Sk At $ from dress and best choo sixto Boe $1 Le Man Pine, few o Both GET Dr. K G. instru recei in, a der for dipet Barbe pacteuber home he ha constu The profe used his baap that a drawn placed The d by made instru it is t or A end ents speci Minx, Beaver, Black Lynx, White Fox, Sable Fox, Red Fox, Gray Squirrel, Brook Mink Furs 20 per Cent Off Stoles, Neck Pieces, Shawls, Boas and Muffs made in latest shapes and models from high class skins. INNES, BULLENE and HACKMAN. Basketball as a Social Affair. President Hill of the University of Missouri has come out strongly in favor of informal parties after basketball games. The basketball party is customary in many schools and is desirable owing to the fact that a game alone hardly provides for an evenings entertainment. At Missouri the band furnishes music during the game and plays for the dance. --- California has made $9,000 this season in athletics. She will use the money in paying for the new athletic field. Special matinee of "The Servant in the House," tomorrow afternoon at 2:00. Night performance all sold out. For Rent-A double room at 1341 Ohio street. "The Servant in the House" will have a special matinee in the opera house tomorrow afternoon at 2:00. Charley Vernon, '08, who is owner and editor of the Manhattan "Mercury" has recently started a daily in connection with his weekly paper. LOST-Between the middle of South Park and corner of Kentucky and Adams, a small black purse containing three dollars in bills and some change in silver and a silver waterlily pin. Finder please return to 1301 Ohio and receive reward. Attend special matinee of "The Servant in the House" tomorrow afternoon in opera house at 2:00. Roy Martin, a junior in the Engineering school, attended the inaugural exercises at Topeka yesterday. Miss Gwen Frost, of Cedar Rapids, Iowa, is visiting the Garrett sisters at the Smith house. A few boarders wanted at 928 Louisiana St. $3 per week. Mixed club. KANSAS WON FROM AMES (Continued from page·1) Referee, "Pete" Allen, of Kansas City. Took Second Nebraska Game. The Jayhawkers won the second game from the Nebraska team Saturday night in Robinson gymnasium by a score of 36 to 17. In the first half of the game the Cornhuskers played real basket-ball, holding the Kansans to 12 points and making 9 themselves, but in the second half the game was a walk-away for the Jayhawkers. Long and Johnson starred for Kansas, while Bell did the best work for Nebraska. Walsh was retired from the game early in the second half for having made too many personal fouls. The score: KANSAS F.G. F. F.T. Johnson, l. f., 5 2 2 McCune, r. f., 2 2 0 Long, r. f., 4 0 0 Bergen, c., 0 0 0 Heizer, c., 2 0 0 Martindell, r. g., 4 1 0 Wohler, l. g., 0 0 0 Woodward, l. g., 0 1 0 Totals 17 6 2 NEBRASKA F.G. F. F.T. Wood, l. f., 2 1 0 Walsh, r. f., 2 5 3 Schmidt, r. f., 0 0 0 Petroskek, c., 0 0 0 Bell, r. g., 1 3 0 Perry, l. g., 2 3 0 Totals, 7 12 3 Referee, Hamilton, of Kansas City Central High School. Umpire, Ebright, of Kansas Univhrsity. Lost-A leather pocket-book containing papers of no value except to the owner. The Price Raid scrip is the only thing of any value to the owner, and if ever paid can only be paid to the owner.E.F.Crocker. A reward will be paid for the return of the pocketbook to 932 Main street or the Secretary's office at K.U. SCIENTIFIC PUBLICATION DEVOTED TO ZOOLOGY. BULLETIN READY AMUSEMENTS. Prof. C. E. McClung Wrote Five of Fourteen Articles—1200 Copies Issued Copies Issued. The last part of volume four of the Science Bulletin of the University, which is a continuation of the publication known as the Kansas University Quarterly, came off of the press during the holidays and is ready for mailing. One volume containing from 300 to 400 pages of reading matter with necessary illustrations, is issued in parts at irregular intervals in each year. The bulletin just issued is devoted to Zoology and contains fourteen articles five of which are written by Dr. C. E. McClung, and the others by instructors and students of the University at the present or who have been associated with it in recent years. One of the important numbers is a brief history of the Department of Zoology in the University of Kansas, prepared by Professor McClung, which includes a list of the publications of the department. Including the articles in the present bulletin, a total of one hundred and eighty-seven articles have been published during the life of the department in Kansas. Four of the numbers of this bulletin are devoted to discussions of the sex cells of the grasshopper, to the investigation of which Dr. McClung has given considerable attention, with the result that he has become a much quoted authority on the subject. Miss Lalia V. Walling has an article in regard to the anatomy of the grasshopper heart. Professor McClung's article on "The Restoration of the Skeleton of the Bison Occidentalis," is of especial interest because it describes the mounted specimen of an extinct bison which is in the paleontological museum. The bones were found by H. T. Martin in Logan county, Kansas, in 1895, and assembled by him. The specimen is the only complete skeleton of an extinct form. Other articles are on the "Relationship of the Turtles and Plesiosaurs" by Roy L. Moodie, a "Description of the Skull and Separate Cranial Bones of the Wolf-eel" by L. A. Adams, some "South American Archeological Notes" by H. T. Martin, and "Notes on Some Northern Arizona Birds" by Alex Wetmore. Twelve hundred copies of the Bulletin were issued. --- There will be a Freshman class meeting tomorrow at 12:15 in room 15, Fraser Hall. Professor Hubach and family will spend next summer in Europe. Miss Grayce Waugh, a freshmen in the Fine Arts School has pledged Chi Omega. THE AURORA Latest novelties, moving pictures and vaudeville. Admission 5 Cents. "Under the Greenwood Tree" TUESDAY Bowersock's Opera House 50c,75c,$1 & $1.50 "The Servant IN THE HOUSE" WEDNESDAY BOWERSOCK'S OPERA HOUSE Prices 50c, 75c, $1, 1.50 PARK HETZEL—FRANK EVANS Lawrence Transser Companp Hauls and Stores Everything Trunks a Specialty 9 East Henry St. Telephone 15 EVEN LADIES DO IT. Seniors—Rates are now on Squires. The time has now come when not only the men but the ladies make a rush for special rates on cleaning and pressing. We have tickets for ladies as well as gentlemen. Both phones 1400.-K. U. Pantatorium. 1400 1400 1400 Most Captains Are Linemen. According to the Purdue Exponent a large percentage of the football captains who have been elected for the coming year play in the line. This is explained by the fact that the new style football requires, as a rule, a double set of backs and as it is desirable that the captain play the entire game, the number of captains who play these positions is comparatively small. Mary Coors, who has been ill at her home in Las Vegas, New Mexico, has returned to school. DON'T FORGET Friday, January 22. F. A. A. HALL Junior Party