This is the Week OF THE- Greatest Of Muslin Underwear Sales In the Suit Room Innes, Bullene & Hackman MORRIS INGALLS DIED. K. U. Graduate Suffocated by Escaping Gas. Morris S. Ingalls, '06, was killed by escaping gas at his home in Halstead, Kansas, Sunday morning. He was found dead by his wife and parents, Mr. and Mrs. M. S. Ingalls, Sr., upon their return from church. Mr. Ingalls was a member of the Sigma Nu fraternity and president of the senior class of pharmacy of '06. At the time of his death he was the owner of a drug-store in Halstead. He was married last October to Miss Ada Williams, '07, of Newton, Kansas, a member of the Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority in the University. Washburn's President at Vesper. Dr. Frank K. Sanders, president of Washburn College delivered the address at the Sunday afternoon vesper service. His subject was "Abraham, the great spiritual pioneer." Dr. Sanders was very much at home with his entire subject as he has especially studied the Jewish people. Tea to University Girls. The ladies of the faculty will entertain the young ladies of the University with an afternoon tea in the classical museum Thursday, Jan. 21, from three to half past five. All young ladies of the University are invited. Pi Theta Sigma Into New Home Pi Theta Sigma Into New Home. The Theta Sigma, the pharmic fraternity, has moved into its new home at 910 Ohio. The house is being furnished throughout. The fraternity expects to start their table within a week. John E. Hawkinson, '07, has received the appointment as private stenographer to Governor Stubbs. Junior party F. A. A., Friday, January 22. JOHNSON VERSUS JOHN. John Suffered Broken Collar Bone in Friendly Match. Henry John, a sophomore in the College, received a broken collar bone yesterday. He and John Johnson were engaged in a friendly tussle after the Zoology I class had been dismissed. Johnson threw John to the floor, breaking his collar bone. Dr. H. L. Chambers attended him. Piano Recital Thursday. --- The Fine Arts Winter Course of recitals begins next Thursday with a piano recital by Rafal Navas, a Spanish pianist. He will play Prof. Preyer's Concert Piece which was produced at the last Musical Festival, accompanied by Prof. Preyer on a second piano. One of his other numbers will be the "Moonlight" Sonata by Beethoven. The other concerts will be a piano recital by Miss Augusta Cottlow Jan. 28th, a harp recital by Mrs. Frances Wade on Feb. 18th and a song recital by Mrs. Ciff Matson'on March 18th. Kansas Now a Member. Kansas University was admitted to the Association of American Universities last week at the annual meeting of that body at Ithaca, New York. The association is made up of the larger colleges and universities of the United States. It is dominated to a great degree by the eastern schools. Missouri and Nebraska are also members. Membership in the organization signifies that a certain grade of work is being done by that school. Kansas Day Speaker Chosen. Sheffield Ingalls, '95, son of Senator John J. Ingalls, and editor of the Atchison Champion, will deliver the Kansas Day address in chapel on Friday, Jan. 29. He will also speak to the classes in Journalism. Senior Play Near Completion. The senior play committee is holding frequent meetings and is putting the finishing touches on their annual play. Tryouts for the cast will be held soon after examinations. Junior party, January 22, F. A.A. Morris M. Roberts, a junior in the college, will be back in school the second term. Last November he was taken to his home in Great Bend with typhoid fever. Frank N. Agrelius, of the botanical department, went to Atchison Monday to get samples of milk and butter for use in the tests being carried on in that department. Professor S.J. Hunter, of the department of entomology, was in Topeka Friday and Saturday before a special legislative committee. Ben L. Jones, a senior Law is ill at the Acacia house. REPRODUCE "THE CLIMBERS." Thespians to Stage Their Play for Third Time Thursday. In response to the urgent demands of students and of down town theatre goers, the managers of "The Thespians," have agreed to reproduce "The Climbers" in Bowersock's opera house on Thursday evening, January 21. The many other attractions held last week gave the going public too much to see and many could not attend the Thespians. The same cast of twenty-two people that gave the play last Thursday and Friday take part in the presentation. "The Climbers" is the heaviest play ever produced by a University dramatic company. Dormitory Life Lauded. The Women's Dormitory at Wisconsin, Chadbourne Hall, provides a comfortable and pleasant home for more than a hundred girls. So popular is it that applications for entrance must be sent in months ahead of the opening of the academic year. Recently the regents restricted its use to freshmen and sophomores because it was found that girls who were fortunate enough to find places at the hall in their first year very often returned year after year, thus making it impossible for freshmen to enter. And this is true in a city in which students, women as well as men, have but little difficulty in finding good rooms and goad board, and where the problem of pleasant and comfortable life is not so serious as at Minnesota.—Anna Helmholtz Phelan. Dormitory life meant in my college protection and tutelage, communal responsibility and comradeship with a large group of people. It brought into our college life the personal touch of people older and better than ourselves. Its social standards were democratic, and loneliness and friendliness could not long exist under its genial and cheery influence. One did not have to go far for what one needed were it mental uplift or an audience for a hornpipe.- Dorothy Derickson, Wells College, in Minnesota Daily. Jessie Baldridge, a senior in the college, has returned to school for the spring term. Miss Baldridge left school in the fall on account of the illness of her father. ___ Pauline Schilling, of Long Beach, California, is visiting Glendale Griffith, a freshman in the College, at 1229 Ohio. John Holdren, of Spring Hill Kansas, is visiting Streeter Blair, a sophomore in the College. Joseph Dyer, of Kansas City, and Frank Merrill, of Topeka, visited at the Phi Psi house Sunday. Rue Anderson, '08, visited at the Chi Omega house Saturday evening. George B. Eyssen of Independence is visiting at the Sig Alph house. AMUSEMENTS. THE AURORA Latest novelties, moving pictures and vaudeville. Admission 5 Cents. The oldest Moving Picture House. The Nickel Always Good 708 Mass. St. AT. THE AURORA "A Country Girl in the Seminary." AT THE LYRIC: VAUDEVILLE The Von Smiths In a very clever sketch, "The R. F.D.Maa." F. D. Maa,' Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday Only. TODAY'S FILMS: "School Days," "The Tenderfoot" "A New Yorker's Visit to His Brother's Ranch." Also other pictures. COLLEGE POSTERS, COLLEGE STATIONERY, COLLEGE POST CARDS —AT— BOUGHTON'S 1025 Mass. St. Be sure to attend the junior party next Friday night. There are eight expert photographers at work in Squires Studio and your work will be done on time. Private dancing lessons given in F. A. A. Hall. Misses Dessie Pittsford and Mary Wilson Phone 200. When the weather's blust'ry, when the walks are slushy too, aint it funny what a pantatorium ticket will do. The K. U. Pantatorium has the right kind at the right price. The fourth Junior dance, F. A.A.hall,January 22. WANTED—A few boarders at Wright Club, 928 Louisiana St. Three dollars per week. Squires, the Students Photographer for your picture. Junior party—the last before the exams. Last party for three weeks, F. A.A.hall, Jan. 22. Dr. Sheldon will speak to the religious and philosophical union at Myers Hall at 4:30 Thursday afternoon. His subject will be "The Relation of the Churches." Clarence Sheldon and Clyde Kyler spent Sunday with their parents in Ottawa. Prof. W. H. Carruth lectured before the ladies of the Round Table Club this afternoon at the home of Mrs. M. G. Manley.