"Wooltex Marchioness" For the woman who wants fine fashion we submit this beautiful coat, with the confident prediction that it will be the favorite of fall fashions,and will appeal to women of taste. Come in and see the coat, try it on, and you will be pleased with its dressy effect. A. D. Weaver. DR. SNOW'S SUMMER BUG TRIP 15,000 Specimens Found.—Story of Judge Smith's Catch in '76. The twenty-sixth entomological expedition, accompanied by Dr. Snow, Professor Baumgardner, Mr. Robertson, Eugene Smythe, and Fred Faragher, had a very successful trip this last summer. The collecting was done in Santa Cruz county, in Southern Arizona, the greatest bug county in the United States. During the seven weeks trip over fifteen thousand specimens were captured. Many of the species are new to science, a considerable number have never before been found in the United States and five hundred species are new to the University museum. By a system of exchange that Dr. Snow carries on with entomologists all over the world he will trade the rare insects captured this summer for over a thousand other insects that the museum does not possess. At the present time the museum contains 21,000 species. This is by far the largest state university collection in America, and Cornell and Harvard are the only institutions whose entomological museums compare with the University's. By next summer Dr. Snow will have collected additional insects enough to make the total 25,000 species. The first expedition was held in 1876 when Dr. Snow accompanied the graduating class on a collecting trip through Kansas. Judge Smith of Stockton, a graduate in the class of '76, was on this first trip. It is said that through the expedition Judge Smith came into possession of much more than the bugs collected. However that may be he was soon afterward married to a lady who was also of the party, and so from the first the expeditions were popular. Dr. Chas. L. Sexton, pharmac '87, of Los Angeles, Cal., spent the day, September 30, on the hill. Mount Oread is reported to be about fifty feet higher than it was last June. It's the tired feeling. Raymond's Bark and Iron relieves it. Our pictures do our advertising, Squires Studio. 150 Students Entered Chemistry. The unusually large number of new students enrolled in the University has made it necessary to organize a class in elementary chemistry for the present term instead of offering the course only during the second semester as planned by the department. This class has an enrollment of one hundred and fifty and it is estimated that this simply measures the increase of students who are applying for physical science, and that there will be about the usual number of applications for the course at the beginning of the second term. German Verein Monday. The first meeting of the German Verein for the year will be held Monday, October 14. The program will be made up of selections on the graphophone recently purchased by the department and will include a speech by the Kaiser, a greeting from Professor Carruth, and songs and recitations from great German singers and actors. Lee's is at the foot of the hill. A place for everything and everything in its place. The place for your clothes to be cared for is at the K. U. Pantatorium. Phone 1400. Minne-ha-ha Now a Student. Minne-ha-ha, of Hiawatha, is a student in the University. Although she lives on Delaware street in Hiawatha, she denies any relationship to the heroine of Longfellow's poem. Minneha-ha's last name is Stearns. She is a freshman in the college. ___ W. E. Broady LL.B. '06, now practising law at Winfield, Kansas, was a visitor at the University Tuesday and Thursday. You friends will like your pictures if they are taken at the Loomas Studio. ___ Try Raymond's Cold Tablets. They cure all right. NEW LEATHER FOST CARDS for Shopping Bags at Hoadley's CHAS. C. SEEWIR, 917 Massachusetts St. PRINTING. Novelties in Pictures Dealer in Moccasins, Leather Novelties, Souvenir Post Cards. at Stevenson-Hopper 819 Mass. St. McPherson Students Organize. At a meeting, last night, of the McPherson county students in the University, a permanent county K.U. club was organized with the following officers for 1907-8: Wirt C. Salthouse, president; Ray W. Baldwin, vicepresident; Miss Minnie Bartels, secretary and treasurer. There are about twenty enrolled from McPherson county this year. WANTED—A girl to work for room and board.—Mrs. Fisher, 1131 Ohio St. Just Received a shipment of College HATS === Yours for the asking === $3 the price FALL CLOTHES Await here for your choosing-in a multitude of patterns—Tobacco Browns, Modes, Grays and Blues. Priced $12.50 to $30.00 Visitors welcome. Felix&Sons Raincoats and Overcoats now selling. Save Money "Pay Less, Dress Better" By ordering your CLOTHES of CLIFTON T. HIATT. CLIFTON T. HIATT, THE SPECIAL ORDER CLOTHING MAN. Both Phones 920. Office 919 Mass. St. Curby, Draper & Greene, BARBERS. First class work. 737 Massachusetts Street. THE EYES Have them carefully looked after. Glasses fitted correctly Bell phone 695. Office 802 Mass. St. J. F. BROCK, OPTOMETIST. Buy your COMMUTATION TICKETS at The Peerless Cafe SECOND HAND SHOE and CLOTHING STORE 734 Mass. St. Pays good prices for second hand Clothing and Shoes. Newby's Shoe Shop 911 Mass. St. WE DO ALL KINDS OF SHOE REPAIRING SEWED SOLES WHILE YOU WAIT ORDERS TAKEN FOR SOROSIS SHOES You will be charmed with the class of work we do for you when it is sent home for your examination. The positive cleanliness and freshness of your garments, coupled with the dainty finish we put to them in the Pressing, will make you hereafter a permanent customer. Let us show you some of the work we are now doing, and you will be glad to have us take charge of your Dyeing and Cleaning hereafter. Our prices will particularly please you. Lawrence Pantatorium Phone 506. 12 W. Warren St. Geo. E. Ross.'08, K. U. Agent. The Dyche Bicycle Repairing Establishment Gives a SQUARE DEAL TO ALL. 1017 Mass, St. We call for and deliver your clothes. We call for and deliver your clothes. O. P. Leonard Tailor Shop and Pantatorium Rates $1.50 per month. Tel. 5321 Red. 733 Mass. St. Tel. 5321 Red.