handed to the president of the Student Council in time to be recognized. And as a consequence: several RECITAL POSTPONED A WEEK Program Delayed by Rehearsal to be Given Thursday Night—McCurdy Business Manager Program Delayed by Rehearsal to be Stoneen men have been chosen for the Men's Glee Club and will start the year's work with a rehearsal in Fraser Hall tomorrow night. William B. Downing, head of the voice department, in the building, has a very good collection of singers to begin work. He also has a list of the men with good voices who will be held in reserve to fill any vacancies. The successful men are: And as a consequence; crushing flunks will be dealt out first tenors—Gola W. Coffeet, Har- DieBohann, Lawrence, Winnw, DeBohann Second tenors—Paul H. Sautter, George Berg, Benjamin Baltzer, S. Berg. First basses—Henry B. McCurdy, Clyde H. Smith, John Hamilton, D. Second basses—Frank G, Porter, E. E. Lamp, Dick Williams, Fred L. Because of rehearsal Thursday night the song recital which was to have been given by Professor Downing has been postponed until next Henry McCurdy has been chosen as business manager, S. W. Mickey, assistant business manager, D. R. Piano, and the pianist. Mickey is also manager of the Mandolin Club. M'COOK FIELD LOOKS FINE Completely Sadded and With a New Fence it Appears $600 Better Than Last Year McCook Field which will greet the William Jewell eleven Saturday will be a different gridron from the one they played on last year. Even if it rains the visitors will find no sea of mud or no amateur lakes. During the summer the entire field was sodded so that it now closely resembles a well kept front lawn. A wire fence has been built parallel to the fence track. Manager Hamilton says that the improvements cost $600. EMPORIA TO PLAY HASKELI Lawrence football bugs expect a spirited football game when Bill Hargiss brings his Kansas Normalts to Haskell Field Friday. The Redskins have a big schedule this year but most of their games are away from Lawrence and the game with the Normal may be the last chance to see Kennedy's pupils in action. While some dopsters expect a big massacre of Pedagogs, others are more conservative. Football Bugs Expect Scrappy Game Friday When Normal Eleven Meets Kennedy's Indians Philosophy Club Will Meet A meeting of the Philosophy Club has been called for Monday night. New officers will be elected and a program for the year will be arranged. about the middle of February. Ignominious defeats that *would have resulted from Friday's election will never be recorded in the book of Vital Statistics. And the district court, with Cupid judge pro tem, will be swamped beneath an avalanche of divorces. Hargiss had more than a hundred men from which to pick his eleven and his heavy line and fast backs may surprise the Indians. But, back to the volcano! The inevitable eitable. Lower and lower the smoke sank over the summit of the mound until at last it melted into the purple haze of the Kansas morn. It threw that energy $25,000 worth of youthful, wasted watching the crater, and Lawrence eye doctors will be about $200 richer when all the students have been treated. FRESHIE MIRAM CORNTASSEL INVESTS IN NEW HAT. Consolation ! SIX MORE MEN CARRY GUNS — AND THEN A HAIRGUT +BUT FRESHMAN CAP FIXED HIM UP O.K. Six new men became members of Company M., at its regular meeting last night, but Capt. F. E. Jones says he still has "room for ten more. Freshmen who enlist and attend drill once a week are to be given credit for gym work. This is proving a drawing card for first year men. By attending drill once a week they are exempt from three hours' work in a gym class. Advantages of this arrangement are plainly evident. Recruits Join Company M but Ten are Needed to Bring it up to War Strength No rifle practice will be held for the company this week, as the range officer is on duty at Fort Riley and will provide extra drill will be held Tuesday evening. NO ADVANCED STANDING EXCEPT WHILE FRESHMEN "Few 'students are aware of the fact that they can not get advanced standing unless they make application for it at the time of entrance', said Dean Templin, this morning. "Many students come to the University and wait until they are let in, or fail security for advanced standing. This is against the ruling of the faculty and is in no case allowed." Senior Laws Elect At a meeting of the seniors in the School of Law held this morning the following officers were elected: president, William M. Morrow over Floyd L. Loveless; vice-president, Jerry Simpson; secretary, Baurin; treasurer, Guy O. Neal over John G. Somers. GRADS BEST PHARMACISTS University Students Who Take State Examinations Get Highest Every graduate from the pharmacy department, who applied for a state certificate at the last state examination, passed, and from this number, five in all, came the two highest examinations returned. Twenty-seven applicants from different portions of the state tried for the examination but only thirteen passed, including the five University The K. U. men who took the examination were: Ernest E. Gates, Claud B. Wandell, G. H. Hall, Cris Yager, and Emsley L. Johnson. Johnson and Yager made the highest grades in the examination. CHEMISTRY DEPARTMENT FEELS EUROPEAN WAR The department of chemistry is beginning to feel the effects of the European war. Some of the orders assigned to German markets are now tied up in English harbors or ports along the line. Many of the drugs have increased in price from 25 to 500 per cent. New Intercollegiate Events The discus and javelin throws are to be recognized officially as intercollegiate events by the Intercollegiate A. A. A. association this winter. Attempts have been made for some time to secure their recognition. The hop, skip, and jump is another new event, formerly "tabooed" by the authorities. Dr. F. B. Dains of the chemistry department said, "We have received only one important foreign shipment this fall, an addition of one hundred volumes to the library. This was one of the last shipments to leave Germany. At present, none of the departments is suffering great inconvenience, but if the war continues a year, the work in next year's advanced classes will be seriously hampered." Having served its time in an old bicycle shed, the new School of Journalism at the University of Montana has now been given a new building. The Montana cubs publish the Kalmin, a weekly sheet. Cubs Get New Building WILL TELL ABOUT POETS Willard Wattles Will Give Number of Lectures on Modern American Verse, Writers Willard A. Wattles, one of the younger Kansas poets, and at present an instructor in the English department of the University, will offer a course of five lectures on Modern American Poets, all of whom Wattles has known personally and visited in their homes. The price of the lectures will be $1.00 for the entire series, and the proceeds will be given into the treasury of the Quill Club by the ex-tenured members of the Extra Magazine, the first number of which will appear at Thanksgiving time. OREAD GOLF CLUB WILL NOT SELL ITS PROPERTY The motion to sell the property to the Lawrence Country Club was withdrawn at the annual meeting of the Oread Golf Club held last night in the Merchants' Association rooms. An agreement was made with the Country Club by which the club may mowers not needed on the campus. The following officers were elected for the coming year: president, E. M. Briggs; vice-president, C. A. Altman; secretary, J. B. Whelon; treasurer, H. C. Allen; team captain, M. W. Sterling. VICTORY!! THEN THE BIG FEED AND PARADE University Men to Be Busy From Noon Until Midnight Saturday Free ice cream, free candy, free pictures! Everything free; everybody free Corned and city fop look alike merchants or merchants in a night shirt parade. After seeing Kansas walk over the Jewelers Saturday afternoon on McCook, 1000 men will banquet in Robinson Gymnasm. Speakers after the feed are President Ed. Hackney, Chancellor Frank Strong, Uncle Jimmy Green; Coach Jack Wheaton and Coach W. O. Hamilton. If possible, Governor George Hodges will come down from Topeka to address the vice-president. If there and Jo Berwick and his big megaphone will not be among the absentees. It will be one evening of spiky talks and rousing cheers. From the gymnasium, the men will go to South Park, from whence, with Cheer-leader Berwick in the front ranks, they will charge down Massachusetts street in quest of more land to conquer. Picture shows ice cream trucks and tents that rest will open their doors to the ghostly figures from Mount Oread. Thirty-five cents and a student enterprise ticket is all that is necessary to admit to all the pleasures of the college. Students can purchase Thursday and Friday in Myers Hall and the registrar still has a few enterprise tickets left. Oread Magazine to Appear The Oread Magazine, the official publication of the Quill Club will be on sale this year as heretofore. This was the decision of the Club at its meeting held yesterday afternoon. The election of officers was postponed until next week. Miller Goes to Princeton DeLaskie Miller, a junior in the College last year, is attending Princeton University where he spent his time and on aparhems yeas this year. He will receive his degree this year. Plowman is City Editor Earl Plowman, a former member of the Kansan Board, is now in Pittsburg where he is city editor on the Pittsburg Headlight. Alpha Delta Pi announce Josephine Gillett, of Kingman, as a pledge. COUNCIL SAYS, "DON'T YOU BE ROUGH NOW" Men's Governing Body Will Tolerate No Rowdiness in Parade FIRST SMOKER REPRIMANDED Dick Williams Reminded of University Rule—Fiske, Stockton and Teed Fill Vacancies Undue roughness and destruction of property by students in the annual night shirt parade Saturday night will result in immediate action by the Student Council. This was the decision of the Student Council in its second meeting of the year last night. Dick Williams, first violator of the smoking rule, was reprimanded by the Council. A number of names are in the hands of the Council for the same offense. These will be acted upon at the next meeting. Otho Fische, Albert Teed, and Marcellus Stockton were elected from the six candidates to fill the three vacancies on the Council caused by the failure of M. E. Johnson, Phil D. Milner and Walter Rockwell to return to school. The numerous complaints brought to the attention of the Council concerning the wide use of proxies in the general school elections and the consequent disputes, resulted in the passing of a ruling which prohibits the use of all proxies in such elections. The voter must appear in person if he wishes his ballot to be counted. The Council also voted that any room on the second floor of the Union building would be available for organization meetings, with the exception of the living room. This will be open to all members of the Union at any time. MAJOR RULE NOW IN FORCE Sophs File Notice in May—Upper Classes Get Advice From Major Department Many students of the upper classes have found fault with the new major work requirements since they returned to school this fall. They felt that a member of the department in which they were doing their major work would meet them and arrange their work for the junior and senior years and when this did not occur they were surprised. The ruling required sophomores to file with the dean a notice of the department in which they wished to do their major work but as the time at which the ruling was made was near the close of school last year's sophomore class was exempt and as it was not feasible to try to start the rule in on this year's senior class it was entirely exempt. As a result the old system of enrolling had to be followed. SOCCER CANDIDATES TO MEET ON GYM FIELD The meeting of the soccer football candidates scheduled for yesterday afternoon will be held at 4:30 o'clock this afternoon on the field south of the University of Texas at Austin's Smith, University physician will have charge of the soccer team this year. No Bleachers for Them Football burs at Yale and Princeton are going to have big concrete stadiums this year instead of the rickety old wooden grandstands. And in the spring 2014, for the Yale bowl will seat 61,000 and the Tiger cage 41,000. WHERE YOU WILL VOTE AT FRIDAY'S ELECTION Following is a list of the voting places for the election Friday. Freshmen vote in Robinson (Gymnastium); sophomore in Green Hall; junior in Snow Hall and seniors in Fraser Hall. The women students of the University will hold a mass meeting Thursday noon in the chapel. They will meet at twelve sharp that the business of the meeting can be done in a few minutes. Prof. H. T. Hill's class in Public Discussion will not meet tomorrow, (Thursday). For Tuesday read page 139 in Robert's Rules of Order. The Kansan Board will meet tonight at 7:30. NIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Official student paper of the University of Kansas EDITORIAL JOHN GLEISNER Editor-in-Chief Marco Macchiato CALVIN LAMARTY Sport Editor BUSINESS STAFF J. W. Dyer, Ph.D. Business Manager CUSTOMER MANAGEMENT C.BARB. S. STURTHMAN Advertising Manager REPORTORIAL STAFF LION HAMM HOLLOW GILBERT CLAUTON GRAPHIC HEAVY CHARLES SWEET STANLEY RIX MIDLER RIX MIDLER FRANK B. HENDERSON BAYLINES YOUNG HENRY HATY JAMIE HAPPEM M.S. CATT, S.M. CATT TETRON SAM WAHLER Entered as second class mate matter Sep- ptember 14, 2014. Keima, under the act of March 3, 2014. Phone, Bell K. U. 25 Address all communications to UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Lawrence, Kans. Published in the afternoon five times a week. From the Kansas. From the press of the department. Subscriptions price $2.50 per year in ad- audience.com/form, $1.50 The Daily Kosman aims to picture the future of Kuwait as go further than merely printing the news by standing up for its interests and no-fragrants; to be clean; to be cheerful; to charismatic; to solve problems from head to heart, in all, to serve the best of its ability, the students of the day. WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 30, 1914 WHO WILL BE FIRST? The Student Council has announced its intention of taking the initiative in the formation of county clubs to boost for the mill tax for state educational institutions. The plan is a good one. Heretofore the organizations have been loose, and have accomplished little. With a good start much may be done. This is a legislative year; a measure will be introduced to submit the mill tax to the vote of the people for a constitutional amendment. Constitutional amendments are difficult to get, and much work will have to be done. And by work, wire-pulling is not meant, but publicity and explanation. The measure is beyond doubt a needed one, a good sound means of financing state institutions, that will do away with petty school politics, and will provide an ever-increasing revenue as population increases. A legislature with a policy of retrenchment cannot curtail the educational institutions. To progress and expand properly a University must make plans for the future. With an uncertain income this cannot be done. When the call comes for clubs to organize, get busy! So, if the county clubs will work, there is a great deal that they may do. In other schools in Kansas the students have secured large endowments—but they have worked. AT THAT PARADE Your conduct Saturday night may decide whether student government is kept or abolished at the University. When the pep paraders go down town the temptation to raid stores and picture shows is a big one. Once suggested, it spreads. The Chancellor has expressed the hope that the students will conduct themselves in a lawful manner—he has also said that student government hangs in the balance. Draw your own deduction. It cost one merchant last year 50 dollars to treat the students—or rather to agree to their demands. And if the students do restrain themselves—well, there are plenty of pepful Lawrence merchants who enjoy a parade as much as its participants, and will do the right thing. AGAIN THE PLACARDS Although the University has been in session only a little more than a week, the Adams Street approach to the Hill is as littered with papers and dirty posters as any back alley. Multi-colored placards adorn the lamp posts, are stuck on the fence palings, are trampled underfoot along the way. Since the police last year declared enforcement of the card-tacking ordinance, ways have been sought to gain publicity without disobeying the law. This accounts for the decoration of fences and lamp posts. Why not keep the approach clean What's the use of having the prettiest campus in the country, if we can't keep it pretty? Think it over, you who seek publicity through placards. FRESHMAN "HONOR SYSTEM" In spite of the fact that the class of '18 went on record as favoring the honor system, (although the resolution did not state just what it considered the honor system to be), Dr. Naismith has been compelled to ask them to refrain from jumping out the window at hygiene class. The number is big, the chance is good, but it's a long, long, way from putting in practice the well-sounding opinions expressed by the class. Essays Picked Young THE K. N. G. The K. N. G. boys are the onl; fellows in school who get their dress suits free and do not have to pay to see the basketball games or football slaughters. Most of the men are good looking and when washed and ironed and in their uniforms, create about as favorable an impression a red tie at a Junio Prom. The ma- cabler is called the "bookies," as they are cluled in the society behind their backs, are perfectly harmless, but they carry big guns and wear a string around their head to hold their cages on. They are extremely useful as ushers, and on occasions have made very successful attacks on Snow Hall. A K U. team recently won a prize for the team's most impressive prizes prefere to shoot off at the mouth, so life for a college soldier is war. Pity the Librarian Perhaps the following, taken from "The Secret Book" (MacMillan), by Edmund Laton Pearson, will explain m not constantly laugh and sing: A few questions a librarian has to face in the course of a day's work. "What is the square of 96?" At times behind a desk he sits. "What dictionary is the best?" "Don't you admire E. Poe?" "How tall was preset him?" "How much perfect e. P.e." “What is a Gorgonzola cheese?” "You mind if I leave baby here?" “What is the fare to Kokomo? At times about the room he flips— "Have you a life of Sairy Camp?" Haf you the Der Hohenozellern "Are oysters good to eat in March?" matter. "Can you lend me a postage buy?" stamp? By asking questions such as these: "How old, I pray," was Sister Ann?" "Who said. To labor is to pray?" "What woman first invented mits?" "I'll Brunnel wear a satin sirt" "that book I used o see?" "I guess you don't remember me?" 'Ouest, mél, la grand Larousse." "How do you use this catalogue?" "A red one—can't you find it now?" `Where shall I put this apple peel?` "Who ferried souls across the Styx?" "Are green bananas full of starch?" starch?" "What wages do they give you here?" here. "Say mister, where's the tele- phone?" "What should if cats have fits?" "Do you say 'two-spot' or 'the dog'?" "How do you spell 'anaemic, please?" "Please, which is right? to 'lend' or 'lead.'" "Come find my book—why make a row?" "Come find my book—a book called 'Shapes'." "On, "hear that noise. Is that my dog?" daniel did. Daniel Lambert "How much did Daniel Lambert weigh?" "how much does his hook- why make a "Have you the rhymes of Edward ear?" **ROW?** "Have you a book called 'Shapes of Fent'?" INTERCOLLEGIATE RELATIONS Pleasant intercollegiate relations are as important as good Nebraska spirit. A spirit in a University which does not foster the best of relations with other universities is not good spirit. The publication of an accusation against a rival university or do our own body or represent any good and will rancor in the hearts of our competitors. of fear?" "Please, which is right? to lend" From start to finish let every loyal Nebraska remember that he owes to visiting teams the utmost courtesy and fair play. We must uphold the ideals in our athletics that our cultural colleges inspire. Our importance is our identity. If we do not put the underlying principles to practice, we University world. Kansas, Iowa, Ames, Kansas Aggies, Missouri, and all the other institutions of rank in the West, are anxious that we relegate all foolish wrangles to the In this issue the Kansan begins the publication of favorite stories that have bloomed in K.U. class-rooms for Io, these many years. These anecdotes will be vouched for as authentic, the perennial flowers of professional wit. Refusal to smile at their recital, it is said, has meant funks in some instances, while a chortle of laughter has earned a high mark for many a stude. So read these choice anecdots from famous K.U. funsters and be ready for any emergency. Here's the first: scrap heap along with the other barbaric elements which have dropped by the wayside--Daily Nebraskan. Favorite Yarns of Kansas Professors FOOL'S GOLD By H. P. Cady, forum of Chemistry Professor of A seedy looking man stole lessly into a chemist's office and closed the door softly behind him. He sounded heart, what I say in "Kin anybody hear what I say in here?" he asked anxiously. "Not a soul," the chemist assured him. Whereupon the man produced a package carefully wrapped and handed it to the chemist, with the query: "What is this stuff, anyway?" After examining the contents, the chemist replied: "Why, that is iron pyrites, commonly known as fool's gold." "Oh, about three dollars a ton in 'carload lots.' 'What's it worth?" asked the seedy fly. "Just my peky luck!" exclaimed the questioner. "Dern if I ain't the biggest fool in the war with a widder's farm an 'went an' married the widder." HARVARD'S ANTI-CASTE POLICY OPERATIVE Six hundred or more youths entering Harvard College as freshmen this year will be housed, fed, humanized and educated together in splendid structures owned by the university and specially constructed to provide environment at once more fraternal and paternal (from the college officials' standpoint) than has been seen in Cambridge for many years. From the artist's point of view the completion of this group of buildings fronting on the Charles is an event that brings much satisfaction. The day of individual caprice and wilfulness and "go-as-you-please" in choice of sites and types of architecture apparently has ended, and henceforth the university will take its place with others in forming something like harmony and propriety in external development of the institution. To a moralist the new plan of enforced residence of all beginners, most of whom are in their teens, in quarters where they can be influenced by ideals of conduct that are not wholly self-derived and contemporary, is significant, indicating a restoration in part of that earlier ideal. His official response to which he had a higher priority which once was presided over all parents and guardians children to college, but which of late years has not always been characteristic of American college practice. Harvard's new president, like Princeton's recent one—Woodrow Wilson—is much concerned over his duties to the freshmen, who are sons away from home and their first break with influencers that have brought them to right places where they need friendly oversight and academic community good will until they stand firmly on their own feet—Christian Science Monitor. Student Union Barber Shop Try our hot lunch, chili a specialty, 'california Fruit Stand.' Adv. Students' Shoe Shop P. O. Burget, Prop. 1107 Mass. St. All Standard Tonies 1200 Tenn. F. M. TIDROW, Prop. Everything up to Now LIGGETTS BOSTON CHOCOLATES As well as Lowneys Always guaranteed Fresh Good Work a Specialty. Prices right. We also repair and cover parasols. McCulloch's Drug Store. Haskell's Big Home Game Your only chance to see the Haskell Indians in a real football game on the home grounds will be next Friday when the Redskins clash with "Big Bill" Hargiss' Normalizes. "The Kansan is all right," said Chancellor Frank Strong, this morning. "It is an unusually good college paper. I am for it. I sincerely hope that the Kansan will allow bi circulation. It certainly seems that a college paper that is one of the best in the United States should have the full support of the University." CHANCELLOR FRANK STRONG 'INDORSES DAILY KANSAN We'll Be Glad to Start You a Kansan Right Away —You have until Nov. 1 to pay— Don't Be a Sponger Subscribe Today! Swede Wilson's For Billiards Phones 540 DROP IN ANY UNIVERSITY MAIL BOX. Are You Reading YOUR Copy of The Daily Kansan? The University Daily Kansan: Watkins National Bank Capital $100,000 Surplus & profits $100,000 The Student Depository A Good Place to Eat at Anderson's Old Stand Johnson & Tuttle Propleiters 715 MASSACHUSETTS STREET Please put me down for a year's subscription to the University Daily Kansan for which I agree to pay $2.50 before Nov. 1, 1914. R. E. Protsch Signed... Rent a No. 5 Oliver in perfect condition three months for $4.00. The Oliver Typewriter Company, Kansas City, Mo. e-o Give her a good box of chocolates and she will appreciate them. Wilson's Drug Store has a full line of the best makes and kept in a large refrigerator case—always fresh—Adv. Want Ads FOR RENT- One double room nicely furnished, also one single room at 1221 Tenn. St. 14-3* FOR RENT—Rooms and board for girls. 1145 Indiana. Phone Bell 1512. 41-3* Mail your want ad with 25 cents enclosed to the Daily Kansan-want ads are payable in advance. WANTED—A student barber at once—Kaw Barber Shop, 910 Mass. St. 7-6 FOR RENT- Two rooms for girls, at 1237 Iodread. BELL 2181W. 11-3 LOST- Brindle bull pup answering to- name of Juke. White muzzle, feet, and tip of tail; ears clipped. Missing since Thursday. Notify Acacia house, 1541 Tenn., and receive re­ ward. $1.1*$ Address... DROP IN ANY UNIVERSITY MAIL BOX. $1.50 up. are fast in color and steadfast in service. ARROW SHIRTS Cluett, Peabody & Co., Inc. Makers PROFESSIONAL CARDS W. C. M. CONNELL, Physician and Surgeon. Office, 819 Mass. St. Bell 399, Home 9342, Residence, 1346 Penn. Tenn. Bed 1023, Home 639. J. F. BROCK, Optometrist and Specialist in Scientific Glass Fitting. Office 802 Mass. St. Bell phone 695. HARRY REDING, M. D. E., eye ear, nose and throat. Glasses fitted. Office. F. A. A. Bldg. Phones, Bell 513, Home 512. G, A. HAMMAN, M. D. Eye, ear Satisfaction Gunaranteed. Dick Bldg. Fax: 516-872-4030. DR. H. W. HAYNE, Oculist, Lawrence, Kansas. J. W. O'RYON, Dentist. Over Wilson's Drug Store. Bell Phone 507. J. R. BECHTEL, M. D., D. O. 833 Massachusetts Street. Both phones, office and residence. G. W, JONES, A. M, M. D., Diseases of the stomach, surgery and gynecology. Suite 1, F, A. A, Bldg. Residence, 1201 Ohio St. Both phones. DR. H. T. JONES, Room 12, F. A. A. Bldg. Residence 1130 Tenn. Phones 211. DR. H, L. CHAMBERS. Office over Squire's Studio. Both phones. S. T. GILLISPIE, M. D. Office corner Vermant_and Warren St. Residence 728 Ind. Phones 596. Mrs. Emma Brown- Schulz, Dressmaking and Ladies Tailor- ing. Suits. Modescoped. Phone Bell 914. 913 Mass. St. Neck. next door to Anderson's Bakery. CLASSIFIED Ladies Tailor. Merchants National Bank ED. W. PARSONS. Engraver, Watchmaker and Jeweler. Diamonds and Jewelry. Bell Phone 717. 717 Mass. Jewelers MRS ELLISON, Dressmaking and Ladies' Tailoring. Evening gowns a speciality, 1032 Vermont. Phone Bell 2411 West. MEALS and SHORT ORDERS Dinners Sunday in a Special Ice Cream Confectioner Mrs. M. Brockelsby-Wilson, Kierster College of ladies tailoring and dressmaking. Over 909 Mass. St. Bell 2109. MORGAN'S SPECIAL MEAL TICKETS 1345 Mass. St. Bell 262 Subscribe now for the Daily Kansan. Subscribe now for the Daily Kansan. Plumbers PHONE KENNEDY PLUMBING KENNEDY AZADA lampsa. 807 Masa KONAMI 658. 807 Masa KONAMI 658. Hair Dressers HAIRDRESSING, shampooing, scalp and facial massage, shampooing, hair goods, "Marinello" toilet preparations. For appointments call Bell 1372. Home 51. The Select Hair Dressing Shop, 927 Mass. St. Barber Shops Go where they all go J. C. HOUCK 913 Mass. GO WHERE you get the Best. Bob Stewart's Barber Shop, 838 Mass. St. Cafes For a good clean place to eat, where you don't get "gipped" go to the MARKET CAFE, Room 1, Perkins Building. Millinery WANTED -Ladies to call at Mrs. McCormick's up-to-date millinery parlorts to inspect our new line of hats. 831 Mass St. Shoe Shop FORNEY SHOE SHOP, 1017 Mass. St. Don't make a mistake. All work guaranteed. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN TODAY TODAY AURORA - Paramount Pictures Daniel Frohman Presents Henrietta Crossman in THE UNWELCOME MRS. HATCH IN FOUR PARTS FRIDAY: "One Wonderful Night" KAW VALLEY ICE CREAM CO. 470 Either. Phone 10 W.9th We specialize on clubs and fraternity orders. Let us handle that next order. ICE CREAM AND OYSTERS $30 TO California Oregon Washington AND British Columbia Low Fares to Other Points Very liberal step-stop-other, pritiques. Tickets good in all locations. Baggage free from Lawrence to all California common points. Rock back trays, insurance, safety. Fare to all locations. On Sale Sept. 24 to Oct.8,1914 Santa Fe W. W. Burnett AGENT Lawrence, Kans. Student Headquarters SANITARY CAFE A Nice Clean Place to Eat LUNCHES - SHORT ORDER Across from Kress Store 916 Mass C. W. Steeper C. W. Steeper Cleaning, Pressing and Remodeling Club For up-to-date men and women 10 years K. U.-Satisfactory results Satisfaction Guaranteed Arl H. Frost and Karl L. Williams, Agents 042 - 024 - 924 LA K. U. Barber Shop and Bath Rooms The Only Electric Mass- age Machine in the City 727 Massachusetts Street Razors Honed. Ground and Exchanged W. F. Weise, Prop. Shorthand and Typewriting Bookkeeping and Banking Penmanship and Spelling In fact, a large number of special train- ing 188C can be had at Lawrence Business College "The Tailor" Frank Koch Full Line of Fall Suitings We Guarantee to Save You from $5.00 to $7.50 on Your Suit or Overcoat! $15^{00} WHY? One price only, and that price cash . . . Think this over and compare these garments with those selling elsewhere at $20.00 or $22.50. M. J. SKOFSTAD 829 Massachusetts St. Lawrence Kansas 1907 SENIORS "Butch" Stuewe "Butch" Stuewe For President of the Class Parker The Tailor High Class Modern CLOTHES 847 Mass. St. Francisco & Co. Livery, Hacks and Garage 812 VERMONT STREET Phone 139 Tales Out o' School Prof. George N. Watson, Dean L. E. Sayre, and Prof. L. D. Havenhill were called to Atchison today for testimony in the Dick trial. Pug Ferguson, a former managing editor of the Kansan, is now employed upon the Dala (Texas) Dispatch. In a letter he tells the following story of the way they do things in Texas. Pug says that he was assigned to cover a murder case. The murderer, a negro, was known, and the police were after him. Pug went down to the police station and started out with two detectives who were working on the case. The three took a street car and started to the scene of the crime. On the way out the detectives were telling of the desperate record of the criminal, when suddenly the car came to a jerky stop, and the motorman and conductor ran around to the front end. Being a good newspaper man, Pug followed them to see what was the matter. A negro had been run down and killed and, "the funny thing about him," Pug says, is this; "that negro was the very criminal that we were after." A seven mile walk as a regular daily exercise is not at all unusual for Prof. H, P. Cady of the department of chemistry. Some days his exercise is more difficult than the day that he has walked eight or ten miles. Professor Cady has for some time carried a small pedometer with him in his daily work. Each evening he has looked at the tiny instrument and has recorded its reading so as to get a good average. During commencement week last spring Professor Cady found that he exceeded its seven mile average by three miles a day. His average daily walk during the summer is the pedometer to register seven miles. What would make that in a year? Well, there are 313 working days in the year. Multiply 313 by seven and you will see that he exceeds the 2000 mile standard set by many doctors. Are you afraid of hornets? No? Well, maybe you think so now, but you might not if you discovered a nest of them on your front porch, as the Sigma Nus did the other day. A few of the most daring men approached the enemy cautiously, bearing brooms, door mats, and such engines of war, but their first attack met with such ferocious retaliation that they retired in disorder to the middle of the street. The perfunctory advances and numerous perfunctory advancements were decided to abandon the fort to the enemy, as their position was not a strategic one anyway. All subsequent news from the field has been censored so heavily that there is nothing left to publish. Rest room for tired students.—Grigr's—Adv. Seeing the movies will be one of the features of Dean L. E. Sayre's reception to the faculty and students of the department of chemistry Wednesday night. Dean Sayre has given a reception each year to the workers in his department, but this year he is planning a novel entertainment. During the reception the guests will hold a get-together meeting at the city M. Y. C. A., from which place they will go in a line party to the Grand Theatre. Russell Gear says that "Macron" Gregory of the Student Union must be a smart man. Mr. Gregory claims to know by memory 680 different moves in the game of checkers, and Gear (who) has said that he knows that such a memory should constitute a claim to brilliancy. When you drink McNish's aerated distilled water, you may be assured of the very best. Phone 198.-Adv. Your Drinking Water Have you seen the swell smoking room at Griggs's? It's yours to use. Women students who want to play tennis will have to bear the rigors of outdoor sport for a few days longer, as the indoor courts for the new tennis club are not yet ready for use. Dr. Alice L. Goetz intends to substitute indoor tennis for a part of the regular gymnasium class work this winter. This will be welcome news to a great many of the girls. "Meet me at Griggs."—Adv. Landon Laird, last year's sporting editor of the Kansan, writes from Kansas City that he is content with his position on the Star and will probably not return to school this year. Laird has handled several good stories for his paper, and is making good in his work. Private telephone booth at Grigg's. Both phones.-Adv. The enrollment for the fall term at the Kansas State Agricultural College has reached 2185, as against 2226 at the same time last year. This Will Show With Whom You Vote A new shipment of films at Squires Studio, 1035 Mass. St.-Adv. Below is reproduced Article IV of the rules of the Student Council for tre election of class officers. This will show students with which class they will vote. Election will be held a week from next Friday: Engineering School: All students having credit for 27 hours work, shall vote as sophomores. All students having credit for 76 hours work shall vote as alumni. All students having credit for 107 hours work shall vote as seniors. College: All students having credit for 20 hours work shall vote as sophomores. All students having credit for 50 hours work shall vote as juniors. All students having credit for 80 hours work shall vote as seniors. Law: All students having credit for 17 hours work shall vote as sophomores. All students having credit for 44 hours work shall vote as juniors. All students having credit for 71 hours work shall vote as seniors. Pharmacy: All students having credit for 26 hours work shall vote as sophomores. All students having credit for 62 hours work shall vote as juniors. All students having credit for 84 hours work shall vote as seniors. In the two year course each student shall be given 72 hours additional credit after his first year in the Pharmacy School. In the three year course each student shall be given 36 hours credit after his first year in the School of Pharmacy. This shall not hold if the student enters the Pharmacy School with 17 or more hours credit. Medics; All first year medics shall vote as juniors. All students completing 26 hours work in the School of Medicine shall vote as seniors. Note: This shall not conflict in any way with our own policies. Or use other colleges. Fine Arts: All students having credit for 16 hours work shall vote as sophomores. All students having credit for 40 hours shall vote as juniors. All students having credit for 64 hours work shall vote as seniors. Graduate Students.: All students holding a degree from K. U, or any other college shall vote as seniors. offer college math Students entering K. U. from other schools shall vote in the class i which their credit hours place them. Special Students: All special students shall carry 10 hours work before being classed as freshmen. Special students having 16 hours work shall be classified within the school in which they carry the major portion of their work. If a student changes schools, the director number of hours required between the two schools will be as sophomore, multiplied by the number of years enrolled and added to, or subtracted from his credit hours. All students not having enough credit hours to vote as sophomores shall vote as freshmen. K. U. DAMES WILL CONVENE Wives of Students Will Hold Social Meeting on Wednesday of Next Week K. U. Dames will meet at the home of Mrs. Clarence S. Stewart, 1028 Mississippi on Wednesday afternoon of next week. The K. U. Dames is a branch of the Intercollegiate Association of Dames which has organizations at the Universities of Hardenwood, Yale, Cornell, Princeton Illinois, and Chicopee. All women who and chicopee students of the University are invited to become members of the club. Meetings are held twice a month. A. K. U. affair—the D. A. R. Ball at F. A. A. Hall, Oct. 31st. $1.50 per couple.-Adv. UNIVERSITY WOMEN WILL EAT OF THE JUICY WIENIE All of the university are invited to attend a wienie roast to be given Saturday morning. The crowd will assemble in front of the Gym at nine o'clock and proceed from there to an appropriate place. All of them to go are asked and their name, address, Hakubush or Naomi before Saturday, so that those in charge of the affair will know how many to prepare for. The event of the season—the Halloween Ball of the D. A. R. at F. A. A. Hall, Oct. 31st, $1.50 per couple. —Adv. MRS EUSTACE BROWN WILL RECEIVE FRESHMAN WOMEN A reception to all freshman women will be given by Mrs. Eustace Brown, adviser of women, in her rooms at 114 Fraser Hall,ridge. Mrs. Frank Strong and the sophomore women will assist on the receiving line. Coffee and sandwiches. California Fruit Stand...Adv. TODAY ONLY VARSITY TODAY ONLY Charles Dicken's Immortal Book The Chimes Featuring Tom Terriss and entire David Copperfield cast, produced by the Shubert Theatre Attraction in five reels. FRIDAY: "The Bond of Love" all star Yale student cast by Yale Dramatic Association. PEERLESS GARAGE FOR TAXICAB Call Either PHONE 100 CLARK CLEANS LOTHES Phone 355 PUNCH TICKET $1.50 TEN PRESSES CLARK LEANS LOTHES All Pressing Done by Hand! CLARK CLEANS LOTHES 730 Mass St. "Bert" vs. "Bill" At Haskell next Friday a real football game will be played for the first time in years between Bert Kennedy's Redskins and Bill Hargiss' Normalites. Don't fail to see it. CLARK CLEANS LOTHES Burt Wadhams The COLLEGE INN BARBER Go to the HOME BAKERY For Good Things to Eat C. M. Williamson 933 Mass. St. A. G. ALRICH PRINTING Binding. Copper Plate Printing, Rubber Stamps, Engraving. Steel Die Embossing. Seals. Badges 744 MASS. STREET SHUBERT Matinee Wed. & Sat The Bird of Paradise THE DRAMATIC COVELOY OF THE PRICES--25C TO $1.50, WED. MAT. 1 Next; Sam Bernard in "The Belle of Bond Dainty Jewelry Adds Much to Your Personal Charm— TEMPERATURES IF well selected, it imparts an air of good breeding and refinement to both men and women. You will be greatly in- interested in the new designs we are now showing. POLICE DEPT. OF POLITICS Their inspection will afford you pleasure and does not oblige you to purchase. Can you not come today? Gustafson The College Jeweler UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN FRESHMEN 'Tis more comfortable to be under a Freshman's cap than under a Sophomore's paddle. Get your Freshman's cap tomorrow at Ober's HEAD-TO-FOOT OUT-FITTERS A BOOKMAN WALKS COAL COAL COAL AND WOOD We will be glad to meet old and new customers among the clubs and fraternities of the University. A. C. GIBSON 208 W. Pickney Both Phones 23 As Prof. C, C. C. Crawford, of the department of history, was on way to the golf links the other day. a woman living on Tennessee street caught sight of his golf outfit. Immediately she ran out of the house with a broken umbrella in her hand and cried lustily to Professor Crawford: "Wait a minute, sir, could you mend this for me?" Particular Clearning and Pressing FOR PARTICULAR PEOPLE 12 W. Ninth. Lawrence Pentatorium Phones 506 "England Wakes Up" Like a thunderbolt camet the dispatch. "Two Thousand British Casualties." What happened then is told in a letter from Samuel G. Blythe in this week's Saturday Evening Post On Sale Thursday GRIGG'S 827 Massachusetts St. One of our Special shoes in which we take much pride. It's a QUEEN QUALITY shoe—high in quality—distinctive in style—supreme in the estimation of discriminating women. $4.50 THE "RITZ" Made in soft patent or dull mat kid leathers with black cloth top. Soucie Cuban heels. 'VARSITY SCRIMMAGE SHOWS LOTS OE PEP Backfield Has Little Trouble in Breaking the Freshman Defense See them in our north window FISCHER'S LINEMEN WORKING TOGETHER Line Opened up big Holes for Wheaton's Fast Backfield to Plow Through Shrimage work at the Varsity football bowl was more satisfactory yesterday than Monday's practice. The backfield had little trouble breaking the freshman defense and they worked down the field repeatedly. Woods, Coleman, Russell, Lindsey, Sproull, and Coolidge were the most consistent ground gainers and could have scored a dozen touchdowns against the tyros if the coaches had not called them back. The linesmen are working together and developing what promises to be the strongest defense in the Valley. They mopped up the freshman and easily opened holes for the backs. A team led by Coach Cmarty to season the Varsity line and get it ready for Nebraska, Oklahoma and Missouri. The old reliable K. U. Barber Shop welcomes you fellows back and will be pleased to meet you and new recruits at the stand, 727 Mass. St. Call and get acquainted. Adv. Make dates now for the Halloween Ball of the Daughters of the American Revolution. Benefit of the scholarship fund.—Adv. Good home made pies. California Fruit Stand—Adv. Jayhawk Feathers Two Varsity Men Hurt Can't Swear on K. U. Gridiron Swearing has been prohibited on McCook Field or in the clubhouse. Coach Wheaton issued the order to the football men today and says it must be enforced. Detwiler's Shoulder Still Bothers Tom Mulloy was tangled up in a mass play yesterday and got a nasty kick on his knee. Andy Groft was also injured when a freshman's foot collided with one of his ribs. Both will be put to play in the William Jewell game. Detwiler's Shoulder Still Bothers The x-ray picture of Detwiler's injured shoulder showed a bone torn loose and pushed upward. He also injured his U, captain and probably will keep him out of the first two or three games. Todd Dumps Varsity Men Todd Dumplins and many others One of the deadliest tacklers on the deadliest team is Todd, the Lawrence high school quarterback. Several times the big Varsity backs broke loose and the Todd dumped them by pretty tackles. Wants More Men for Freshman Line Coaches McCarty and Weidlein have issued a call for more freshmen to reinforce their line. The Varsity teams, in opposition and the freshmen coaches are looking for beef and muscle. Team Can't Loaf on Both Coaches Coach Wheaton was not, with the squad yesterday. His business keeps him in Kansas City and permits him to come to Lawrence only three or four times a week. Jay Bond keeps the ball going when Wheaton is away and when they both are on the job, the Jayhawkers get strenuous workouts. Send the Daily Kansan home. A Real Foot Ball Game Not a track meet nor a runaway but a good hard football game will be played at Haskell next Friday at 3 p.m. when the Indians meet the State Normal of Emporia. FOOTBALL Big home game at Haskell Emporia State Normal $ ^{v}_{s} $ Haskell Indians Friday, Oct. 2 3 p. m. Admission 50c Special seats are being arranged on both sides of field for this game. Plenty of auto space will be reserved. See what "Big Bill" Hargiss and his team can do with Bert Kennedy's Red Skins. It will be a good stiff game, and perhaps your last chance to see Haskell here. Bowersock Theatre October 3 Matinee and Night Mr. Wm. Wamsher Presents The Pearl of Dramatic Purity THE CLIMAX MUSIC PATHOS SONG HUMOR BY EDWARD LOCKE Musical Theme by Joseph Carl Briel EXACTLY AS PLAYED One Year, Weber's Theatre, N. Y. City, Six Months, Grand Opera House, Chicago PRICES: Night---25c, 50c, 75c and $1 Musical Theme by Joseph Carl Briel 1913 Orchestra Whose Successors Were Chosen Last Night Matinee----Adults 50c, Children 25c. Seats on Sale at The Round Corner Drug Co., Friday THE CONCERT ORchestra OF SANTA ANASTASIA VARSITY RUNNING ON BRICKS Cross Country Team Training for Work on Paved Streets in M. V. Race The Varsity track team will do a great deal of running on the paved streets of Lawrence this winter in order to familiarize the men with running a cified cross-country. Last year the cross-country race at Missouri was run over a course made up almost entirely of paved streets. The course for the Missouri Valley cross-country to be run at Ames early in October has not been announced and Captain Edwards is taking no chances on having to train the team for minutes to run on the pavement. It is hoped that more men will come out for track even if they do not hope to make the team. Taking a run with the team three times a week is good practice. Equipment may be checked from the Athletic Association. Dates and Teams on K.U. Schedule The football schedule is now complete, and runs as follows: Oct. 3—William Jewell at Lawrence. Oct. 10—Emporia College at Lawrence Oct. 17—Drake University, at Des Moines Oct. 24—Kansas Aggies, at Lawrence. Tobeka. Nov. 14 - Nebraska University, al. IU. Nov. 7 - Washburn University, at Tonks Oct. 31 — Oklahoma University at [ ] Nov. 21—Missouri University, at Lawrence. Frehmans Caps all ready Safety First一 get yours now Johnson & Carl