- 9 1 THE SUMMER SESSION KANSAN 74 VOLUME X. BIDS ON STADIUM ARE UNDER HALF MILLION NUMBER 6 University Officials Pleased With Figures Given by Several Contractors MR. FOSTER TREASURER Registerar Appointed to Handle Million Dollars Subscribed in the Movement With the receiving and tabulating of the Stadium Memorial bids this week, Chancellor E. H. Lindley made the pleasing popular announcement in a semi-official way at the Lawrence Chamber of Commerce meeting Tuesday noon that the stadium would probably be completed for something less than half a million dollars. He said that reductions in labor costs and aid would work to get much more of the new fund in getting much more for the money subscribed than had been thought possible at first. The Stadium and Union building were each looked upon as something more than a $500,000 proposition, but now the money saved on one project will go to make the other much better. From the enthusiasm manifest among the alumni and students, the entire fund is hoped to net more than a million dollars, but the accounting will show that every dollar has been spent wisely and for the building of a greater University. The bids for the building of the K. U. Memorial Stadium were opened Tuesday morning in the Chancellor's office. The bids were as follows: A. R. Stimson ... $428,950 Unlimited Construction Co... $463,438.78 Construction Co... $555,755.87 Fogel Construction Co... $753,164.53 A. S. Hocker Co... $182,141.85 A. R. Stimson of Topeka was the low bawler as shown by the above. He offered to build the Stadium complex and he fitted it with hammers and it fited in twelve months. Some arrangement must be made concerning the fall football season. The committee is considering the advisability of trying to complete one or two sections at a small additional cost. It is thought that the larger gate receipts would more than offset the extra cost. The bidders were asked to rejuire their bids in an effort to cut down, the time with as little added expense as possible. The executive committee will meet in Chancellor Lindley's office Saturday morning at 9 o'clock to consider the revised bids and determine if awards are issued is notvery definite yet, but there will be no unnecessary delay on the part of the University officials. George O. Foster, registrar of the University, has been appointed a permanent treasurer of the Kansas Memorial Corporation. Chancellor Lindley made the appointment upon the recommendation of a committee composed of Mayor George Kreeck, Irving Hill and Prof. W. J. Baumgartner. These men had given this matter several weeks consideration. The committee considered Registrar Foster the logical man for treasurer because, along with his other qualifications, he has a wider acquaintance among the alumni of K. U than any other person in Kansas Mr. Foster has been a judge during his thirty years of service. He has also beer treasurer of the athletic association for a number of years. Mr. Foster will have charge of all moneys of the Corporation. He will attend to the collection of all notes and the disbursement of all funds. "It may be necessary to establish a separate office for the handling of the treasurer's business," Mr. Foster said. FINANCE COMMITTEE NAMED Chancellor Lindley, Chairman of the K. U. Memorial Corporation, appointed the finance committee of that organization last Wednesday. The following persons were named: Thornton Cook, Columbia National Bank, Kansas City, chairman; C. H. Tucker, Lawrence, vice-chairman; Chester Woodard, Central Trust Co; Topeki; Irving Hill, Lawrence; and T. J. Sweeney, Lawrence. This committee will hold its first meeting at noon today. Leona Baumgartner, c23, left for Charlevio, Mich., last night as official delegate for the Kansas Alpha chapter of Pi Beta Phi to the majors and graduates from chapters all over the United States will be in attendance. Convocation is Called for 11:30 This Morning Convocation will be at 11:30 o'clock Friday morning. Periods will be shortened five minutes. Dr. Frank Strong will be the speaker of the morning, and there will be special music by the School of Fine Arts. W. H. JOHNSON. Board of Administrators Held Meeting on Budge The Kansas State Board of Administration is in session with Chancellor E. H. Lindley. They are working out the budget for the University for the ensuing biennium. Jas. A. Kimball is the business manager of the board. The other members are H. J. Penny, E. L. Barrier, and E. N. Underwood. GOOD TIME PLANNED FOR FRIDAY NIGHT Committee Has Planned Party For Students Not Going The entertainment committee has announced a social program for this evening. It has been arranged餐, it has been arranged a party to not go hope to spend the Fourth. Home THE SUMMER SESSION KANSAN, FRIDAY MORNING, JULY 1, 1921. The program will consist of two parts, the first of which will be held at 7:45 o'clock in front of Fowler Shops. This part of the program will be an exhibition of the students of the department of physical education under the direction of Nellie Martin. Students will attend dances, and drills. This will be followed by a short period of community singing. Following this the students will go to Robinson Gymnasium for the second part of the entertainment. Musie will be provided for those who wish to dance in the gymnasium, but will be given plenty of chance to meet their friends and to have a general good time. The committee expects a large attendance, and have prepared this program especially for the Summer Session student, who do not find it conducive for the week end and the Fourth. Stadium Drive Is Now Under Way in Atchison A preliminary meeting was held in Atchison last Tuesday night, in which an organization was effected for the purpose of putting on a campaign for the K. U. Memorial Stadium-Union fund. The campaign will cover the city of Atchison and the surrounding county with Ed Shaw, committee was chosen with Ed Shaw, and Orlin W. Leed, secretary. The first meeting will be held July 11. The chief speaker of the evening will be Dr. Forrest C. Allen, manager of athletics, K. U., Alfred G. Hill, Alumni secretary, and secretary of the Memorial Corporation, will also be present to give a talk and to generally help接待 to the committee. COMMITTEE PLANS OUTINGS The campaign will be started or July 18. Chancellor E. H. Lindley will be the speaker for the occasion Prof. F. P. Obrien, chairman of the entertainment committee for the Summer Session, says that it is the plan o f the committee to invio and urge the different departments who are open during the summer to entertain the members of their department. In case the department is small, it is urged that they combine Picens, socials, and excursion were planned. Obrien says, "In this way people will get better acquainted and learn that play as well as work is possible in any department." Plans Are For Entertainment of All Departments Red Cross Will Entertain All vocational men are requested by John Brodie, president of the vocational men's organization, to be at the meeting to be held on Monday, June 7, at 3:09 o'clock. The matter of affiliation with the Disabled American Veterans of the World War will be taken up at the meeting, according to Mr. Brodie. Red Cross Will Entertain Fourth of July Celebration Call to the Summer Session Will Join City Festivities Whoop 'er up! The Summer Session students, instructors and everybody else on Mount Oread will celebrate the Ever Glorious Independence Day next Monday, July 4th, with the City of Lawrence alumni, business men and citizens generally, at Woodland Park, all day and evening. The University co-operation with the city committee has been shown by the bringing of Professor Burgess Johnson, an outdoor orator of national renown, for the address of the day. He will make a special visit to Lawrence for this occasion and will give the intellectual touch to the proceedings, with his oration "The Yankee and His Ancestors," about noonday. In several other ways, the University will have a big share in the events of the day. A score of the instructors, whose athletic fame has been restored by the leadership of Doctor "Phog" will try their "come-back" about 11 o'clock in the morning with a team of livey youths, Boy Scouts from 15 to 18 years of age, in a baseball contest. If the youngsters will men will buy them a full outfit of ice cream and lemonade for ice cream or afternoon, they has permitted his name to be used in the line-up for encouragement since he is expecting to join the celebrators during the greater share of the day. What is looked upon as the piece de resistance of the entire day is the promise of some bankers of Lawrence to provide an opportunity to the service men students on Mount Oread to eat supper with the pretty Red Cross survivors. Of course, any service women can join with the nurses in taking care of the veterans during the late afternoon social entanglement. The remainder of the day's program will be well taken care of at the park. It will consist of a round of amusements, basket picnic gatherings, concerts and exhibits. Not too late is the time to leave. Not at the house and the University but Haskell Institute en masse and the country folks for miles around will join in the delights of the day. Mount Oread will be barren official PROF. PRUNTY SPEAKS BEFORE MEN'S FORUM Women Will Be Invited Participate in the Open Meetings Meetings He also gave the following statistics: Of the total amount of taxation in the United States, over 92 per cent was spent for wars or past acts of war; only one per cent was used for administrative purposes, while only 1 per cent was used for the advancement of education in our country. The United States has 6 per cent of the world's landmass and one-third of the world's wealth. The second Men's Forum meeting was held in Room 10, Green Hall, Wednesday evening at 7 o'clock. President Farris called the meeting to order and disposed of the business on hand first. The Forum decided to invite university men to attend the open meetings, the first evening will be held next Wednesday in the Little Theatre, Prof. M. L. Smith, of the Emporia State Normal, will be the main speaker of the evening. ly for the occasion. This is not saying however that some of those most enjoyable when alone two by two gatherings will not utilize the quiet under the shade trees and celebrate in their own particular way. They are excusable by general consent, else K. U. would not attain the co-educational perfection and consideration that is our romantic youth. Professor Prunty also brought out that the public school is the place for the coming generation to get their foundation for a mental, moral, spiritual, and economic education consequent on successful education should be the most efficient and well-trained teachers it is possible to obtain. The remainder of the program was a talk by Prof. Merie Prunty, principal of the Tulsa (Oklaahoma) High School. Professor Prunty is in charge of the classes in High School Administration at the University this summer. He emphasized espousing the value of salience in our preservice system. The value of being able to put our plan of education before the voter and before the people who are educating their children, was very high, he said. Professor Prunty, in closing, made a final plea to the educators to take a place of leadership and responsibility in the education of those who have failed before, in future years, and brought out the necessity for securing better-trained AFTER THE FOURTH THoughts There will be several days after the Fourth of July. One of these days will be Saturday, July 9, on which day and date it is officially promulgated that all classes will be held in regular order so that none of the Summer Session recitations may be lost. "The students do not ask two holidays in one week," said Director W. H., Johnson yesterday in announcing the changed schedule. "The custom of the University has been to hold classes Saturdays when more desirable to make up for holiday dismissals. All want to do their summer work completely d without being curtailed so the regular schedule for the last day of the 10 o'clock will be set forward 'o Saturn foveron.'" Conversation may be called on Tuesday morning, July 5. As soon as Director Johnson can see Professor Johnson, the visiting author for this course, we will endeavor to arrange to have the latter remain in Lawrence to address an All University conversation in Fraser Hall, probably at nine o'clock Tuesday morning, since the speaker has to proceed to Emporia in the early afternoon. As professor of English at Vassar College, the visitor from the East is already personally known to many educational workers in Kansas and western states. He is considered one of the most eminent men of the country to be secured for this occasion and definite announcement will be made his conversation to be made in city bulletin boards and in urban newspapers will mean an overflow gathering in Fraser Hall chapel, it is predicted. DEMONSTRATE FILMS USED IN INSTRUCTION Given to Show Practibility for Use in Secondary Schools Schools Films prepared by the Society of Visual Education were shown at Fraser Hall Tuesday night through the courtesy of the film department of the Extension Division. The films shown were: "The Westward Movement," a historical film; and "The Central Plains," a薄膜scape; and "Work of River Ivy," a film. The purpose of the demonstration is to show the practicality of the use of moving pictures in secondary schools. The audience was composed chiefly of school administrators and teachers who were interested in the show, and shown were just received by the Extension Department this spring and had not been shown before. The use of these films and others for classwork in schools can be seen on most est shows at the Extension department. Prof. Frank H. Hodder, of the department of American history, was asked to criticise the first film from this point of view. He said, "I believe that the moving pictures will be of greater use in other fields of study than in history. The presentation of scenes is too fast for a thorough study of history and in many places creates false impressions of circumstances, of causes, and of time." and more efficient teachers to guide the students along the right path to leadership and administration, A second demonstration, slightly different in nature, will be given by the department Friday night, July 15. The meeting was closed with a few remarks by President Farris, who cordially extends to all men and women who are interested in problems related to invitation to the meeting to be held next Wednesday evening. The well-informed typewriter salesman declares that any man that makes as good a machine as the Underwool is entitled to a sematroch, anyhow. NO KANSAN TUESDAY, DAY AFTER HOLIDA There will not be any Summer Session Karsan published next Tuesday morning. $\Omega$ will be the Fourth of July holiday. The Independence Day celebration committee has asked that there be no work in Lawrence next Monday to interfere with the city-wide celebration. The Kansan editors, reporters and printers have agreed to unite with the local committee. The next issue of the Kansan will not appear until Friday, July 8. Spring Semester Grades Are Ready for Students Announcement from the registrar's office yesterday afternoon was that student grades for the spring semester are now ready and can be obtained at the window. Thus far the clerks have been knitting up grades. Now this morning at 8 o'clock we will the office officially opened for distribution of a 'B', B's, etc. Those students of the regular session who are not in Summer School will learn their fate by mail. Some of them have left stamped, addressed grade cards with the Registrar. These cards contain a statement that later a statement of grades will be sent to the parent or guardian of each regularly enrolled student. F. P. O'BRIEN DIRECTS EDUCATIONAL SEMINAR The Graduate Seminar in education met Thursday afternoon. Two reports on research study were made and discussed. The first report by Rice Brown, principal of the high school at Emporia, was on the sub- "The Relation of Scholarship to Curricular Activities in High School." Prof. Rice Brown and Fernan ondo Bermejo Read Research Reports The second report was given by Fernando V. Bermajo, who is工作 on his thesis, on "The Analysis of Public Education in the Philippines." About twenty attended this meeting. The Seminar is under the direction of Prof. F. P. O'Brien, director of the bureau of school service and research study, Professor O'Brien is the adviser for the graduate students. Other professors in the School of Education are cooperating by assisting the students with their research problems. The graduate conference group met Tuesday at 5 o'clock, and about thirty people attended. The group discussed several problems for investigation in school work which they will use in their work next year. Professor O'Brien is also directing this group. H. W. Humble Resigns To Go to Brooklyn, N. Y Tuesday Prof. H. W. Humble of the School of Law handed in his resignation to take effect at the close of the Summer Session. He will go to the Brooklyn School of Law of the University of New York, New York. Professor Humble came to the Law School from Cornell University as an associate professor in 1908. In 1913 he was raised to the position of professor and has held this position up to the present. The Humbles will leave for New York City in fall of September as Professor Humble takes up his new york fall. Fire Does Small Damage In Dyche Museum Office The basement of Dyche Museum caught on fire Tuesday afternoon, June 28. No one was in the building at the time with the exception of Dr. Coghill, acting dean of the School of Medicine, and Adolp Boese, assistant Instructor in anatomy. Mr. Boese had left his office but on detecting smoke, returned to his office to find the room on fire. The fire probably started from a Bunsen burner which had been burning in the office. With the help of Dr. Coghill, a group of summer students gathered around him and put out the fireman, the fire was soon put out. Not much damage was done. SCHOOL OF RELIGION FACULTY ANNOUNCED Dr. Arthur Braden and the Rev. F. E. Witcraft Make Up Faculty TWELVE COURSES OFFERED Application Has Been Made for Charter Incorporating the Institution Announcement was made this morning by Rev. Frank Jennings, president of the school that the curriculum for the School of Religion to be established at Lawrence this fall had been selected and that two members of the faculty had been decided upon with the expectations that another member would attend. The fall. That of the school has not yet been decided upon. It was also made known that a charter had been applied for, incorporating the school. The faculty members approved by Chancellor Lindley of the University are Dr. Arthur Braden and Rev. Forest E. Wiercraft. It was required of the faculty that they have an A.B. degree and the degree of B.D. or its equivalent. The courses decided upon total thirty ours, ten in each of the first two emesters and ten hours not assigned o any semester. The first course is Development of Biblical Literature" under Reverend Witcraft. There are four hours of credit in this school for his course, which deals with the Old Testament. The second course is also taught for his course. The third, on the life and teachings of Jesus. The remaining four hours of credit are in two courses of two hours each under the Reverend Witcraft and Dr. Drazen. The course under the latter leads with the development of the New Testament church, while the other leads with the Reverend Witcraft tells of the prophets as statement and reachers. The second semester offers a second course in the development of biblical literature and in the life and teachings of Christ. "The Teachings of Paul" are the title of the biblical literature" are the titles of the other courses offered in this semester. The unassigned courses are "Israel's Messianic Hope," "Aperpirical Literature," "Hebrew Institutions and the Expansion of Christianity." ART EXHIBIT OPEN AGAIN Thayer Collection Contains Many Important Designs The Thayer art exhibit will be open again next Wednesday afternoon from two o'clock until five. About fifty visitors viewed the exhibition last Wednesday under the supervision of Miss Moody. This art collection illustrates the development of design in textiles, ceramics, glassware, and costumes. There are a number of important paintings of the American schools, and Chinese and Japanese paintings, and 200 Japanese prints of exceptional merit. There are about 11,000 items in the collection, the most being textiles, of which there are examples of Coptic and Byzantium textiles. The following well-known American painters are represented: George J. S, Murphy, Winslow Homer, Homer Martin, Paul Doughey, Emily Carlson, Richard Miller, Jonas Lie, and Robert Henri. The following European painters are represented: Joseph Israels, Mesdag, and Sadolla Bastida. New Curios Received At Museum This Week C. D. Kunner, assistant curator of the Museum of Natural History, has just received some interesting additions to the collections now in Dyche Hall. The most interesting ones are the gift of Miss Harriet Greissinger of the department of music. One of these is a picture of Crop Foot, son of Sitting Bull, who surrendered his horse to Breckhorn at Fort Burfow in 1881. Sitting Bull insisted that the horse surrendered, and not he. There is also a pair of buffalo horns, and a pair of moosecas from the Philippines. Some birds' eggs from the East and a pair of vulture eggs from Texas are among the new donations. 08 THE SUMMER SESSION KANSAN Published Tuesday and Friday mornings by students in the Department of Journalism from the press of the Department of Journalism. Entered na 2a second class mail matter September 19, 1876, in Kansas City, Kansas, under the Act March 3, 1879 Honorary member, fifty cents for the last week's session. Phones: K. U. 25 and K. U. 100. Address all communications to the Summer Session Kansas, Lawrence, A. W. Reynolds. Editor A. W. Reynolds Edito Lloyd Ruppenthal Business Manage FRIDAY, JULY 1, 1921 AN OLD FRIEND PASSES Can it be that Ye Old Cookie Jar is now extinct? That big brown jar filled with warm spicy cookies which one ate to satisfy his after-school hunger and whose contents never grew stale for want of appreciation. Those rough ill-shaped oatmeal cakes that helped pass a rainy Sunday away while one read a thrilling detective story. Those crisp sugar cookies piled high on a plate, to crunch when seated under a June sky, with an *alm tree* for protection and a frosty glass of lemonade to accompany them, those crusty sugared doughnuts fresh from the hot stove, to enjoy on cold snowy days after a long walk from town, seated on a high stool in the kitchen. But best of all were the little bumpy rocks filled with walnuts at night (any time after twelve) when having returned from a strenuous having returned from a strenuous dance the cooky jar raider supplied himself generously and wended his necary way upstairs. SUMMER DREAMS But cookie jars must have genius behind them, and with Grandmother out rounding up the vote in the city election and with Mother striving to win the prize at the Wednesday bridge club there seems to be little hope of their survival. Anyway, the butler's pantry is entirely too small—B. C. "Lives there a man with a soul so did never to himself has said, 'How I wish I could go back to my boy- hood days and fish and roam the country as I did when a youth.'" At the beginning of the warm summer months the old swimming hole and fishing trips of yore are memories that stir the most grim man of business and make him want to go out to his home town and see all the old gang, and learn how they are getting along. To see Smitch, Smith, Brown, Williams, and the rest of them often takes such a strong hold on the man who has been too busy for years to keep track of his old friends that he finally decides to take a little vacation and go home and renew all his old acquaintances. But what a different story he find when he arrives on the old "two-ten." 'he old gang is scattered to the four corners of the world. Smith is in Alaska running a mine; Smith is in London at the head of an American exporting house; Brown is in the fruit importing business—left a short time ago to take a trip through Europe and the Orient; and Williams is in the hardware business. So our visitor calls on Williams, only to find that he is doing fine but has no time for fishing or swimming. The business man stays around the home town for a few days but in the end he gives the trip up as a complete failure and goes back home. The vacation has served only to emphasize the fact that the past lives best in memory, and any effort to reconstruct in actuality ends in the realization that it is gone forever.-C. D. S. SHOPPING From the standpoint of the newspaper sport page the great American sport may be baseball or golf or what not, but as every woman knows, the greatest of American sports is Shopping. How many men, in the face of a boiling July afternoon, will devote an entire afternoon to the puruance of some hobby? Yet a woman, with no thought of singular courage, her most intent interest being on her powder-puff, will spend hours buying a spool of thread and matching a sample of silk. The first qualification for an expert shopper is a pure and unadulterated imagination. What but a fantastic conceit can enable a woman, who knows that her bank book shows a balance of $6.45 to her credit, to wall into a shop and try on fur coats by the dozen, only to come to the realization that it is so hard for her to deceive which she seems to like. O course, she'll be back to look at then farther and to make up her mind That time will probably be the next year when her bank account is it much the same condition, To see a group of lovely dresses it the window is but a cue for the shopper to go in and look at all of them. Necessarily at times it is a severe temptation to keep from buying one—but the game of shopping says nothing of buying. Another requisite is patience. I takes so long to stand one's turn to be waited on when there is a crowd. Then after one has finally received some attention it is miserably exasperating to find that there is no cambogue crepe-de-chine in stock; only a deep heavy yellow that would not do at all. Persistence is also required. One ought always to be sure of getting exactly what was wanted. "Accept no substitutes" has become more than a byword. The only disadvantage of this sport of shopping is that there has not yet been enough agitation among the leaders to warrant the establishment of a "shoppers' league" wherein a number of competitive games might be scheduled. So far it has been a game played solitaire. It is hoped that under the present administration steps may be taken to organize the game in a proper manner and have it placed in the same exalted position as bestowed upon the regular sports of the sporting pages. —S. J. B. The downtown picture show receipts have a tendency to vary inversely to the number of quizzes announced for the next day on the Hill. Some years ago a fire at Columbia University destroyed a lot of valuable manuscripts. Would it not be advisable to have a fireproof vault in each building on the hill, in which to put the ungraded quiz papers. The plumbers still remain the autocrats of the labor situation. A course in plumbing might fill a long-felt financial need among the teachers attending the summer session. Whether Dempsey or Carpenter wins in the fight on Saturday, a lot of people are going to say "I told you so." A pair of sixes won the pot in a crap-game in western Kansas. A couple of bums, each possessing a six gun, held up the game. "Bums are failing the Kansas harvest," says a headline. Where are the tar-famed K. U. "Bumaders?" New York and Jersey City hotels are full of prize-fight devotees, and "standing room only" signs are out. There was plenty of room for lovers of fighting in the Argonne about September, 1918. THE SUMMER SESSION KANSAN What will the sport writers use to fill their columns after the prize fight is over? Not a single rally yet, and the University has three baseball teams in the Twilight League! Mrs. E. L. Buchanan, who was the sole survivor of an Arabian massacre, has shattered another of our pet ideas concerning the "mysterious East." She says that haraens are not places of ease and but of indescribable filth, like our tenement districts. An entertainment by the dancing classes has been announced for Friday evening. The question is, will it be comedy or tragedy? Many students are worried over whether they will have a concrete stand to sit in for the Missouri game fall, when they haven't paid their first stadium pledge yet. "Women will rule the world." Can there be anything more than an anterior motive for the interest that men are now showing in the Dempsey-Carpentier bout? Times that try men's souls: When you arrive at the box-office of a show with your girl, discover that you have left your bill-book at home, and find that your pocket contains exactly $.00 in small change. A phenomenal discovery has been made on the Hill. A young man who was not in the service during the war has admitted that he didn't care much about going, and didn't try. A prominent baseball umpire says that the lot of the umpire is not so hard as pictured. Umph! That mcv we 'e so, but their ivory's mighty solid. We often wonder how the boys used to make their dates when there were no telephones. be so, but their ivory's mighty solid. Concerning the controversy over the eight-hour day, it might be said that eight hours a day is not enough, when working for one self, and too much when working for someone else. There is plenty of skirt length on the campus but it is not altogether impartially distributed. The Symposium Random Paragraphs on Topics of No Great Importance About Mount Oread SOME POINTER FOR NEW STUDENTS No, good people, you who are here for the first time, neither Van nor John Shea teach any chasses. University of Kansas students are not called Jayhawkers, because they eat at the Jayhawk Cafe.-A. E. G. That board walk in front of the Ad building, is not temporary, it is permanent. Or at least it begins to look that way. PERHAPS EDISON WAS RIGHT The fact that Tom Edison believes the average college graduate is unusually ignorant may be the reason why students are returning to summer school. We must admit, in spite of the pessimists, to the contrary, that education seems to be in full sway. Yea, verily, Tom may be right. So if you call a familiar number and get chilled by the reply, don't blame anyone but remember that the fall is yet to come and the world is not bad after all—A. F. N. Brick's, the paradise of the sociable youth, is closed at 7 o'clock. "Cluck" and his band no longer endure the crowds and last, the porches, familiar hang-outs for the lounge lizards, have been deserted by the "sweet young things" and replaced by the stern school-marsh who is searching for the fourth After a glimpse of the carnival at Woodland Park, those of us who have lived in this vale of tears for twenty-three or more years can look back on the good old times when we were little shavers, and went to the carnival—or "street fair," as it was sometimes called—with thirty-five or forty cents in our pockets and had a g-l-o-r-i-o-u-s time! THE CARNIVAL Those 'were the days when Bo-Be, the wild man, Boscop, the snake-eater, Annie Redline, the fat woman, the giant and the dwarf, the educated horse, and last but not least, Fatima, the Oriental, held undisputed sway and gathered in the nickles, dimes and quarters of the gray boys. In breatheless we awe watched the high-dive make his daring leap; we stood around under the flaring and sputtering gasoline torches and listened to the bally-hoos; we tried our luck at the roulette wheel where the prize was not all of us, and when some time to go home we were happy and tired, and convinced that we had seen some of the wonders of the big world. The carnival carried an atmosphere of romanticism to us, it was a breath of the outside world—which we knew only in our geographies and storybooks—brought before us. The kids of today seem harder to fool than we were, but, we may be getting old and just imagine it. At any rate, we'll never forget the days when the "greatest show on earth" came to town, and when our most popular sport—other outdoor or indoor—was to talk about science. So we all went forward to stimulate the actors to stimulate the articles and articles of the剧—C. L. S., In my Enjoyment Stables there are several stalls wherein I keep my hobby saddle-horses. Some of them I ride quite frequently and others only occasionally, but all are fairly well-roomed and looked after. My Pet Hobby Is— SEVERAL THINGS—WHAT'S YOURS? This little animal in the first stall I call "Hyacinthin." I only use him in fine weather of fall and early spring. About October there comes a never-falling trill in puttering around with tin cans, black loam, leaf mold and the dull-looking bulbs. Then comes the spring-water planting, the thick furrowing, and lastly, the flowering—great waxy spikes of creamy white, pink, and purple, filling the furnace-heated air with heavy, sensuous sweetness. The next stall is "Jazz's," but she got so fractions I couldn't keep her in it, so had to get rid of her. Her place is, "to let." And now we come to my favorite team of hobbies—I can't decide between them because they work double so well. The first 1 call "Habit" because I had such a hard time breaking him. However, he is now the most docile and useful or all my hobby-steeds. Having once been accused of "being hard to get acquainted with," I determined to overcome such an objection, and to make a hobby of making friends. "Habit's" team-mate I have named "Scribbling." He is a vicious, jealous, selfish little brute, who requires lots of time and won't be put off for any other. I have even mounted him at midnight and come back exhausted. This particular hobby has a fascination that none of us can resist. Without him I could never have satisfied rhetoric teachers, diaries or this "col'mor," So, I'm tempted to call him "favorite" and say, "What's yours?"—A. L. C. A. G. ALRICH Printing, Engraving, Binding, Rubber Stamps, Seals, Stencils Office Supplies 736 Mass. St Dora Helmick Would like voice or harmony pupils Can show you recommendation Phone 1257 TYPEWRITERS Bought Sold Rented Repaired Exchanged Phone 548 737 Mass. St. Lawrence Typewriter Exchange WHEN DOWN TOWN TAKE YOUR MEALS AT THE Meal Tickets, $4.40 for $4.00 $2.20 for $2.00 STUDENTS ALWAYS WELCOME WANT AD Supreme Cafe 914 Mass. St. STUDENT HOE HOP Across Street From Courthouse Shoe Repairs Shoe Findings R. O. BURGERT, Prop. 1113 Mass. St. STADIUM BARBER SHOP —A good place to get into for you feel better when you get out— "The Shop of Service" FOR RENT—Nice clean cleaning rooms—near University, Reasonable, 1228 Louisiana St. Phone 2726, 8:11 YES SIR! YOU'RE NEXT 1033 Mass. St. PROFESSIONAL CARDS LAWRENCE OPTICAL COMPANY (Ex- clusive Optomatrists). Eyes exam. glasses made, Office 1025 Masa. DRS. WELCH AND WELCH - PALMER GRADUATES. Office 927 Mass St. Phones: Office 115, Residence 115K2. PROFESSIONAL CARDS DALE PRINT SHOP, 1027 Mass. St. Phone 228. CHIROPRACTORS DR. G. W. JONES, A. M. M. D. Di- REN of stomach, surgery and gynaec- istry. Suite I, F. A. U. Hgl. Phone Office 15, Residence 3216. Hospital 1745. DR, J. R. BECHTEL. Rooms 3 and 4 over McCulloch's Drug Store. Office Phone 2431. Residence Phone 13313. DR. H. L. CHAMBERS, Suite 2, Jackson building. General practice. Special attention to nose, throat and ear电话 217 VANITY SHOP—Marcelling, manicur- ing, shampooing—Mrs. Anna John Summer Joys Wolf's Book Store 919 Mass. St. A summer day—a charming book. Our summer books are attractive and interesting. See the new titles. son. Phone 1372. Stubbs Bldg. DR. H. REDING—F. A. U. Building. Ear, ear, nose and throat. Special attention to fitting glasses and tonsil work. Phone $13. from Varsity Everything to To Write With in A Torchy Comedy BACK FROM THE FRONT Wallace Reid FRIDAY AND SATURDAY "The Love Special" An Eversharp at 50c A Corona at $50.00 F.I. Carter Stationery 1025 Mass St. Bowersock A Cosmopolitan SPECIAL Straight is the Way FRIDAY AND SATURDAY also Pathe News No. 48 WATKINS NATIONAL BANK 1047 Massachusetts Street Capital $100,000.00 Surplus 100,000.00 Our Policy: Helpful, friendly, co-operation. Your Appearance May have a very great deal to do with your success in life. You will at least have a better chance to succeed if your wearing apparel is in spick and span condition. Our modern equipment and efficient workers enable us to give you the highest degree of satisfaction in both laundry and dry cleaning service. You will appear at your best all the time if you let us be your clothes specialist. Lawrence Steam Laundry Phone 383 12 . = 501 1.5 THE SUMMER SESSION KANSAN 1. SOCIETY Richard R. McGee, c'21, of Kan- kas City, was in Lawrence this week to attend the wedding of Louise Eliot and Ervin Brisee. Mr. McGee will be attending York City where he will be in the employ of the General Electric Co. President H. B. Ober, of the Lawrence Chamber of Commerce, who is known as one of the greatest town enthusiasts for K. U., has been joined by Mrs. Ober in an auto tour through Colorado gathering data, with pleasure as a side line, that will benefit the University and community generally. They started Tuesday afternoon. Dean and Mrs. F. J. Kelly have started on an overland tour of Nebraska, Iowa and Wisconsin. While in the north, Dean Kelly will attend a meeting of the National Education Association in Des Moines, Iowa, on July 5 to 8. --s list will be continued in th n next issue of the Kansan. ) A farewell party in honor of Mary Hart and Marguerite Daugherty was given at the Registrar's office last Monday evening. June 27. Those present were: Mary Hart, Marguerite Daugherty, Mr. and Mrs. George O. Foster and son John, Rohnman Tucker, Louise Burch, Pauline McCormick, Eileen Mullan, Nelri Nelson, Veta Lear, Marcia Baty, Lydia Pearson, and Mry Sakter. "Toward the close of the party, a lunch伞 was served at which Mr. Hart responded to the departing girls, to which Miss Hart responded. Miss Hart and Miss Daughter have been employed in the Registrar's office for some time and are leaving soon for their re-entry. Mrs. Hart has New Ulysses, Kansas, and Miss Daughter at Caldwell, Idaho. Both will spend the summer at home. Overwork is Given as Reason For Musician's Collapse DUDLEY BUCK MUST TAKE COMPLETE REST Dudley Buck, who came to the University to conduct a master school of voice, is now confirmed to his bed and under physician's care at his home in New York, according to a wire received by Dean H. L. Buler of the School of Fine Arts yesterday, Professor Buck had been here only two weeks when he was forced because of heart trouble to cancel his work. Dr. A. J. Anderson of Lawrence, whom he consulted here, advised him to discontinue his work and take a complete rest for three months. This advice was corroborated by the New York physician of Professor Buck. Director Buck was favorably impressed with the University during his short stay here. He said, "I consider the University of Kansas most fortunate in having a man of Duan Buttell as head of the School of Fine Arts." Those students who are taking other work in the Summer Session and desired to continue their special musical training started under Mr. Buck are being taken care of by Dean Butler who has sacrificed all thoughts of a part time vacation so as not to disappoint them. With his office and department work, he has his day安排 well. Managed the artists who came especially to have voice coaching by Mr. Buck have been refunded their fees and have returned to their homes or summer engagements. Y. W. C. A. Activity Shown In Round Robin Letter A round robin letter has been started by President Henrietta Mitchell of the W. Y. C. A. to go to all the first cabinet members of the Y. W. C. A. Many of the members are located in different places. One of them, Jessie Dana, is attending the University of Colorado, where she is now at K. U., while the others are at their various homes. The purpose of this round robin letter is not only to get all the news of what the girls are doing this summer, but to get any new ideas which any of the girls may have for plans for the organization for next year. It is planned that the Big Sister committee will meet all the new girls at the train next fall. The first cabinet is in itself a Big Sister committee with President Mitchell as its captain. The cabinet plans to be back on the Saturday before college starts on Tuesday in order that plans for the year may be completed, and work started. Roll of Summer Session Students MEN (Continued from last issue.) Iudson, Edward F., 12 W. Jaffman, Harold C., 104 W. 17th. Jaffman, Harold C., 104 W. 17th. Hunfied, Alfred C., 1121 Ky. Humphreyes, John Ephrisman. Huston, Alfred C., 1124 Ohio. Huston, Harry E. K. Invio, Pablo R., 1409 R. I. Irvine, Arthur H., 1233 Teen. Irmann, Erhard H., 1234 Teen. Isern, Ehrin H., 1614 Ky. Twy, Hylo rheil, 1614 Ky. Isern, Horst H., 1316 Ky. Jackson, Paul S., 909 Vt. Jaggard, Robert Kenneth, 1345 Ky. Janicke, Michael O., 1043 Teen. Johns, Chas H., 1425 Teen. Johns, Chas H., 1425 Teen. Johns, Earl J., 1215 Oread. Johns, G. Harry H. Johnson, F. Evan. Jolly, D. E., 1002 R. I. Jones, G. Harry H. Jones, Chas F., 1338 Vt. Jones, Geo. Wm. 1019 Mich. Jurado, Pedro W., 1409 R. I Johns, Geo. Wm. 1019 Ind. Jones, Chas F., 1338 Vt. Kastruf, Henry Frederick, 917 Ohio Keever, John W., 1386 Teen. Kessler, John W., 1386 Teen. Kerr, Archibald V., 1024 Ky. Kessler, Irvin J., 1328 Ky. Kiddow, Robt L., 1140 La. Klefer, Everett D., 1304 Mass. Klocz, Emil, 103 Oread, Krapp, Leslie E., 123 Oread, Kramer, John H., 124 Tom, Korb, John H., 122 Delaware, Krane, John H., 124 N. H. Tunstall, Emil, 133 Ohio, Lane, Giles H., 125 Oread, Lane Lang, Donald B., 1537 Tenn. Law, Thos. E., 1127 Ohio. Mason, Satson E., 1084 Iowa. Armund M., 798 Ala. Leavel, O. W. S., A. E. House. Lenington, Geo. E., 1245 Ordell. Lewis, L. Willis, 933 Vt. Linsdale, J., 706 W. 12th. Loewen, Otto B. 825 Ohio. Lonborg, John C. 1439 Tenn. Long, Carl E. 643 Ind. Nicollet, J., 606 Long, Walter Sterrett, 1116 Miss. Longwell, Alden L., 912 Ala. Lovan, Fletcher A., 1407 N. H. Lutten, Wary A., Lucas, Cecil E., 1007 Tenn. Lutz, Clarence O., 1045 Tenn. Lynn, Goe. 1247 Ky. Mhl' kobert H., 100 Iaul Mnh' Vin, Vn Iaul N. H. Mudden, Lawnies, 1336 Tenn. Mandeville, Frank P., 1301 Mich. Margu, H. 1633 Mt. Manker, Sanford M. 1340 Tenn. Markham; H. V., H. 30V. W, 14th. Marshall, Hugh A., 19 W. 14th St. Marshall, Russell C. Meacham, Era D., 1310 Tenn. Mollott, Lennett B., 1223 Oread. Melton, William E., 1947 Barker. Mierle Kris, S. 1838. Tenn. Olsen, Albert W., 1836. Tenn. H. Moore, Alvin Abern, 1301. N. H. Norman, Norman J. 10. 49. H. Morris, James, 1246. Ohio. Morris, Wm. W. 1249. Ohio. Morris, Wm. W. 1250. Ohio. McAdams, Carl A., 1246 Oread, Burney Murray, L., 1333 Tenn. McCalmon, Chas. A., 801 Me. McClintock, W. S., Jr. Mcbuck, J. McCue, Ernest F., 545 Tenn. McHale, Terry C., 103 Tenn. Mhale, Thomas C., 140 Tenn. Heights, McKibbin, Harry C., 14th & Oread. McKinnev, Earl B., 1145 Ind. McMurphey, John W., Room 7, Jackson, Blvd. No. Bill McNaught, James B., 1420 Ohio, Naher, Peter Geo. McNaught, James B., 1420 Ohio McNault, Alfred C., 1301 Mich. Alley, Allison F., 1301 Mich. Nelson, Morton E., Haskell. Nelson, Richard R., 125 R. I. Netts, Chris P., 125 Dread. Netts, Chris P., 1425 Tenn. Nevels, Z. J., 1033 Inud. Neville, H. F., 1439 Tenn. Nevitt, James Russell, 1222 Miss. Newbury, Saw L., 1517 R. I. Newby, Alph L., 1517 R. I. Newton, Hiram D., 917 Ohio. Vicholas, B. B., 1001 Me. Batting Wm. Dean 1268, Bradford Wm. John 1068, Edgarhead Bryon J. James E., 1109 Ohio O'Donnell, Harold F., 745 La. Hara Wm. J., 1324 Ohio. O'Donnell H., 1225 Oread O'Leary, Edward. O'Leary, Paul M., 1106 La. Oles, Lawrence M., 1537 Tenn.曼堤勒,艾德尔 L Parker, Lewis E. 1145 1-2 Ky Patterson, Edward W. 1317 Ky. Patterson, Geo R. 1145 Patterson, Glen P. 1145 Patterson, Phil L. 1245 La. Patterson, Tyler C. 917 La. Penney, Elin E. 1101 Tenn. Penney, Elin F. 1101 Tenn. Phillips, John Foster. 1840 Vt. Pipps, Read, 1245 Orad. Platz, Chas R. 1940 Miss. Marmonenae, Takla T. 1319 Ten Fewell Poulou, Adrian E. 1127 Ohio. Preyer, Ray W. 1015 Ky. (Continued from last issue.) WOMEN Hake, Helen, 1244 Ohio. Iate, Declec, 1244 Ohio. Hall, Augusta Elenora, 1254 R. I. Hallock, M. M., 1603 La. Hamill, Elma Grace, 1245 La. Hammond, John O. David. Hammond, Thora Esther, 1508 Haskell. Hampus, Lucille, 1145 La. Hangen, Eva Catherine, 1131 Ohio. Harlord, Louis France, 1145 Mass. Harper, Leila, 1145 Ohio. Harper, Leta Maule, 1323 Ky. Harris, Katherine A., 1223 Ohio. Hart, Georgia Morris, 901 Maine. Haven, Haven, 1316 Ohio. Hawk, Erma A., 1122 Ohio. Hawkins, Enice Lucile, 1116 Tenn. Haynes, Georgia, 1110 Indiana. Haird, Michael, 1124 Id. Haysilp, Elizabeth, 1224 Ohio. Healey, Margaret W., Haskell Inst. Heath, GLadys Esther, 1322 Mass. Henmanover, Ruby, Murs. 1001 Maine Henderson, Bernice. 1014 Maine Henderson, Renee. 1027 Maine Henderson, Era Mae. 701 Maine. Henderson, Margaret. 1328 Ohio Henderson, Margaret. Russell Henderson, Ruth, 1736 La. Henderson, Ruth, 1736 Miss. Heess, Mary Whitcomb. 1211 R. I. Hicks, Gladys Lila. 1246 Miss. Hildinger, Lucile. 1415 Ky. Holden, Eric. 1414 Ky. Oathe, Earl McVity. 937 Mg. Hodgin, Helen May. 1316 Teen. Horner, Alice McY. 937 Mg. Oathe, Earl McVity. 937 Mg. Hood, Kathleen Agnes, 1145 Ind. Hofstad, Bertha Cecelia, 1245 Oread Hofstad, Susie Lillian, 1346 La. Houru, Haila. Houghton, Emma Florence, 506 West. 6th. Hoffman, Ida Rose, 1247 Ohio. Hogue, Helen Schenck, 1246 Miss. Holmmann, Mary Louise, 116 Ind. Jacobs, Jared, 1244 Ohio. Holme, Jane 1011 Ind Brown, BJ, Hoffman, Dora, Elizabeth, 1234 Oread Hoffman, Ibn, Lao, 1347, Qbio Howard, Marian Ruth, 1541 Tenn. Howland, Vadherd, 1238 Miss. Hubbard, Ruth Geneva, 1345 Tenn. Huff, Elemere Ethel, Huff, Elemere Ethel, 1230 Oredak. Humble, Mrs., University Hts Husband, Agnes, 1416 Tenn. Husband, Agnes, 1416 Tenn. Husband, Mabel Edit, 1415 R.I. Ideen, Gayl, 1224 Ohio. Indewan, Anna Albertine, 1332 La Isborn, Nanna Albertine, 1327 Ored Jackson, 1625 Ohio. Jackson, Dorothy M., 1316 Kiy Jacobus, Elizabeth Bryan. James, Eileen Virginia, 1297 Oread Jewell, Eena Fern, 1221 Tenn. Johnston, Clara, 1116 Ind. Johnston, Colette, 601 LA. Jones, Batrice Jee, 1140 Mills. Jewell, Eena Fern, 1221 Tenn. Jones, Mary Lenora, 813 N. J. Kanode, Ed May, 912 Ind. Karnes, Faye Effe, 2000 Mass. Karne, Faye Effe, 2000 Mass. Kanode, Efaye May, 912 Ind. Karnes, Faye Edye, 2009 Mass. Kealing, Frances Frederica, 1120 Corn. Keeler, Allecine Ruth, 1011 Ind. Kelora, Lora Amme, 1216 Ind. Kelley, 126 Tenn. Kellen, Hillman, 1500 Mass. Kendall, Marguerite, 321 Mo. Kennedy, Ruth, 117 Pa. Kennedy, Orr, 120 Tenn. Kerr, Elizabeth 1145 La. Kildoo, Esther Jane, 1122 Ohio. Kiebe, Emma, 1147 Ohio. Ketemma, Kenny, 1252 Ky. Kimura, Ana Laura, 1200 Tenn. King, Edna Cooper, 1011 Ind. Kirby, Mrs. Odessa Florence, 435 Ill. Kirtman, Kurt, 1252 Ky. Klisse, Doris Kathryn, 1244 Ohio. Knapp, Cecilia Ledona. Knox, Eliseo, 1029 Ky. Keohan, Barbara, 1218 Pa. Klein, Dori Kathryn, 1244 Ohio. Knapp, Cecile Ledona. Knox, Eliseo, 1029 Ky. Keohan, Barbara, 1218 Pa. Klein, Dori Kathryn, 1244 Ohio. Knapp, Cecile Ledona. Knux, Geneva Mildred, 1314 Tenn. Kunkel, Chris, 1218 Pa. Kouznt, Ferne, 1011 Tenn. Kunkle, Geneva Mildred, 1314 Tenn. Kunkel, Chris, 1218 Pa. Kouznt, Ferne, 1011 Tenn. Lambader, May B., 1246 Miss. Landon, Marie Elaine, 944 Ala. Lane, Mrs. Arthur, 1204 Pa. Lane, Mrs. Arthur, 1204 Ind. Lanz, Ethel Maria, 1014 Miss. Laptad, Marguerite, 2445 Mass. Larson, Mary Elizabeth, 804 Pa. Lawson, Hazel Berdine, 1245 Oreac Leach, Caroline Elizabeth, 1414 Tenn Lee, Rebecca Josephine, 2024 Ohio. Ebencogge, Caroline Elizabeth, 1200 Tenn. Leidy, Pauline, 1008 Tenn Leidy, Pauline, 711 W. 12th. Lesh, Lotttie Lorraine, 340 Ind. Lewis, Dorothy Ruth, 1175 Pa. Lewis, Dorothy Ruth, 1175 Pa. Lokeirst, Mr. Augustine, 906 Ohio. Jasmey, Mrs. Frankie K. 1045 Miss Loesh, Edch, Elem. 1255 Tenn. Loehs, Edch. 1255 Tenn. Mrs. Lena May, 2013 Ohio Lorimer, Margerant Emily, 2013 Ohio Lorimer, Margerant Emily, 2013 Ohio Lieberk, Lienard, Margaret Mildred. 546. Light, Flora Dethra. 112nd. Inden, Lindgren, Els E., 1234 Oread. Mack Nutchurion. Mabel Nerlert. Macon, MS. Inkley Inst. Inc. Louise Belleau. 608 Kw. Maloy. Eva Helene. 1142 Ind. Martfording, Mrs. Else Lenoral. 1142 Former, Margaret Emmett Cuman, Adah Flossidel, 1131 Ohio. Macdonald, Margaret A., 1345 Tenn. Marran, Paula Kateleen, 1247 Ohio Martin, Paulte Ehcel, 1241 Tenn Martin, Martin Charlie, 1037 Ky Martin, David Larson, 1241 Martindale, Jessie Ellen, 829 La. Mason, Josephine Mina, 931 Ill Mother, Sylvia B. 1245 La. Mason, Jillian B. 1245 Ky Matthews, Violet Gene, 1142 Ind Maxwell, Midred A. 640 R.I. May, Tressie, 1245 Oread. MAYfield, Meredith Barbara, 1037 Tenn Mchtrin, Esther, 1247 Mass Meinzer, Velma Floy, 1237 Oread. Mehrin, Esther, 1247 Mass. Meinzor, Velma Floy, 1237 Oread. Melville, Marguerite. Mertz, Mary Ursula, 916 Ohio Miles, Margaret Ann, 1223 Delaware Miller, Catherine Bentrice. Miller, Helen Miller. Miller, Elma Florence. Miller, Leona, 1238 Miss. Miller, Julia Elizabeth, 1602 Mass. Miller, Patty Alce. Miller, Iannah. Miller, Ruth, 1046 Ky. Miller, Ruth Mary, 1541 Tenn. Minkin, Francesana, 1602 Ind. Mittell, Francesca, 609 Tenn. Mitchell, Henrietta, 1220 Ohio. Mitchell, Lora M, 1100 Ala. W. 12th W. W. 10th Buhl B, A612 W. 17th Moody, Maran A, 1009 Miss. More, Lucie, 1339 Ohio. Morell, M. Zehne, 1122 Ohio. Morovsky, Marge Madge, 1006 Ind Dorothea. Mueller, Marie Frances, 1145 Lau. Myers, Mame L, 1145 Lau. Meyer, Maran A, 1009 Ind. Cuffaffery, Estella, 1200 Tenn. McCaules, Eva J, 1405 R. I. McCarthy, Mary Gabriel, 916 Ohio McClain, Elisse Odel, 464 Lau. McClaim, Eloise Odel, 464 Lau. McClaim, Margaret Catherine, 646 Lau. McCoy, Rachel Nora, 1244 Ohio. McCracken, Ann, Augusta, Kan. McDuffee, Mrs. Ophelia Lambert, 1500, Louisiana McMee, M. Charles, 916 Ohio McGuffey, Alice Wynan, 2111 Tenn. McHale, Rose Theresa, 1340 Ky. McKea, Nelle Maud, 1124 Miss. McKinney, Mary Emma, 1146 Ky. McKimey, Mary Emma, 1146 Ky. Lmaughlin, Louise Ellis, 927 La. McMullen, Elva Barbara, 1146 Inc. McMullen, Helen, 10229 Ky. McSpadden, Mrs. T. R., 1140 Miss. Naismith, Helen Carolyn, 1635 Mass. Nelson, Irill, 1301 Ohio. Naismith, Helen Carolyn, 1635 Mass. Nelson, Iril, 1301 Moho Nelson, Maule Delphine, 1725 Tenn. Nelson, Naomi Haskell, 1629 Augusta Newsome, Marle C., 1246 Mich. Newton, Frances May, 1333 Ohio. Nicholson, Edity, 1245 Orund. Nicholson, Mrs. Id Heodologen, 1245 Nigg, Clara, 603 Tenn. Norton, Emmy E. Norton, Emma E. Noyes, Laura B. O'Mearn, Edith Florence, 1031 Miss. O'Mearn, Milred Elizabeth, 1031 Oreulp, Florence Faye, 721 Maine. Otl, Gladys Mace, 820 Mo. Otl, Gladys Mace, 820 Mo. Marker, Parham, Iva Reams, 1217 Ky. Parham, Mrs. Maurie Peak. Parker, Fay, 1246 Ohio. Parker, Fay, 1246 Ohio. Otl, Pete, Ethel Mary, 1122 Ohio. Patterson, Marjorie, 1046 1-2 Tenn. Beabody, 2932 Alice, 1324 Otl. Pete, Ethel Mary, 1122 Ohio. Patterson, Marjorie, 1046 1-2 Tenn. Beabody, 2932 Alice, 1324 Miss. Perkins, Alma M. 1246 Miss. Perkins, Alma M. 1246 Miss. Perkins, Alma M. 1246 Miss. Perry, Ransy Kathleen, 1245 Oread. Peterson, Louise, 1134 La. Perry, Favoline, 1245 La. Piper, Amarie Marie, 434 Illinois. Plesse, Thela Florence, 927 La. Pool, Ma尔妮 Daniel, 11 (This list will be continued in the next issue of the Kansan.) STUDENTS WANTED who have had selling experience and are real salesmen. A steady, well-paying local proposition. Want men who will have at least one more year in school. Address Kansan Business Office or call Turner, Phone 297. Squires WANTED The College Photographer Instructor of Domestic Science and Normal Training Apply to Wm. Scalapino 1232 Louisiana St Phone 2767 C. E. ORELUP, M.D. Specialist Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat Glass Work Guaranteed Dick Bros. Building Phone 445 F. B. McCOLLOCH, Druggist F. B. McCormick Eastman Kodaks L. E. Waterman and Conklin Fountain Pens THE REXALL STORE 847 Mass. St. "Suiting You" THAT'S MY BUSINESS WM. SCHULZ 917 Mass. St. Study Outlines Complete To Send Women's Club The Extension Division has completed the outlines for a number of new study courses for women's clubs. The following new courses will be offered this fall: Romance Language Novels, Magazine Study, Contemporary Literature, American Social Possessions, Americanization, Child Labor, Citizenship for Women, Civic Improvement, Conservation of the Environment, Government and Citizenship, International Topics of the Day, National Topics of the Day, Prevention of Crime, Recreation, and Public Health. Last year the Extension Division furnished outlines for 610 man's clubs and 6167 package libraries. They are given a number during the enuing year. Campus Opinion Leo Burgner, e'24, will spend the Fourth at his home in Newton. Dear Mr. Editor: I have been noting the increasing interest that the summer session students are showing in all the plans for the stadium Memorial and wondered if they would not like to know how it will be possible for them to subscribe to the fund for its building. Many of these students attend winter games regularly, and would be as interested in the Stadium as the winter students. Of course they all know that it is a memorial to those in the service who did not return, so there would be little to do except to tell them in convocation how and where they may subscribe to the fund. Yours truly A Memorial Advocate. I hope you will find it possible to act at once. A Memorial Advocate. A woman's face used to be her fortune. Now it's the druggists. COMFORTING TOILET GOODS Face Powder Everyone should have a complete supply of toilet goods. They add so much to your comfort these hot days. Garderia . . . . . . . . . . 89c Mary Garden. . . . . . . . . 98c Pompein. . . . . . . . . . . 38c Laflanche. . . . . . . . . . 58c Helen's Choice. . . . . . . . 38c Palm Olive. . . . . . . . . . 38c Hudnett. . . . . Toilet Water Perfumes Talcum Powder Hudnett. . . . . 69c and 98c Djer Kiss. . . . $1.75 As the Petals. . . . . NEW SHIPMENT OF DRESSES Crisp New Dotted Swiss, Organdies, Fine Ginghams and Voiles Priced from $5.00 to $25.00 WEAVER'S Sane Fire Works You will find us at the foot of 12th Street on Haskell Avenue Hoadleys THE SUMMER SESSION KANSAN UNIVERSITY NINES WIN IN TWI-LIGHT LEAGUES Crimson and Blue Whip The Merchants, F. A. U. Lost to Jayhawkers HILL TEAMS LEAD RACE How They Stand Haskell Draws Third Place by Defeating Wildcats with Score 5-0. Won Lost Pct. Jayhawks 2 2 0 1.00 Crimson & Blue 2 0 1 1.00 Haskell 1 1 1.00 Haunted Block. 0 0 1.00 Wildcats 0 0 1.00 F. A. U. 0 0 2.00 In the second series of games of Twilight League baseball, both Hill teams strengthened their claim to remain at the head of the states, while the F. A. U. and Six Hundred also taller into the Sixth division. The latter team was defeated by the Crimson and Blue with a score of 6-0. The cards seemed to turn against the matchers at every play of the game. They had men on first and third during every inning of the first four, but failed to hit. The feature of the game was the hitting of Daniels for the Crimson and Blue. Despite their defeat, the merchants started out strong, shutting out their opponents for the first three innings. Crimson & Blue ... 003 21 0 — Six hundred Block ... 000 0 — Batteries: Crimson and Blue — Hundred and Seed. — Hundred Block and Reed. The F. A. U. team suffered their second defeat of the season at the hands of the merciless Jayhawks. The score was 9 to 1. The F. A. U.'s came onto the field in the first start, starting out right filling the bases first inning, but inability to hit at this point kept them from scoring. Batteries: Jayhawk—Cane and Haggard; F. A. U—Carl and Smith. The Indians proved their mettle by defeating the Wildcats at Haskell. Previous to this time the strength of the Wildcats was unknown as they failed to show up for the final game. They were then purchased Merchants. Their main weakness shown at Haskell was lack of team work. They erred repeatedly while the Indians played a consistent game with few mistakes. Nevett and Madden worked for the Wildcats. Nevett showed good form for a victory, but five injured Hampton and Anderson were the battery for Haskell. Score: Haskell .002 050 0-5 Wildcats .000 000 0-0 Blackberry pickers are wanted for the first of the week. Those who desire work call William Griffith at the M. Y. M. A. C. office. City 380. Why know when a fellow makes an "A"? When you caught that twelve-pound catfish you sneak in through the alley? Nebraska Journalist Drifting Down Rivers to New Orleans A La Style of Huckleberry Finn It is one thing to lie in a big easy chair and read of the adventures of Huckleberry Finn on his famous trip down the Mississippi on a raff, and quite another thing for a youth in Omaha to build a twofoot punt and go down the Missouri and Mississippi rivers to New Orleans. That is what a young Nebraska journalist is doing this summer. In fifty- six hours of travel he completed the distance from Omaha to Kansas City, arriving there last Friday. He estimates that he will complete the trip some time during his visit to New York where size he explores it and pays especial attention to newspapers and newspaper offices. The following is an excerpt from a letter received here. "The first purpose of the trip is the gathering of ideas on newspaper work in universities." And he mentions five years as a Boy Scout have taught me to love camping and I always enjoy preparing my own meals. Each evening I pitch a tent near the river bank and cook supper over a n ice fire. Then I stand at the camp all night. Prof. Herbert Spoke At Commerce Luncheon Prof. H. H. Herbert, summer head of the department of journalism in the University for the Summer Session, gave the important address of the day at the meeting of the Chamber of Commerce last Tuesday. He recommended the establishment of a bureau of information where directions might be given out to all visitors and shopkeepers, as well as information, and where persons might be directed as to the location of places of interest. One suggestion that met with hearty approval was the using of outside correspondents that the name of Lawrence might appear frequently in the papers of the state. It was decided that all of the correspondents established where strangers might know where to get service without driving all over town to find it. 6 More Names Wanted for Tennis The University tennis tournament will start as soon as there are enough names in to make up the schedule. Dee Miffin will be in charge, and the names may be handed to him at McCook Field or turned in at the athletic office at Robinson Gymnasium. None of the former University tennis stars are in attendance this summer, so the chances are good for anyone with a knowledge of the game. Those who wish to enter should hand their names in at once. Among the Kansas City teachers attending the Summer Session the following will spend the week end in Kansas City: Katherine Baer, Leonora A. Weyer, Helen McMillan, A. Weyer, Katie Schuster, Beverice Britkie, Dora E. Hoffman, Harry H. Oldendick, J. W. Storms, F. H. Barbee, and E. H. Robinson. Elenor McQuaid will spend the week end at her home in Colony. Elizabeth Coots will accompany her as her guest. 20% DISCOUNT ON ALL Wardrobe, Steamer and Dress Trunks During Our July Clearance Sale Innes, Bullene Hackman The wide range of styles and makes combined with dependability of our Trunks make this a most opportune time to buy. An inspection visit here places you under no obligations to purchase, however the selection of a trunk at this 20 per cent reduction will assure you of the best for your money in both style and quality. "The dangers of the Missouri river have not been threatening. The river has not been threatened." It insures a couch out of water to harm fire, Contriary currents often whirl the caesize it. Snags are dangerous and have to be avoided. For one whole night I was on the river, being unable to land." Friday and Saturday of last week young Huckleberry Finn, his real name being Richard Soles, was in Lawrence and was so well pleased that he has decided to enroll here next fall. For some time he has published a little magazine for journalists, and is a reporter on the Omaha Bee. During the past year and a half he studied at the University of Omaha. BRICK PLANT INSPECTED Dr. Lawrence Engel, son of Prof. F. Dr. E. Engel, will locate in Kansas City for the practice of his profession. Dr. Hursh of Illinois University Superintends Inspection R. R. K. Hursh, accompanied by our students of the School of Ceramics of the University of Illinois, are pending a short time in Lawrence, making an industrial survey and doing other research work for The Manufacturing Company who have taken over the local brick and ile plant. "We have employed Dr. Harsch and his party of students to make such surveys in all our plants," said M. Coates, vice-president of the company, "During this period of keen competition in business, we must learn to stand up, so we went to one of the largest schools of ceramics in the country." THE LAST SWORD The students accompanying Dr. Hursh, in addition to their salary and experience, receive credit from the University as a certain amount of actual experience is required before their degrees are granted. The University of Kansas has a department of ceramics under the direction of Professor Teeter, but no classes are conducted at present. The world loves a lover but it must feel something like admiration for a man who will marry a woman with ten years' teaching experience. Now is your time to save on that medium weight suit of clothes. S. G. CLARKE Great reduction in prices in medium weight fabrics in the Ed. V. Price & Co. Clothes. 1033 Mass. St. A man standing on a golf course, holding a club and watching the ball go through the net. Prepare for July 4th We offer very special values in genuine Palm Beach and Cool Cloth suits $10.00 $15.00 $17.50 Tropical weight worsteds, the finest summer suits produced $25.00 $30.00 Summer trousers to match that odd coat or for the man that does not care for the whole suit $5.50 $6.50 $7.50 Straw hats all styles, all materials, highest quality, lowest prices. $1.50 $7.50 Shirts with or without attached collars in tan, white, stripes or pincheck, real values. $1.00 to $3.50 GOLFING SkofStadS ELLING SYSTEM This store will be closed all day Monday Sandy McTavish: "Why when I was a young man it was nothing for me in some hotel, and it wasn't long before he owned the whole place." No, "No doo." phonetic pattern Angus: "Aye. No doot, but since they've invented cash registers." Society Brand Clothing The Finest Suits Made by Society Brand We have purchased a special lot of these Famous Society Brand Suits at a very worth while concession Our Buying at a Saving Means a Saving in your Buying $^{3} 7.^{50}$ — $^{4} 7.^{50}$ Ober's HEADTOFOOT OUTFITTERS If You Need PEOPLES STATE BANK TRAVELERS CHECKS (A. B. A. or Nat. City Bank) GET THEM AT THOMAS' THOMAS' ELECTRIC SHOE SHOP Shoes Restored in Way? We know "OUR STUFF" on Wood Heels 101% Mass. St. Cool Summer Breezes Can be Guaranteed When you own An Why suffer with the heat when you can enjoy your work? You will be surprised at the low prices. ELECTRIC FAN Kansas Electric Utilities Company 719 Mass. Street O THE SUMMER SESSION KANSAN 20 b2 4.4 VOLUME X. NUMBER CONTRACT AWARD WILL BE MADE VERY SOON First Sections of Stadium Are to Be Rushed During Fine Weather SEATS FOR 15,000 PEOPLE Important Steps in Biggest K. U Project Are Being Taken Daily Another important step was taken in the K, U. Stadium program when the finance committee met with the Lawrence Clearings House Association yesterday. The executive committee also met yesterday and the announcement was made that the contract will probably be let within the next few days. This contract will be for the number 2-3 which will have a seating capacity of 15,000. These sections will be sufficient near completion that games may be held there this fall, according to committee plans. THE SUMMER SESSION KANSAN, FRIDAY MORNING, JULY 8, 1921. Mo. members of the finance committee are: Thornton Cooke, Columbia National Bank, Kansas City, chairman C. H. Tucker, Lawrence, vice-chairman C. H. Cluster Woodward, Topical Irving Lawrence; L. J. Sweeney, Lawrence. The bids that were submitted to the executive committee last week were as follows: A. R. Stimson, $429,828; United Construction Co., $469,843; Higgs Construction Co., $555,758; Gigel Construction Co., $875,966.53; A. S. Hocker Co., $481,214.1. Just what is the Memorial and what progress has been made toward realization of the memorial structures are question, asked frequently by Summer Session students. Here are some answers! The Memorial is a project to raise one million dollars by popular subscription on the part of friends of K. U. to make possible the building of two important Memorial structures with a state of James Woods Green. The two buildings, the Stadium and the Kansas Union building will cost in the neighborhood of $500,000 each, and will be a permanent memorial to the services of the one hundred and twenty-six K. U. students who died in service. Explanation of the purposes of these buildings are given in other parts of the Summer Session Kansan. To date the pledges toward the million-dollar goal total nearly $800,000, these being agreements to pay this amount during a period of four years. All pledges are made on this basis. Last November the Kansas University football team staged one of the most remarkable comebacks in the history of the gridiron when the Jayhawkers tied Nebraska 20-20 by scoring three touchdowns in the last half. The following week the students and faculty of Kansas City staged a campaign long to be remembered and pledged $260,000. Topeka and Shawnee kept up the high standard and in June pledged $141,000. In each case the goal or quota set for the local campaign was more than met. On July 11 the team went on to win at Tucson then Atchison will follow July 18. Preparation for the campaign will continue during the summer under the direction of W. J. Baumgartner, organization secretary for the Memorial and known as the man chiefly responsible for the Memorial progress, so that next autumn the local campaigns will be continued where there are attacks by U. S. players interested in the development of the school and in honor of the memory of the K. U. students who made the sacrifice. Students of the University and faculty members took the first step toward the success of the memorial April 1919, when the overseas men were returning. Chancellor Strong appointed a memorial committee whose investigations revealed the fact that the union and the Stadium had been formed for the K U. Memorial. Then it was decided to provide for the two in a million dollar project to which the Green Memorial was added. The affairs of the Memorial are directed by a board of directors acting under a charter issued to the Association. Chancellor E. H. Lindley is Chancellor E. H. Lindley (Continued on Page 3.) CLASSES ON SATURDAY CLASSES ON SATURDAY All classes will meet Saturday of this week so as to make up for the holiday on July 4. W. H. JOHNSON, Director of Summer Session * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * EXTENSION PICTURES TONIGHT IN FRASER A Five Reel Comedy "Pots and Pans Peggy" and Two Features The entertainment committee has announced a program for the Summer Session students which is to take place this evening at 8 o'clock in Fraser Hall. It will consist of seven or eight reels, made up of a five-reel comedy drama, "Pets and Pans Pegg," followed by a one reel feature, "Shep's Race with Death," and one reel called, "The Children Hour." The films will be provided by the Extension Division, and are available for rental purposes to be used in school entertainments throughout the state. The films selected for the program are especially popular, and are in great demand during the school year. The program at first was to take place on the campus, but it, it was thought that the lantern was not sufficient to entertain a large crowd out doors. "All who like entertaining wholesome pictures are especially invited to be present this evening," said Prof F. P, O'Brien this morning. Interesting Exhibition By Physical Department On Friday evening last, the women's classes of the Physical Training Department gave an interesting exhibition on the campus in front of Fowler Shops. Many of the spectators joined in the festivities, which is a privilege to have in their hands. The Summer Session students were anxious to join these classes, but were unable to arrange their schedules to do so. These occasions give them an opportunity to join in the work, and get into touch with its practical demonstration. On this occasion, many of the students enjoyed the exciting relay games to the fullest extent. Miss Mildred Andrews, of this department, will have charge of the work on the campus this evening at 7a5'04 ock. Games and community singing will characterize the evenings' entertainment. Two More Sessions of the Journalism Round Table Two more sessions of the high school newspaper round table for teachers, editors and business managers will be held Wednesday after afternoons in the Journalism building. Next Wednesday Prof. H. H. Herbert will conduct the conference on methods of directing the publications and choice of editorial and feature materials. The gathering of the news was explained by Prof. F. W. Dillon at the conference Wednesday, at which time was urged the securing of the cooperation of students, teachers, graduates and townpeople, necessary in making the publication a complete newspaper useful to the progress of the school and education in the community. Rectal Given by Inif Garrison A piano recital was given Thursday evening, June 30, in Fraser Hall by Iliif Garrison. A good piece of the show being about two-thirds fall, Mr. Garrison's playing was appreciated by the audience, and was quite well given with the exception of the Polonaise in a flat by Chopin, which was played with an amateur touch. For an encore Mr. Garrison played a sonata by Mac Dowell. Prof. H. H. Herbert met with the round table and conducted the teachers and high school leaders on a tour of the Kansan printing plant where Supt. Guy M. Pennock assisted in explaining the operation of the machinery. Lois Ferguson, c23, and Albina Hults, of Topeka, the guests of Kathleen Hood at the Alpha Delta House from Friday until Wednesday. Recital Given by Illif Garrison The Late "Uncle Jimmy" Green, Popular Leader of University Life, Who Will Be Honored in the Campaign. Elizabeth Kerr, c24, spent Saturday and Sunday in Kansas City. A. B. ROWLEY M. H. MURPHY DANIEL CHESTER FRENCH, Sculptor, Who is to make the "Uncle Jimmy" Statue. Do you know the relationship which exists among these three pictures? That Daniel Chester French, the maker of the Lincoln memorial is to make a statue of our beloved "Unchum?" We are subserving willingly to the Stadium because our physical comfort and pride demand it; and just as willingly we will subscribe to the Green memorial because our hearts demand that we give thanks to God. We are heroic size of a man whose qualities of mind, of heart, whose great soul and noble character are be- Perhaps you know that the million dollar memorial fund, which the University of Kansas is raising, is to be used in three ways, partly for the K. U. stadium, partly for the Kansas football and partly for the Green Memorial. yod description, but which made a lasting impression on everyone who met him, and influenced the life of every student who knew him since he was first a professor in the School of the University of Kansas in 1878. "UNCLE JIMMY" GREEN, To the boys he was a father pro- fessor, and as Chancellor Lindley had said, he was Lincoln-like in his de- votion to men. And since he was Lincoln-like what better person could have been chosen to make his statue than the man who made the beautiful Lin- coln memorial—Daniel Chester French? Mr. French studies the character of each man he portrays. In December he attended the Kansas City banquet Lincoln Memorial Statue in Washington, Designed by Sculptor French. of the K. U. Laws, when Uncle Jimmy was byged in those who knew and loved him best; and he said, "I have never seen such love for a man as this, unless it be in the case of Lincoln." Later he sent the architect, Henry Bacon, to Mount Oread to study the campus and find the site which would give the statue he is to make appropriate settings and surroundings. The statue which will cost $40,000.00 will be a source of pride and pride in our University and the distinction of having the work of French artists over over emphasized. Best of all it will glorify our dead Dean — M. M. TEACHERS WILL FEAST The beach seems to be setting women's styles in Chicago; it is perhaps fortunate that Potter Lake exerts so such marked influence on the campus. Students to Have Big Feed Acting Adviser of Women The housing situation for women students looks even more serious for next year than it was last year. Many houses are for sale. Other houses where girls lived have been sold or rented to boys. Persons who have rooms for girls, and who have rooms already already occupied them, are requested to call K. U, 12. Friday Mrs. F. E. BRYANT, Housing Situation The report of these women, which was the result of many meetings among the women of the University alumni, was adopted in full by the sub-committee who will report on it at the next meeting of the Memorial Corporation at an early date. At present the report is in the hands of Professor Shadu. Belle Wyme, a student in the Summer Session, spent Sunday with friends in Kansas City. On Friday evening, July 8 at 6:30 o'clock in the evenings, all students in the School of Education, together with their wives, sweethearts, or husbands, as the case may be will have a big get-to-gether chicken dinner. Preparations are now in the hands of a committee composed of F. H. Barbee, Dr. Frances O'Brien, of the School of Education, Rice Brown, H. H. Olenck, Ferris, Mrs. Crowell, and the Misses Sisson and Flynn. The chicken dinner will be served by the ladies of the Plymouth Church. An excellent program is being presented for social intercourse will be given. The sub-committee on the plans for the Union Building met last night with the chairman, Prof. George Shad, of the School of Engineering, to receive the report of a committee of women alumnae concerning the conference plan for the construction of women they desired to see in the proposed Union building. Agnes Jeffries, c23, spent the week end at her home in Kansas City. As the ladies are prepared to accommodate but two hundred guests, everyone who wishes to take advantage of them may also join his tickets at once. They may be obtained from F. H. Barbee, or from any others of the committee in charge. Women Alumni Report Union Investigation H. P. SMITH SPEAKS BEFORE MEN'S FORUM Committee on Education Was Chosen With Mr. Barnes as Secretary The Men's Forum met Wednesday evening at 7:00 o'clock in The Little Theater in Green Hall. There was a good crowd of men present but the women were conspicuous for their absence. An open invitation is extended to all women for the next meeting. Professor Smith spoke on consolidation. A committee on education was appointed for solving problems of school education. This committee will in existence until next summer when another committee will be appointed. The members of the committee are as follows: Mr. Barnes, principal of Junior High was elected secretary; Mr. Elliott, superintendent of schools in Fredonia Mt. Brewer, principal of Fairview Mt., Mr. Mitchello, principal of Fairview School. Everyone was well pleased with the meeting and a large crowd is expected next Wednesday evening at seven o'clock. STAR GAZING PARTIES BEGIN Must Make Advance Date to See Stars Through the courtesy of Prof. Dinsmore Alter, of the Department of Astronomy, a party of more than twenty persons was received at the Observatory on Friday evening last. The sky was somewhat overcast, but Jupiter was sighted with three of its moons. One was on the other side of the planet in such a way as to be hidden from view. Antarcs, a fiery red star of the constellation Scorpio were seen in the southeast, well up in the middle of the galaxy. A green star which was not visible because of unfavorable conditions. NOTED EDITOR AT ASSEMBLY The lecture which followed was illustrated by means of luntern slides, and was very instructive. It was given by C. Thomas Eley A.B., who has prepared himself for who will prepare himself for his A.M. degree at the University here. Persons wishing to visit the observatory on Friday nights may send a postal card request to Professor Alter who will mail free tickets to those who can be received on a certain day. Telephone calls or three or four days in advance. No telephone calls for admission to these parties will receive attention. Burges Johnson Addressed Tuesday Convocation Burges Johnson, former editor-in-chief of Judge and new professor of literature at Vassar College, delivered a chaty sort of talk on literary men and the literary shop, in a convoction Tuesday morning. "Commercialism and artistic visions do not go hand in hand," he said. "Man must communicate his inspirations to other men; and out of his desire for communication has grown the literary shop," he said. "At the head of the literary shop, he continued, "is the author. He is never a great writer. If he is both a good writer and a good author one ability will in time kill the other." JOHNSON has also had experiences in experience having been connected with the editorial departments of Everybody's and Harper's, and having personally known many great editors, and writers, among Henry, Gillam Bill, and Mark Twain. Chancellor Lindley Speaks in Warrensburg Wednesday afternoon at 5 o'clock Chancellor Lindley addressed the summer session students at the State Teachers' College at Warrensburg, Mo. Dr. Lindley chose for the sub-committee 'Pioneers on the Teachers' College." It is of interest to the students of the University of Kansas to know that the supervisor of the Training school department, George R. Crissman, is a graduate of the University of Notre Dame and has been trained by George O. Foster, Dr. F. C. Allen was director of athletics at the Teachers' College previous to taking up his work here, and has many friends in Warrensburg who are watching his efforts here with him. Doctor Linder Lindley said on his return. Famous Architect Views Campus For Statue Site STADIUM-UNION DRIVE WILL OPEN THURSDAY Henry Bacon, considered by many the foremost architect of the United States, arrived from New York last week to advise as to the site of the "Uncle Jimmy" Green Memorial statue, on the campus. He asserted that the University of Kansas had one of the most beautiful sites for a campus that had ever seen. Daniel Chester French, one of the foremost sculptors of the world, is to execute the Green statue and Mr. Bacon was here to choose the site for him. Two or three locations were Campaign Will be Conducted Among Summer Session Students Next Week PRUNTY HEADS COMMITTEE Meeting of Workers Wednesday Night Selected Leaders to Direct Work The Stadium-Union Memorial campaign among the Summer Session students will start next Thursday morning at a convocation in Fraser Chapel, which will be addressed by Chancellor Lindley, who will explain the meaning of the whole Memorial movement. A convoction Saturday, tomorrow morning, will be called at 9 o'clock. Dr. Forest C, Allen will be the speaker of the day and will tell the summer students of the relation of the Stadium to athletics and the physical development of students. It is desired by the executive committee that every summer session student be present. Merrie Prunty, chairman of the committee, said this morning that the summer session drive was highly important in that it was to educate the teachers who are here at summer school as to the real meaning and importance of the Stadium and the Union, so that when they go out among the people of the state this winter they can become leaders in the state drives and in spreading the news of the era at Kansas. At a meeting Wednesday evening of student workers the executive committee for this drive was formed with Merle Prunty as the head, Florence Bliss, secretary, and Ruth Miller, Adrian Reynolds and Alfred G. Hill at publicity workers. The captains are William Horton and follows: Glendale Griffith, Maune Meyers, Margaret Lorimer, Dorothy Stanley, Marjorie Rickard, Maume Elliot, Mitchell, Anne Mitchell, Henrietta Mitchell, Lucie Hilldinger, Dorothy Keeler, Spencer Scenner Bayles and Lola Lindsay, R. C. Brown, Ed. Ellipse, Shirley Peters, Sandy Wilson, Hoover, George Gould, Guy Daniels, Hoover, George Gould, Guy Daniels, Paul O'Leary, H. O. Beal, H. C. Fiske, L. E. Harms. One hundred dollars a person has been suggested as the minimum amount to be asked of the alumni who are attending summer session. In the drive at the University of Missouri, nothing less than this amount was accepted and it is expected by the captains that the alumnus of the university will be liberal as were those at "Mizzou." Of the 600 women enrolled in summer session, 125 are already subscribers to the Memorial fund, while 285 of the 568 men have added their bit to the subscriptions. Every man and woman in the University will be solicited before the drive is over. Another meeting of the executive committee will be held the evening after the Hall for further plans for the drive will be worked out. Each captain is asked to select one lieutenant and take him to this meeting. Large Attendance in Educational Seminar The educational, seminar met last Thursday afternoon at 4:30 o'clock. F. H. Barbee, principal of an elementary school in Kansas City 'Ma., reported on "Educational Value of Corrective Gymnastics for Physical De-venture" attendance has been from fifteen to eight at all meetings held thus far. The graduate conference group discussion at the meeting next Tuesday at 5:00 o'clock in Green Hall will center about the subject of "Comparing the Results of Instruction in One Teacher School and Grade Schools." Some possibilities with reference to this subject will be demonstrated by the use of charts showing the results of such an investigation. Helen Olson, A.B.21, of Topeka, was the guest of Mrs. Dora Bryant over the week-end. Mary Green, e'22, spent Saturday and Sunday with friends in Kansas City. approved and the final decision will be made public in a few weeks. Mr. Bacon was one of the judges for the campaign to be erected in Kansas City. . THE SUMMER SESSION KANSAN Published Tuesday and Friday mornings by students in the Department of Journalism from the press of the Department of Journalism. THE SUMMER SESSION KANSAN Entered as second class mail matn September 19, 1916, at the post-offi- cation at Lawrence, Kansas, under the Ac of March 3, 1879. Subscription price, fifty cents for the six weeks' session. Phones: K. U. 25 and K. U. 142 Address all communications to The Summer Session Kansas, Lawrence Kansas. FRIDAY, JULY 8, 1921 A. W. Reynolds_ Lloyd Ruppenthal!_ Business Manager THE STADIUM-UNION DRIVE That "the people in authority it the State of Kansas have resolved that nothing shall prevent the University of Kansas from assuming its proper place in relation to this great commonwealth" was the significant statement made by Chancellor Lindley in his convocation speech Tuesday morning, in paving the way for the memorial campaign drive which to be started among the summer session students next week. In order that the University may assume its proper place in the educational scheme of Kansas, the first step was to build a great stadium to care for the continually increasing crowds which throng Lawrence during the football season. Associated with this has been the project for n Student Union building. It is now the time for the previously unsolicited summer session students to show that they too want to see a stadium and a Union building on the campus. That the Stadium is a necessity in a foregone conclusion, but why the summer session students should contribute to a Union building is not clearly understood by some. The plans for the Student Union building, which is to be constructed just north of Dyche Museum, specify that the entire third floor is to be used as a dormitory for the use of alumni, friends and former students of the university when they return to Lawrence during Commencement week. Home-Coming day, or other important period, when they find it impossible to find a room in the local hotels. The second floor is to be devoted to small kitchenettes for the use of students who, wanting to prepare a small spread for a few friends, do not wish to incur the expense of any similar place in Lawrence. The first floor is to be used for an auditorium. Any student who has been here for any length of time knows that this is a very imperative need of the University. On this floor also will be found lounging rooms stricly for men and for women. In the history of the University of Kansas no student or alumnus had until this year ever been asked to contribute to any general campaign for the benefit of the entire University. As a result the average contribution of the entire student body when the campaign was put on last winter was about $55. Will you do your part to make the summer session campaign a success? —C. M. G. HAY FEVER It is the irony of fate, surely, which causes this malady to fasten itself upon those who take the keenest pleasure in out-of-door life. They are forced to forego many of the delights which the late summer affords and conceal themselves behind doors and windows closed against the possible admission of a minute particle of the mischief-making pollen. A famous general once remarked that he would rather meet, alone, an armed regiment of the enemy than come within fifty yards of a single goldenrod plant in August. His feeling in the matter is doubtless shared by thousands of co-sufferers who look forward to the advent of the hay fever season with a fear that rises to the point of freenzy when the first symptoms of the seizure appear. It was considered a sign of super- sensitivity and fineness of constitution to be subject to annual visitations of hay fever. For this reason there were those who rather prided themselves on the fact that they belonged to the select few who received yearly calls from this discriminating enigma. So democratic has the distress become, however, that the red nose and the watery eye are no longer the insignia of aristocracy, but are displayed by all classes with equal grace. So hay fever has been relegated from its position in the inner circle of society to the rank and file of undesirables and is now accepted at its face value as a public nuisance—L. M. H1. THE SPIRIT OF STADIUM GIFTS O. Henry once gave a beggar a coin. After passing on a short distance the beggar, believing there had been a mistake, hastened back to O. Henry and say, "Inquiring, you gave me a twenty- dollar goldpiece!" "I can't help it," said O. Henry. "that was all I had." That incident was an example of charity. On every college campus are beautiful buildings that have been donated in the name of philanthropy. But when the donor's name and biography occupy conspicuous places on the portals the opinion is justified that a less worthy motive prompted the giving than caused the heart of the tramp to be gladdened by O. Henry's humanity. Contributions toward building the stadium are to be asked of summer session students. In comparison with the aggregate sum, individual subscriptions will be so small that the contributors may regard themselves as well anonymously. No direct recompense for contributions is offered. Each must find his reward in the satisfaction the giving brings to the giver. Many a book-dressing boy, deceyed o Lawrence by the Stadium's appeal his play instincts, will unconciously and pleasantly find himself on the highway that leads upward. perhaps his experience will lead other boys to realize that the spirit of unselfishness which is building the Stadium must not be permitted to perish.-J. J. O. MIXING SLEEP WITH WORK In these times of hurry and bustle the problem of sleep becomes a very important one. Some have endeavored to solve the problem by mixing sleep with their daily tasks. Among college students there are so many affairs, educational and otherwise, that be looked after during the day, that when night comes, the assignment still remains. Then begins the fight between the assignment and the claims of sleep. This struggle generally ends in compromise, in which the student is often more generous than the instructor in cutting the assignment short. In considering those who insist on mixing their sleep with their waking hours, it is often a debatable question whether they are awake or only walking in their sleep. This form of sleep is accompanied with numerous difficulties. The sleeper who roams at large on the crowded streets of any city is very apt to be rudely awakened by the bump of an approaching car and even if he immediately takes a reclining position, the car is bound to make a lot of rocket in passing over, which is very disturbing even to the soundest sleeper. Sleeping in church either in mixed or definite manner is not nearly so dangerous and is a regular procedure among many of the best practitioners. However, it is very bad form to seize in church, especially during the quiet intervals of the service, as it attracts attention from the minister and keeps the rest of the congregation awake. The university classroom is not nearly so adaptable to sleep for various reasons. It is true that the services conducted by some of the instructors are often far superior to those of the minister in their lulling effect. However, the professor does not seem to approve of this form for expressing enjoyment of his lectures. Many of them are given to asking questions and often insist on having the person called on awakened in order that he may give the question proper consideration. And then again there is the possibility that the professor may say something of importance. On the whole it does not seem practicable to depend upon the classroom for any great amount of sleep; and yet some of the students after remaining here for several years have become very proficient in choosing the classes best suited for snatching a few hours of rest. Some have even taken the same course a second time. However, as long as some persons persist in being very much awake during their working hours, the rest of us must at least be very careful in choosing the time and place in which we mix our sleep with our daily tasks. C. L. Y. We read so often of trolley car motormotor sticking to their posts after hope of avenging the attack has been abandoned that we wonder whether they should be decorated for bravery or treated for paralysis. A apropos of the present noticeable decrease of thefts and other crimes in Kansas City, it may be remarked that prosperous folks take their vacations about this time of the year. The old ascetic wearers of the haircloth shirt had nothing on the modern slave of fashion who promenades in a bright wool sweater when the mercury is playing around 105. The Physics clock seems to be the only thing on the Hill that has more energy in summer than in winter. An "A" student, says the flunker, is one who always agrees with the instructor. An artistic soul would be a comfortable asset these days. Sitting in the cool shade of a campus tree painting landscapes bats laborious notetaking in a heated lecture room, as a summer pastime. What has become of the old-fashioned fat man who carried an umbrella and palm-leaf fan from July to September? Another of Chicago's political bosses has been murdered. The sawed-off shot gun seems to have been adopted as a necessary factor in Chicago's political machine. Charles Gray Shaw, Ph.D., says. "Love may be the sixth sense." Perhaps he is right, but the sixth sense generally disappears when a man at last regains his original five. One successful student in the School of Law is known to have a gold-lettered sign bearing the words, "Attorney at Law" hung above the door of his "office" on the floor of a fraternity house. Why do the cartoonists persist in pictureng teachers in the garf of fifty years ago when many of the profession now wear skirts as short and those as thin as their sisters in other callings? Wouldn't it be a joy if Shakespeare had only written his plays in slang. Random Paragraphs on Topics of No Great Importance About Mount Oread The Symposium NEDLE—AWARD Winner There is one girl in the University who intends to buy a new watch as soon as possible. The other day she knew what time it was, so she hurried up to a group of four friends and asked one of the girls in the party. The girl glanced at her waist watch and began talking to her companions. Girl number one turned to a man in the group and asked him the time. He took out his watch, looked at it abstractly and added his bit to the topic under discussion. Turning to a third member of the group, the girl *zinp* grab her question. The third member slowly pulsed out his watch and as slowly put it back, nodding his head meanwhile in agreement with something which had just been said. In despair the girl waited, "I'm anyone else?" She asked the three members of the group turned to her and said, "I told you the time ten minutes ago."—M. M. NEEDED—AWRIST WATCH My Pet Hobby Is— SEVERAL THINGS--WHAT'S YOURS? The other day a man asked me what my pet hobby was and not having thought much about it, I tried to decide what said hobby could be. And I didn't think this is about the most elusive sport, just 'it for your life.' When I started huntin' a baby! decided that it must surely be swimming, as that is most probable this time of the year, but when I figured as to why it would swim in water it must play tennis and play tennis most every afternoon and go swimming to cool off. Then I thought that tennis must be the object of my quest but that was all wrong again because I play tennis to get a relief from being the object that studying it can be caused by assignments on my school work. Then I noticed that it was time to eat, that being one of my most regular habits and pleasures, so I just decided that finding a hobby was the most elusive pastime. Thus, my favorite hobby is just living a normal life filled with as many habits as there are fruits in a mine pie—a W. N. W. A. G. ALRICH Printing, Enggravng, Binding, Rubber Stamps, Seals, Stencils Office Supplies 736 Mass. St. Dora Helmick Would like voice or harmony pupils Can show good recommendation Phone 1257 WHEN DOWN TOWN TAKE YOUR MEALS AT THE Supreme Cafe 914 Mass. St. Meal Tickets, $4.40 for $4.00 $2.20 for $2.00 STUDENTS ALWAYS WELCOME TYPEWRITERS Bought Sold Rooted Repaired Exchanged lawrence Typewriter Exchange Phone 548 737 Mass. St. A summer day—a charming book. Our summer books are attractive and interesting. See the new titles. Wolf's Book Store 919 Mass. St. Summer Joys STUDENT HOE HOP Across Street From Courthouse Shoe Repairs Shoe Finding R. O. BURGERT, Prop. 1113 Mass. St. STADIUM BARBER SHOP "The Shop of Service" The Shop of Service —A good place to get into for you feel better when you get out— WANT AD YES SIR! YOU'RE NEXT 1023 Mage St. LOST—Horn rimmed spectacles in case. In or near Spooner Library Wednesday evening. Finder call 480. Reward. 1033 Mass. St. FOR RENT—Nice clean sleeping rooms—near University. Reasonable, 1228 Louisiana St. St. 2756, 824 PROFESSIONAL CARDS LAWRENCE OPTICAL COMPANY (Exclusive Optometrists) Eyes examined; glasses made. Office 1025 Masa. CHIROPRACTORS DHS, WELCH AND WELCH - PALMER GRADUATES. Office 297 Maxs. St. Phone: Office 115, Residence 115KE. BARNARD, NJ DALE PRINT SHOP. 1027 Mass. St. Phone 228. DR. J. R. BECHTEL. Rooms 2 and 4 over McCulloch's Drug Store, Office Phone 342. Residence Phone 1343. DR. G. W. JONES, A. M. M. D. Dise- sition of stomach, surgery and gynaec- ology, Suite I, F. A. U. B. Glb. Phones Office 68, Residence 3262, KHPaill. 1745. DR. H. L. CHAMBERS. Suite 2, Jackson Building. General practice. Special attention to nose, throat and ear电话 217 DR. H. BEDING—F, A. U. Building Ear, eye, nose and throat. Special attention to fitting glasses and tonsil work. Phone 613. C. E. ORELUP, M.D. Specialist Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat Glass Work Guaranteed Dick Bros. Building Phone 445 F. B. McCOLLOCH, Druggist VANITY SHOP—Marcelling, manicuring, shampooring…Mrs. Anna Johnson. Phone 1372. Stubbs Bldg. Eastman Kodak L. E. Waterman and Conklin Fountain Pens THE REXALL STORE 847 Mass. St. Varsity Theater Friday and Saturday MARY MILES MINTER in "THE LITTLE CLOWN" Pathe News No. 50 The College Photographer "Suiting You" THAT'S MY BUSINESS WM. SCHULZ 917 Mass. St. Squires THOMAS' THOMAS ELECTRIC SHOE SHOP Shoes Repaired "Right Way" We know "OUR STUFF" on Wood Heels 1017 $\frac{1}{2}$ Mass. St. Luggage TAXI BOX We are leather men and have been in the leather business for years. We handle leather luggage and believe we are in a position to give you leather goods which is second to none. All kinds of Bags, Suit Cases, Boston Bags, Portfolio's Pocket Books and Trunks. See us and get our prices. BAG 732 Mass. St. ED KLEIN We Also Repair Bags and Suit Cases Phone 144 Your Appearance May have a very great deal to do with your success in life. You will at least have a better chance to succeed if your wearing apparel is in spick and span condition. Lawrence Steam Laundry Phone 383 Our modern equipment and efficient workers enable us to give you the highest degree of satisfaction in both laundry and dry cleaning service. You will appear at your best all the time if you let us be your clothes specialist. 1 2. NEW STRUCTURES WILL ADD TO CAMPUS BEAUTY Lines Stadium and Union Building Area Planned on Modern REQUIREMENTS ARE MET Descriptions Show That All Needs Have Been Considered by Architects With another drive for the Stadium-Union close at hand, many of the Summer Session students who were not here in the regular term are rather anxious to know just what they are being asked to subscribe to a MOM call to K. U.'s war heroes in the shape of a hummingbird stadium built on a campus as a University building modeled after the one at Michigan, are proposed. The Stadium, as planned, will be u-shaped and constructed entirely of concrete. There will be a quarterterm running track with a 220-yard extension. Tennis courts and a practice field will be adjacent to the open end of the U, which is to open to the hockey field. Students take in most of McCook and Hamilton Fields and some of the ground to the north of McCook Field. The U will be 620 feet long and 465 feet wide. The width of the stand itself will be uniformly 100 feet and the height will vary from three feet at the bottom to forty-two feet at the top. There are forty rows of seats and the space allowance for each seat will be eighteen by twenty-eight inches. The entire deck of the structure will be a concave upward so that all spectators will be able to see everything going on in the field below. The seating is constructed of two-boot inch wooded planks raised above the concrete. The main entrance and ticket offices will be in the north or closed of the structure. There will be exits at such intervals as will safely handle a large crowd. There will be ample parking space for cars and the street car line will be one block east of the stadium. This Stadium will be one of the largest in the United States and one of the most scientifically arranged. The largest stadium is the Yale Bowl which has a seating capacity of 61,000, while the oldest Stadium is the Harvard Stadium, originally built to seat 23,000 but now with a capacity of 45,000. The Princeton U holds 42,000 persons. The University of Washington is constructing one with a capacity of 60,000. THE UNION BUILDING The definite plans for the Union Building have not as yet been decided upon, but it is looked upon by many as the real memorial to the men who paid the supreme sacrifice for the country. The big thing about the Union is that it offers a get-together place for the students and alumni of the University that it is otherwise impossible to obtain. The Union will be the center of all student activities in the University where all the clubs and organizations connected with the University may have headquarters. Here too the activities are more easily controlled than at present. It will make possible for the University to invite and properly entertain conventions and will afford a comfortable homelike place for the returning alumnums to make his headquarters while in town. A union building would emphasize and bring out strongly the democracy of a state university and bring together more and more every person in the institution. it is expected that the Union will make possible a closer association of the groups of the University through the proposed cafeteria, dining rooms and other facilities which tend to give to the University a more united strength and spirit. Contract Award Will Be Made Very Soor (Continued from page 1.) president of the Memorial Corporation. There are twenty-one directors. An executive committee trunts掌 the routine business of the Memorial and supervises the campaign plans. Members of this committee are Chancellor Lindley, Irving Hill, T. J. Swensen, the banker who attends K. U. fifty years ago; Thornton Cooke and R. J. Delano, leading Kansas City alumni; W. J. Baumgartner and F. C. Allen, director of athletics. Alfred G. Hill, secretary of the Alumni Association, is secretary of the Memorial corporation. Registrar George O. Foster is treasurer. SOCIETY The Spanish club which is situate at the Sigma Kappa house is one of the live summer organizations on the Hill. A Spanish tertulia is held or Thursday night of each week. The feature of last night's meeting was a written report by Agnes Jeffries, c22 and Marjorie Steele, c22, who are majoring in the department. On Saturation Plan to plan to Kansas City to spend the day. The club had a picnic on the Fourth of July. J. B. Ramsey, former instructor in the chemical department has returned from California where he has been instructor in the University of California. Mr. Ramsey will return there this fall. Seventeen students in entomology work are spending the day at Rock Creek. The forenoon work planned was that of collecting a picnic lunch and the afternoon spent in a way pleasing to the students. Clarice Gardner spent several days in Kansas City with friends. Frieda Lewis spent several days in aransas City. Emmet Tuttle spent the weekend in Kansas City. edna King visited with friends over the weekend at Emporia. Ronald Dilz attended a house party last week end at Neodosha. Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Rader of Sedan announce the birth of a daughter, Helen Louse, Mrs. Rader was formerly Amy Gladys V安 Horn and was an assistant in the chemistry department. Mr. Rader received his LLB. degree at K. U, and is at present county attorney at Sedan. Josephine Fulcher, a student of Manhattan, visited here with friends last weekend. Jack Stewart spent the weekend at Manhattan and Alta Vista. Asa Tenney spent Wednesday A1 Topeka. Lloyd Buikstra spent the weekend in Kansas City, Mo. The Walling Club gave a dance Wednesday evening. Twenty guests were present. Lois Ferguson and Alvina Hults of Topela visited last weekend at the Alpha Delta Pi house with Kathleen Hood. Josephine Tector, of Ottawa, a student in the Summer Session, became ill with apendicitis last week and was sent home to treatment. When she was operated on Thursday, Raymond Dyer, c24, spent the Fourth of July in Iola visiting with friends. Martha Banker, A.B.29, who was a guest of Florine Shoemaker at her house in Severy, accompanied her to the Chihuahua city of friends at the Chi Omega house. Mrs. Catherine Burnett, of the correspondence study section of the Extension Division, has gone to her home in Kansas City. AN EDUCATIONAL CREED [The following creed was read by Prof. Merle Prunty before the Men's Forum Wednesday and is published by request.] "I believe that education is the strong defense of a free nation, and that ignorance is a curse to any people. I believe that the free public school system of the United States is the best guarantee of the rights vouchsafed to us by the constitution, and that other public schools of the land are the cradle of our democracy, and that in class rooms and upon the playgrounds, where the sons and daughters of the street sweeper and railroad magnate, of day laborer and multimillionaire meet on an equal footing and stand upon their own individual merits, the lessons of democracy and fraternity are best taught. I believe that the hope of the child is that the battleground of the world is the heart of the child, and that Government fails at its source when it ceases to make ample provision for the development and nurture of its future citizens." FREED L. SHAW, Supt. of Public Instruction of South Dakota. - * * * * * * * * * * * * * * THE SUMMER SESSION KANSAN The Summer Session Kansan is publishing the names and Lawrence addresses of the Summer Session students as rapidly as space will permit. The following is additional to the list that was started in the Kansan for Tuesday, June 21: Roll of Summer Session Students Prosser, Francis Ware, 1005 Ind. Pugh, Clifford H., 1043 Ind. Pumley, Harry H., 14th. Puney, David H., 1215 Oread. Quackenbush, L. O., 1001 Miss. Quecker, Gilbert H., Sigma Nu hous Rachel, John A., 1001 Miss. Raney, Frank L. Readio, Philip A., 919 Ind. Reamin, Fred C., 1222 Miss. Reeyler, Emil, 308 W, 16th. Reynolds, Adrian W, 1720 La. Reynolds, Basil, 820 Ohio. Reynolds, Thomas H. Richards, Walter M. Rieger, Herbert, Ala. Rieger, Herbert, M, 831 Ky. Rinehart, Wm, G, 1341 Mass. Burt, Tert R. Roberts, Harold H, 719 La. Robinson, Harold M, 1246 Oread. Robinson, Ernest F, 1237 Oread. Robinson, Hugh E. Robson, Robert, 1288 Ohio. Rogers, Jacob, H, 920 La. Rogers, Wilmer K, 1140 La. Follow, R. Herbert. Rose, Marion M. Rose, Marion M, (Continued from last issue.) (Continued from last issue.) WOMEN Pyle, Mary Llewellyn, 1317 Mass. Quinn, Grace Katherine, 1116 Ind. Nacotinhuy, Idaa, 1708 Mass. Ramsheimer, Billem, H. J. Ramsheimer, Billem, W. 19. Witt. Rankin, Mrs. Paul C., 1600 H.庐, Laurine Marne, 124 Oread Scott, Hazel Louise, 1122 Ohio. Sexton, Nina Lera, 127 E. 17th. Seymour, Mabel, 126 E. 17th. Elizabeth, 1645 Barker. Shepherd, Finmore, 132 La. Shepherd, Mary Elizabeth, 132 La. Tenn. Tenn., 1319 Tenn. Siler, Nora, 900 Illinois. Simmone, Edith Naomi, 1011 Ind. Sisson, Grace Mary, 1236 La. Seymour, Mabel, 126 E. 17th. Smiley, Mrs. Ruth H., 1291 Oread. Smiley, Blanche C., 1423 N. Y. Smith, Esther B., 1128 Tenn. Smith, Indiana, 1088 W. 10th St. Sopher, Maude Myrtle. Speck, Clara Marie, 1205 K. Stevens, Melissa, 1270 W. 10th St. Spierer, Miriam Russell, 413 W. 14th. Stanley, Constance E., Haskell Inst. Stanley, Dorothy J., 1236 Oread Stevens, Caroline Frances, 1121 La. Stevenson, Wayne Bernice. Stilson, Gladys Larsen, 1144 Miss Stilson, Dorothy J., 1236 Oread Stevens, Caroline Frances, 1121 La. Strafford, Jan Augustus, 1142 Ind. Stuart, Mrs Celia Louse, 916 Vt. Ungrueh, Nellis, 1247 Oread Stuert, Arnums Whitney, 2235 Mass. Sutton, Eleanor K., 1304 Tenn. Sweigert, Gladys Naima, 914 Vt. Taylor, Lora, 1246 Miss Tector, Josephine, 1220 Oread Teserman, Pearl, 1706 Vt. Thomas, Aileen Lola, 1312 Ohio. Thomas, Helene Laze, 2043 Miss Thomas, Edythe Eldyke, 1150 Tenn. Troster, Stella, 1208 Miss Troster, Annale, A宝娜, 1254 Lau. Truelle, A宝娜, 1254 Lau. Vail, Helen Robison, 1217 Tenn. Van Buskirk, Julia, 1041 K. Vienna, Marianne, 1217 Tenn. Vienna, Marguerite, 1317 R. I. Waddell, Florence Catherine, 706 Wahlin, Venда. Jennon, Jemma. May. Walker, Marnie. 1224 Ohio. Walling, Beauh. 1241 Tenn. Warreng, Kathleen Frances. 1142 Ind Watkins, Mary E., 1217 Tenn. Wattens, Mary E., 1217 Tenn. Watson, Alauncee. 1231 La. Wedel, Emili. 1339 Tenn. Welch, Lena H., 1015 Miss. Wilde, Melissa. 1231 La. Wenzel, Marie. 1138 Ky. West, Genevieve. 1230 Haskell ave. West, Louise. 1230 W. 9th. West, Wiechen. Gladys. 1225 R. I. Wilhite, Margaret Luclie, University Heights. West, Elizabeth. 1145 La. Williams, Bess Mae. 1014 Miss. Williams, Edna. 1024 Vt. Williams, Jennie. 1400 Tenn. Williams, Louise Angelina. 1145 La. Williams, Mary Leoa. 1224 N. J. Wolfe, Mary M. 940 Ind. Wilson, Elendra. 1916 Tenn. Wynne, Belle. Young, Blanche. 804 La. Young, Myrtle M. 940 Ky. Wilson, Marie. 1225 Ky. Yust, Ruth Ellette. 1014 Miss. Williams, J. H., 1111 Miss. Williams, Myron. 1425 Tenn. Willgus, Leon A. Wilson, Allen D., 1001 Conn. Wilson, Carl. M. Winsor, Chas. B., 1102 W. 6th. Winsor, Carl. 1215 Oread. Wood, Dinmore. 1231 Ind. Wycoff, GlenL. 116 Tenn. Tap, Benjamin T. H., 1409 R. I. Chas, Charles. 1215 Tenn. Young, Marmel. M., 804 La. Young, Lindley. City Y.M.C.A. Raymond J., 1537 Tenn. Adams, Howard. W., 1031 Miss. Bayles, Ernest E. 501 La. Bouzin, Chas. G., 1300 Tenn. Prof, and Mrs. P. W. Claassen spent the Fourth with Professor Claassen's mother at Hillborough. Dr. Frank Strong delivered a sermon at the First Baptist church at Ottawa on July third. (2) Special Sale Blouses Fine assortment of Organdie, Volle, and Dotted Swiss Blouses. These are indeed a rare bargain. Values from $2.50 to $9.00. Your Choice Don't Forget Our Dollar Days— Today and Tomorro 1/2 PRICE WEAVER'S Don't Forget Our Dollar Days— Today and Tomorro If You Need TRAVELERS CHECKS (A. B. A. or Nat. City Bank) GET THEM AT PEOPLES STATE BANK Cool Summer Breezes Can be Guaranteed When you own An ELECTRIC FAN Why suffer with the heat when you can enjoy your work? You will be surprised at the low prices. Kansas Electric Utilities Company 719 Mass. Street THE SUMMER SESSION KANSAN JAYHAWKERS CONTINUE TWILIGHT LEAGUE HAS TO LEAD TWILIGHTERS MANY EVENING STARS Hill Hustlers Overcame th Crimson and Blue Nine on Tuesday SHUT OUT BY WILDCATS Advances Haskell Indians Showing More Speed as the League Season Advances The undefeated Jayhawks won their fourth victory Tuesday evening on Hamilton Field by defeating the Crimson and Blue, and continue to head the Twilight baseball league. The Jayhawks got away good in the first. Jaggard singled and stole second and third on two consecutive rallies and third scored nine. Minor, pitching for the Crimson and Blue, showed his stuff by retiring the next three men who faced him. From here on things went decidedly unfavorable for the Crimson and Blue. A rally in the fifth cheered them considerably and for a while things looked rather blue for the prominent leader. He responded to the Jayhawks and received good support all around. Minor also pitched a good game, but his support failed him at critical times. The score: Jayhawks ... 102 32 — Crimson and Blue ... 001 13 — Batteries: Jayhawcs—Cane and Haggard; Crimson and Blue—Minon and Griffin. The Wildcats defended the F.A. U. team in the twilight league game to the tune of 5 to 0 at Haskell Field Tuesday night. Score by innings: Humans: F. A. F. . . . . . The 600 Block Merchants again succed to defeat on McCook Field Tuesday night. Both sides hit the opposing pitchers freely and due to the advantage in the Indian's aided, the game ended with the score 13-7 in Haskell's favor. The Merchants played much better ball than previously but were unable to run in the necessary scores. The batteries for the Merchants were Snow and Osborne pitching with Reid receiving. Hampton and Anderson were the batteries for the Indian team. The Haskell team defeated the F. A. U. nine in one of the best games of the season at Haskell Field last Thursday night. Save for the one iming, the fifth, when the Indians managed to get four tallies, the game was a very closely contested score. Score by innings: F. A. U... .000 101 0-2 Haskel)...000 041 2-5 Batteries...F. A. U...Dunkley, Urbana and Rohlst; Reid; Hampton, Kilkand, Anducken. The Crimson and Blue received their first romping of the season on Hamilton Field by a score of 8-0. It was administered by the Wildcats who surprised the spectators by showing some real baseball ability. Up to this time the Wild Cats were considered tame, losing one game by a large score and forfeiting the other. Score: Wild Cats ... 000 503 - 9 Crimson and Blue ... 000 000 - 9 Batteries: Wild Cats - Nevit- and Milton and Blue - Hays and Chestnut. Another frightful massacre took place on McCook Field Thursday night. The 600 Block Merchants succured to the fast, big league baseball of the invincible Jayhawks who ran up ten counterts in the first timing and managed to score in the four remaining innings ofscore and while in the field didn't know what to do with the ball when they found it in their hands. "Babe Ruth" Mandeville again hit the ball for a home run with two men on bases. The Jayhawk pitcher had air-tight support from both the innd out-fields. Another big feature of the game was the loan of one of the Jayhawk's star outfielder to the onposition. The batteries for the 600 Block Merchants were Reed, Gallinger, and Schon. Reed pitched after the terrible first inning and managed to allow only five men to cross the home plate. Long, Kane, and Jaggard were the Indians for the Anthyhaws. Kane both received and delivered for the winners. The umpire called the game at the last half of the fifth inning on account of darkness. The score was as follows: Jayhawks 10 1 1 3 x-15 600 Block 0 0 0 0 0 -0 "Babe Ruth" Mandeville and "Phog" Allen Fight for Honors "Phog" Allen Fight fo Many evening stars are beginning to shine in the Twilight League as the schedule progresses. The Jayhawks still lead the league, having lost no games and their chances to retain the team the league seems very favorable. F, A. U, and the 600 Block Merchants are having a hot fight for the cellar position, neither one having won a game, as yet. Probably the most outstanding player of the league, is the Jayhawk second-baseman Husten. He formerly played with the Philadelphia Nationals before he was transferred to the Jayhawk aggregation. He covers his territory as only a big leaguer can, and he is no mean man at the bat. Among other noteworthy stars on the Jayhawks, are Carl Long, pitcher, who has a reputation, having been on the Varsity last spring, and he is fearled by the opposition. R. K. Jaggard, catcher and fielder, formerly of Colgate and Baker Universities, is a speedy man. Harry Kane, Varsity catcher, holds down his position, while "Babe Ruth" Mandeville covers shortstop, and wields a bat like his name sake. Not all stars are on the Jayhawks however. "Speed" Deever, formerly of Washburn University, covers short-stop, for the Crismon and the Blue, like a veteran. Deever is coming out for Varsity baseball next spring. Following the flight of a ball knocked between first and second we see a flash of determination. We can distinguish our old friend "PhoG" Allen, standing triumphantly holding the ball ready to put out any runner unlucky enough to be off base. Phlog plays a good game for the Crismon and the Blue. "Rusty" Navitt, who starts to hit he keeps the hits well scattered and plays a bliss of a game. Other men who are showing up in are, Coach Schadleman, Bishop, Reed, Chestnut, Conboy, Carl, Smith, Maden and Pugh. One Theatre is Closed Prof. H, B. Hungerford, of the department of entomology, is traveling in the vicinity of St. Paul collecting specimens of corixidia or water-burgs, in which he is very much interested, and also made several pleasure excursions. The management of the Bowersock Theatre following the usual custom, closed the theater for the rest of the summer. Minor repairs will be made during this period. The Varsity will continue to be open all summer. You will change the program three times a week, and continue to show the same class of pictures which they have in the past. Prof. P. B. Lawson, assistant professor of entomology, is spending a portion of his vacation in trips around Boston and New York, and in his last letter it was stated that he was on his way to Ithaca, N. Y., where he will give instruction in entomology during the summer. WANTED Instructor of Domestic Science Apply to Wm. Scalapino 1232 Louisiana St Phone 2767 WATKINS NATIONAL BANK 1047 Massachusetts Street Capital ... $100,000.00 Surplus ... 100,000.00 Our Policy: Helpful, friendly, co-operation. THE BATHING AGE Tailored in the best manner of the finest all wool fabrics. We say these are the best suit values in town and urge a careful comparison. Special Suit Values $30 $25 $35 For 100 per cent summer wear comfort genuine Palm Beach or Cool Cloth suits. $10.00 $17.50 $15.00 Bob Sinclair and a pianist SkofStadS ELLING SYSTEMS Beginning Tomorrow Morning A Special Selling of Sporting Goods and Luggage Second Floor SILK SHIRTS A most remarkable sale of SILK SHIRTS of finest qualities not duplicated in many years. $ 4.85 Ober's HEADTOFOOT OUTFITTERS What are You Going to do the Remainder of the Summer? On July 22, the first term of the Summer Session closes. There will still be seven weeks before the fall term opens. WHAT WILL YOU DO DURING THAT TIME? If you have no more profitable plan let me suggest— Director of Summer Session 2. If you can't stay in Lawrence, enroll in the correspondence study department before you leave, and make a few extra credits while at home. 1. The second term of Summer Session—opens July 25—lasts four weeks. Either of these are dividend-paying investments for the vacation weeks. W. H. Johnson In either event the correct Trunk, Bag or Suit Case is most essential, not only for convenience but for economy as well. Here you will find a comprehensive selection, and during our July Clearance Sale liberal reductions are being made on all lines. Going or Coming? AIRPORT TICKET BOX 20% Discount on all Wardrobe, Steamer or Dress Trunks Special Prices on Bags and Suit Cases. Third Floor Innes, Bulline & Hackman Everything To Write With from An Eversharp at 50c A Corona at $50.00 to F. I. Carter Stationery 1025 Mass St. LOST Tempoint Fountain Pen last Saturday. Call 2498 White or leave at Kansan Business Office Hot Weather Suggests fresh vegetables, and salads, and cool refreshing drinks, and all sorts of things that are different—to eat. A change in food is what you crave— Our menu of wide variety permits you to order just what you like— And—it is cheaper to eat what you want and when you want it. Coupon Book, $5.50 for $5.00 "Just a step from the Campus" THE OREAD CAFE E. C. BRICKEN, Prop.