PROF. HELLEBERG HAS BEEN CHOSEN WILL. SUCCEED PROF. PAR MELEE, WHO RESIGNED. Will Be Assistant Professor of Sociology—Comes From Chicago University. The vacancy left in the department of sociology by the resignation of Prof. Maurice E. Parmeclee, has been filled by the appointment of Victor E. Helleberg of the University of Chicago to the position of assistant professor of sociology in the University. Professor Helleberg is a graduate of Yale University and of the Cincinnati Law School. He has spent the past four years studying and teaching sociology in the University of Chicago. The addition of the new instructor to the teaching force will make possible the better handling of work in the department for the rest of the year, and relieve the other instructors from the burden of extra work which they have been carrying since the fall term opened. Prof. Helleberg will have charge of the classes in socialization and social control, social, and social pathology. Seventy-one students are taking social pathology and the class will now be divided into two sections. The course in sociology I, in which eighty students are entered, will also be divided into two sections Professor Helleberg arrived in Lawrence from Chicago last Friday and began work in the department yesterday morning. Prof. and Mrs. Helleberg will make their home at 1720 Louisiana street. BAND TO KANSAS CITY. University Men Have Principa. Place in the Parade. Under the direction of J. C. MeCanles, a combination of the Kansas University band and the Lawrence military band went to Kansas City this afternoon where they will be participant sin the Priests of Pallas parade tonight. A special car was chartered for the occasion. This afternoon the band scened the offices of the Kansas City Star, the Journal, the Post and the other city publications. Last night a practice was held on Massachusetts street and sixty men were present. Both bands are in excellent practice and Mr. Meanes is certain that his band will make a good showing in the parade. The eagle is the principal attraction in the parade this year, and the position just preceding this has been allotted to the Lawrence aggregation for tonight. Miss Maria Benson, instructor in painting and drawing, who has been ill a few days, is reported better today. She will not be able to meet her classes for two or three days. Leonard Hammer, a senior in the School of Law, received a telegram from home this morning, which informed him that his mother was not expected to live. He left today for his home in Hutchinson. The Mining Journal will hold a meeting in Haworth hall Wednesday afternoon at 4:30 o'clock, and Prof. F.J.O. Marvin, Dean of the School of Engineering, will give an address. George Beezley, a middle law, received a telegram from his home at Girard, this morning, informing him of the death of his father. He left for his home immediately. Prof. W. H. Johnson, high school visitor, left this morning to visit schools on the Union Pacific line. He will return Friday. The Sigma Nu fraternity has pledged John Crosswhite of Kansas City. You College Men Who Shave Yourself Can make some big savings on shaving articles and things for the toilet by buying at Innes'. Here are a few of our special prices: 10c Colgate's Shaving Soap at a cake, 5c 15c Bottle of Witch Hazel, 10c 25c Can of Talcum Powder (Colgate's or Mennen's) 15c Big Bottle Finest Bay Rum 25c And Soaps, Tooth Powders, Hair Tonies in a big variety of standard brands at proportionately low prices. The Store That Saves You Money OREAD NEWS NOTES. Prof. R. A. Schwegler, associate professor of education, spoke at Osawatome Friday night to an association of county school teachers. He addressed a similar meeting at Girard Saturday night. E. B. Cowgill, head of the University publicity department, spoke to the Grange of Jackson county Saturday night. The members of the department of mathematics held its first meeting last Wednesday to discuss plans for the year. It was decided to hold meetings once every two weeks, mainly for the purpose of hearing reports on the research work done by members of the department or under their direction. Wm. Theil, a graduate from the School of Engineering in the class of '09, is visiting University friends for a few days before leaving for Schenectetey, N. Y., where he resumes his work in the General Electric works at that place. The current number of the Transactions of the American Mathematical society contains an article by Prof. J.W. Young on "Two-dimensional Chains and the Associated Collineations in the Complex Plane." Nat Pigman, who was a freshman in the College last year, has just received an appointment to Annalopis naval academy. He leaves for Washington immediately to prepare for the examination. The current number of the American Journal of Mathematics contains an article by Prof. J. N. Van der Vries, on "The Steiners in Quartic Surfaces." Frank C. Gephart, of Northwestern University is spending a few days with his brother, J. T. Gephart, a senior in the College. The Nu Sigma Nu medical fraternity has pledged Watson Campbell of Athens, Linden Greene of Kansas City, Mo., and Clarence Earnest of Lawrence. Mattie Kent, who was graduated from the University several years ago, is teaching German and Latin in the Dodge City high school. W. G. Fairchild of Hutchinson, Kan., spent Sunday in Lawrence visiting his son Sam, who is a freshman in the School of Engineering. If you want something to keep you awake get a coco cola at the College Inn. The pies like mother used to make—fresh every day, at the College Inn. SUNFLOWER STATE HAS 12. 000 COLLEGE STUDENTS. KANSAS GREATEST COLLEGE STATE John Elfreth Watkins in the Washington Star. Has Cultured Massachusetts Best ed in Number of Schools and Students. Eleven thousand miles of American students in line this fall; eleven thousand miles, and more of boys and girls, young men and young women, on their way to school and college. Line them up, single line, with only a yard of step room from from nose to nose and the procession measures—to be exact—11, 364 miles, which means that it would stretch all the way from the spot where Peary nailed the flag to the tip top of the earth down to the interior of the antartic Continent, which Shackelton penetrated on his South Poleward journey. To give his children a college education the American parent will spend in tuition fees alone enough money during the coming year to make thirteen millionaires, and during 1910 our colleges will have taken in about a million dollars every six days—in other words, their total income is now about 60 million dollars a year. If you owned all their buildings you would be worth 215 million dollars; if merely their scientific apparatus, 28 million dollars; if their libraries alone, 12 million dollars. The total amount of money now invested in American colleges is 260 million dollars. If they were all wiped off the map a tax of $3 on each man, woman and child in the nation would about pay for their restoration. Our army of college professors and instructors is now twenty-two thousand strong, and includes seven times as many men as women. If all of our colleges were equally distributed among the commonwealths of the Union there would be more than ten for each state. What is our greatest college state? No, not Massachusetts, by a jug full! Guess again! Give it up? Well, it will knock you down to hear it—Kansas. Massachusetts with her hallowed hub of culture, is nearly twice as populous as Kansas, yet the latter has twelve thousand college students to Massachusetts's ten thousand. One out of every 122 residents of Gansas is in college, while in Iowa the average is one in 171; Illinois, one in 200; Ohio, one in 244; New York, one in 279; Massachusetts, one in 280; Pennsylvania, one in 315. These are the states having more than ten thousand college boys and girls. This year there are more than twice as many colleges in the North Central as in the North Atlantic states. For goods, style, fit and up-to-dateness, ROYAL clothes lead them all. Prices $15 and up, at Paper in Atlantic Monthly. HIATT, the CLOTHIER'S. “Fixin's” for fudge at Vie's. Sewing of all kinds wanted, 1702 N. H. Bell 2413. 3-t “The Smoker,” under Rowland’s—a cozy place and comfortable lounging seats. Mrs. Anna Johnson, who conducts the select hairdressing shop in Room 3, Jackson building, in the 900 block on Massachusetts street, has just received a new line of hair goods and hair accessories. Hair shampooing and hair weaving done. Ladies are invited to visit her parlors. Hot Mexican chili at Lee's. Dean L. E. Sayre, of the School of Pharmacy will talk to the home administration class Wednesday, on the "History of the Pure Food Law." The class is now studying the principles of marketing, and Professor Sayre will give them information that all housekeepers should have. Professor Carl Becker of the department of European history, has a contribution in the Atlantic Monthly for October entitled "Detachment and the Writing of History." H. V. Foulk, '10, visited in Lawrence Saturday. He was on his way t oAnn Arbor, Mich., where he will attend the University of Michigan this year. Carl Campbell, a senior engineer, returned yesterday from a business trip to Lyndon, Kan. The Stout club will give a dance in Fraternal Aid hall next Saturday evening. Katherine Wilson, '09, is teaching in Millville, Ark. A good line of good pipes—25c to $2.50, at Lee's. Student Agency Wilder Bros. CUSTOM LAUNDRY Mayer, Deforest Bell 498 Phones Home 498 Kabler, Neuschwanger Specials Promptly Attended You can get a good meal at the College 1nn for 15c. SCHULZ FOR FALL SUITING 911 Mass. St. Take 'em down to Those Shoes you want repaired Ed. W. Parsons JEWELER Watch, Clock and Jewelry Repairing. Engraving. 717 Mass. St. The Peerless Cafe A PLACE TO EAT 1009 Mass. St. W. C. PARRISH OPEN FOR THE DANCE Paper by the Pound all kinds, at Boughton's 1025 Mass. St. Parker Makes Clothes ED ANDERSON Restaurant and Confectionery Leathers and Lasts at Popular Prices Fall Foot Toggery! We have what you are looking for---all the new Starkweather's THE GRAND Wilson-Wolgast World's Lightweight Championship Contest Moving Pictures. 4 REELS—4400 FEET-PERFECT PHOTOGRAPHY EXTRA THURSDAY AND FRIDAY POST CARDS 300 Different Kinds THE POST CARD SHOP 944 Mass. St. Those Brass K's Have Arrived Six Dozen Arrived Our own swell designs, nothing like to cheap looking K's on the market now. GOLD PLATED 50c EACH. We had 6 doz. when students arrived and they went in five days. The College Jeweler