READY FOR BUSINESS THE COLLEGE INN is now open for busi- ness prepared to serve you better than any place in town. Have plenty of room, plenty of help, and more to eat for the money than any place in Lawrence. Something new all the time. Everything in season. The only Restaurant in the city where you can get fountain drinks and sundaes served with your meals. A complete line of cigars and tobaccos. A fine line of Weideman's candies! A fine line of Douglas Box Candy! The best Coca Cola on earth! A complete line of other fountain drinks, Sundaes and Ice Creams. We make a specialty of parties. We serve regular meals. Breakfast, 6:30 to 11, Dinner, 11:30 to 2, Supper, 5:30 to 7. Short orders all the time. Prices most Reasonable in the city. We cater strictly to the University trade. Give us a trial, and you will do the rest. Don't forget the place LEE'S COLLEGE INN 411 West Adams St. 500 REGISTERED BY TUESDAY NIGHT ALL SCHOOLS ENROLMENT STARTS WEDNESDAY High School Diplomas and Report Cards Don't Admit Students to University. The students are flocking into the University now. For the past week Registrar George O. Foster and his assistants have been busily engaged in registering the students and collecting their fees. More than 500 had enrolled late this afternoon. This afternoon a freshman girl from Hiawatha came to Mr. Foster and presented her high school diploma to him. It was beautifully bound in "green" leather. She also had her "report" cards for her four years course in high school. Although all of her grades were Es, for excellent, and 100, for perfect, the registrar could not admit her to the University because she did not have her entrance blank of requirements. The registration will continue this week. The College students register in Fraser Hall, the Engineers in the Engineering building and the students of the other schools in the Law building. Enrollment in each of the schools will start bright and early this morning. All College students will enroll on the first floor of Robinson Gymnasium. The Engineers, Medics, laws, and Pharmies will enroll in their respective buildings. The Fine Arts students will enroll in the Law building. Enrollment will continue three days. Casey-Landers. The marriage of Miss Margaret Elizabeth Sasey and Mr. Robert Landers, of Lawton, Okla., was solemnized at the Church of Assumption yesterday morning at 6:30 o'clock by Rev. Father F. M. Hayden. It was a simple wedding, only the immediate relatives of the bride and groom being present. The bride was attended by her sister, Miss Helen Casey and Mr. Dwight Hulberd, of Wamego, was the best man. Mr. and Mrs. Landers left for Lawton, Okla., where they will make their home. Both Miss Casey and Mr. Landers were members of the '00 graduating class at the University of Kansas of the Law school. Owens-Relano. Professor Owen, of the University of Kansas, today married Sarah Relano at New Haven, Mass. Mrs. Owens was formerly an instructor in piano and violin at the University of Illinois. The two will tour Spain this summer and then will return to Lawrence to live. It was rumored when Professor Owen left here that he would be married, but nothing definite could be found out. All the newest and latest Ladies' Apparel. A big line of corsets in all the latest models. Mrs. Shearer, Ladies' Toggery, 841 Mass. St. ESTABLISH MODEL SCHOOL AT Y.M.C.A. HEADS OF DEPARTMENTS WILL SUPERVISE. Tuition is $5 a Course. School Will Permit Deficiencies to be Made Up. "A Model School," where the freshmen and others who are deicient in entrance credits can meet their up has been established by the School of Education in Myers' hall. The school will offer a full four year high school course and can be entered by any one who wishes to take high school work. The school will open on Monday with A. W. Trettion Ph.D. of Clarke University as principal. Mr. Trettion formerly was high school inspector of South Dakota and later became head of the department of education in that university. The registration already includes students from Illinois, and Missouri. There are usually nearly two hundred freshmen with entrance deficiencies. It is hoped that most of them will avail themselves of this opportunity, but they are not required to do so. In the past those with deficiencies often have gone to the Lawrence high school, but that was unsatisfactory to both the student and the Lawrence school. This school differs from a Uni. THE AURORA "The Students' Favorite" A large French plate glass mirror Screen, the only one in the city. versity preparatory school in that the University does not furnish the funds the building, or does it have the curriculum arranged especially for those latter desiring to enter the uNiversity proper. It is rather a laboratory in which the students in the School of Education can have practical work in teaching. Call and see how clear and plain our pictures are. The unique part of the school is that the heads of the different departments in the College have direct supervision of the work in the "model school" and also in the School of Education. In most of the other state universities the school has only assistants from the various departments and not the head professors. The tuition will be five dollars a course. Enrollment will begin Monday at Myers' hall. Mrs. Jeanette Benson has opened dress making Parlors over the Peoples State Bank, opposite the new Innes Store. Suits, Dresses, and Costumes a specialty. Appointments may be made now. This normal school is one of the strongest in the country. This summer school's attendance has gone beyond one thousand students. It has a faculty of fifty teachers and is the fourth in size in the United States. Miss Anna Harris, who graduated from the University a few years ago and who has been teaching in the Abilene high school for the past year has just been elected to head the department of German in the State Normal school at Warrensburg, Mo. De Witt C. Croissant, who has been assistant professor of English at the George Washington university in this city, has accepted a position in the English department of the University. Professor Coissant, who is a graduate of Princeton, and has studied in the graduate schools of the University of Chicago, Munich and Princeton, is to have charge of the development of the linguistic side of the work. Professor Croissant was given the degree of doctor of philosophy by Princeton university in June. Welcome Students May the year prove profitable. You will find THE GRAND in the same old place Better than ever, ready to entertain you. K.U.is our Alma Mater, therefore we cater to the wants of all K.U. Students. OUR MOTTO: Cleanliness, Morality and Purity. J. C. McCANLES, K. U. Bandmaster, Proprietor.