HAD EASY TIME WITH FAIRMOUNT COLLEGE TEAM WON BY A SCORE OF 29 TO 6. Last Game on the Home Court Was Slow and Free From Rough Work. The last basket-ball game played on the home court by the College team resulted in a defeat for the Fairmount College team last night by the score of 29 to 6. The playing was not as fast at any time of the contest as in the contest between the College and Y. M. C. A. last Saturday night, and the local men showed form in goal shooting that was far inferior to what they have done before. The team work of both squads was loose, but the guarding near the basket was close and a number of the points of the game were made on long shots from the center of the court. The contest was exceptionally clean and free from rough work. During the entire course of the game only three fouls were called and Malleis of the College scored the only point in the free trials at goal. Malleis and Hite were the best scorers for the arts and sciences men, Malleia tossing seven and Hite five field goals. The guarding of Plank of the Wichita five was perhaps the best work done for the Fairmount team. The summary. Fairmount— G. F.T. F. Haymaker, l. f...2 0 0 Peacock, r. f...1 0 0 Hodgson, c...1 0 1 Mahannah, r. g...0 0 0 C. Plank, l. g...0 0 0 Totals...3 0 1 College— Hite, r. f...5 0 0 Nesbit, l. f...2 0 1 Malleis, e...7 1 0 Ebnothe, l. g...0 0 0 Eistle, l. g...0 0 0 Totals...14 1 1 Totals...14 Referee—“Fog” Allen. As a curtain raise to the College game the freshmen played the senior class team and defeated them by the score of 24 to 16 and the sophomore team played the junior team and defeated them by the core of 22 to 15. K. U. RANKS TWENTY-FIRST School of Law Now Has an En rollment of 216. The School of Law of the University of Kansas stands twenty-first in enrollment, in a list of forty-six law schools. The list is published in the Winter number of the American Law School Review. Harvard Law School heads the list with an enrollment of 802. Michigan is second with 776. The University of Kansas and the University of Missouri Law Schools both have an enrollment of 216. The schools which show a decrease in attendance this season are: Minnesota, Yale, Texas National, Missouri, Iowa, Virginia, Illinois, Valparaiso, and Indiana. Plaster Model Arrives The plaster of Paris model of the new Administration building has arrived and is now being set up on the main floor of the museum. It is about ten feet long, five feet wide and three feet high Only the east wing of the Administration building is now under construction. INDOOR TENNIS PRACTICE. Kansas Team to Enter Intercollegiate Tournament. The indoor tennis tournament is to start as soon as possible in the gymnasium, so that a team may be picked for the Kansas intercollegiate tournament which is to be held May 12 and 13 at Wash burn. This will be the first year that the University team has entered this tournament, which is composed of the following schools Washburn, Baker, State Normal Southwestern, and the Kansas State Agricultural College. The indoor tournament will be played under intercollegiate rules, although the contestants will be allowed to arrange their own matches, and will be permitted to play them out doors if they wish. However, each contestant will have to play every other man at least one match before Saturday, March 4, unless he has lost six matches, in which case he must withdraw from the tournament. No contestant will be permitted to play two matches in succession if in so doing he will prevent another match from being played in the gymnasium. The matches are to be played under regular rules, except that a set is to be of four instead of six games. Contestants are to be required to furnish one ball apiece for each match,and at the end of each match the result will have to be immediately communicated to the office of Dr. Naismith, either by phone or on paper. It is the object of the committee to pick the four best men from this tournament to represent Kansas in the inter-collegiate contest, for they will have to send two men for the singles and a pair for the doubles. At Vespers Sunday. Bishop E. R. Hendricks of Kansas City, president of the Associated Christian Enterprises of America, made the address at the Vesper services Sunday afternoon on the subject of "The Christiikenness of God." "The vocation of man is the discovery of God," said Bishop Hendricks, "and he may come to know God by studying Christ, who is a time exposure of the Father." Bishop Hendricks named absolute truthfulness, unselfishness, and the pardoning power enabling him to present the justice of a sovereign, as some of the attributes of Christ, which show him to be the equal of God whom men worship. At a meeting of the Pan Helenic Council held last Sunday morning a committee was appointed to draw up tentative rules regarding the methods to be used in the future by the fraternities in pledging. Up to this time no systematic plan has been used in this matter and it was thought best to adopt such a system, so that if a controversy should arise regarding pledges the council might have something to work on. The committee consists of Sears, Doyle, and McKay. New Pledging System. Accident to Professor Olin. Prof. A. S. Olin is suffering from a sprained wrist as a result of a fall Saturday morning. While helping to move some rotten timbers at his new house, one of them broke and threw him backwards, tearing the ligaments in his wrist. Accident to Professor Olin. IT WAS A FIGHT. A tennis court on Adams St. might be mistaken for a Mexican battlefield except that the "dead soldiers" scattered about on it largely outnumbered those to be found on any single field in Greaserdom. The casualties were the result of a night attack the latter part of last week. Dead Soldiers Lay Scattered on the Scene of Action. The dead left on the field were mostly pints, with a couple of quart commanders of battalion. When attacking party retired they carried their dead and wounded with them. A Prom Minus Men. ITHACA, N. Y., Feb. 11.—Disgruntled because only five of their number were invited to the men's junior "prom," the remaining 395 women students in Cornell university held a "defiance dance" of their own in the gymnasium of Sage college last night. No men were admitted to the girls' party and the fee required was only 10 cents in comparison with the $5 required for admission to the juniors' ball. Miss Ada May Harrington, of Brooklyn, was chairman of the committee which started the movement. It has been an open secret for years that Cornell men do not look with favor on the coeducational plan. This is, however, the first time that the young women became militant enough to organize an opposition event and exclude them from the function. New Motor Received. A new three and a half horse power motor has been received by the department of industrial research and will be set up in the basement of the Chemistry building. This motor will furnish the power for such chemical apparatus as the mixers and grinders used in the industrial department. Rats, eats and ants are made to run through mazes of labyrinths at the University of Michigan in order to teach students their learning processes, and soon monkeys are to be added. The work is unique in that the experimentation accompanies a regular undergraduate course, whereas in the past such work has been reserved for graduate students. HOME DAIRY LUNCH ROOM Friday Menu. ROASTS Prime ribs of beef au jus ... 15c Roast pork ... 20c ENTREES. Fried catfish ...20c Baked pork and beans...15c Spanish beef stew...15c Vienna meat loaf...15c NOW for that SPRING SUIT. Let me suggest that you let HI- ATT order you a ROYAL, as you are SURE to be RIGHT in STYLE and at a PRICE that no other house will be able to meet. Call and look over the line and get the prices. CLIFTON T. HIATT, Local dealer for ROYAL CLOTHES. For sprains or rheumatic pains use Rexall's rubbing oil, 25 and 50c bottles, at McCulloch's drug store. A good assortment of reception sticks for parties and entertainments. See them at Wiedemann's. Seniors get busy—Squires for your pictures. Gentlemen: You are invited—the women can't have all the "millinery openings" to themselves—gentlemen, you are invited to a most noteworthy one- The first showing of Stetson and Mallery Styles for Spring,1911 These Hats will show you "the styles" for Spring. We want you to see them-want you to come with the understanding that you will not be importuned to buy unless you are ready. Mallery Craveneted Soft Hats, $3.00 Mallery Craveneted Soft Hats, $3.00 Mallery Craveneted Stiff Hats, $3.00 Stetson Soft Hats, . . . . $3.50 Stetson Stiff Hats, . . . . $3.50 PECKHAM'S The Young Men's Store FLOWERS FOR ALL OCCASIONS ::: ::: THE FLOWER SHOP ::: ::: Phones 621 Mr. and Mrs. Geo. Ecke, 825 1-2 Mass. K. U. Loop Street Car Time Table. Cars leave Henry and Massachusetts street, 10, 25, 40. 55 minutes past the hour via. Mississippi street, for K. U., from 7:30 a.m. to 5:25 p.m. and 55 and 25 minutes past the hour, 5:55 p.m. to 10:55 p.m. Cars leave Henry and Massachusetts street, 5, 20, 30 minutes past the hour, via. Tennessee street, for K t from 7:30 a.m. to 5:35 p.m., and 5 and 35 minutes past the hour, 6:05 to 10:35 p.m. Cars leave K. U. for down town 7, 22, 37, 52 minutes past the hour; 6.22 a. m. to 10:52 p. m. Lawrence Railway and Light Co. Do You Want Milk ABSOLUTELY free from all germs of Tuberculosis, Typhoid Fever, Scarlitina and other dread diseases? Milk In which the milk bacteria are diminished and retarded? Hence Milk Free from "Cowy" or "Stable" odors? Milk Shorn of onion and weed taste and of flavors of any kind produced by objectionable feed? And still Milk Normal in taste and appearance? If you want Pasteurized Milk Milk Which is now supplied by LAWRENCE CREAMERY CO through your grocer or by wagon. A telephone call will bring it to your door. OUR Milk Is being furnished by three of the oldest and best dairymen in this vicinity from long established high grade dairy herds. Visit us and see what is meant by a thoroughly sanitary and up-to-date milk plant. THE LAWRENCE CREAMERY CO. All kinds of cleaning and pressing. Ladies work a specialty, at the K. U. Pantatorium. Both phones 1400. We have a nice line of mirrors Step in and let us show you. Wilson's drug store. Don't forget the Hiawatha after the show. Dancing school every Wednesday night. Ecke's hall. Private lessons by appointments. Home phone 4772, Bell 1719. LeOra Strahl, Instructor. Particular cleaning and pressing for particular people at Lawrence Pantatorium, 12 West Warren.