100 STUDENTS WILL SEE AGGIES PLAY MORE MAY GO IF THEY S WISH Special Train Has Been Charter ed—Band Will Go—Round Trip $3.20. A special train will carry the students to the game with the Aggies at Manhattan, Saturday. Manager Hamilton has made arrangements with the Union Pacific and the special will leave Lawrence at 9 o'clock Saturday morning and return after the game at 8 o'clock in the evening. More than 100 rooters have already signified their intention of making the trip to support the team. Cheer leader Dolde expects to lead 300 men in the game with the Farmers. The K. U. band will go with the rooters and will be there to start the game with "Boola." The round trip fare to Manhattan is $3.20. Manager Hamilton has received a block of tickets to the game. The Kansas rooters should get their tickets from him so that they can sit together. NEW BUILDING AT MICH Ann Arbor, Mich., Oct. 17. Plans for a mammoth new University Y. M.C.A. building have been drawn and active work is being done by the students here to purchase all the land that will be necessary for the erection of the structure. Y. M. C. A. Working on $300,000 Equipment. When completed, the structure will be the finest student Association building in the country. The plans call for an expenditure of from $200,000 to $300,000. A portion of the site has already been purchased and options on the remainder are in the hands of the Association. The new building will contain dormitories for 75 or 100 men, offices, reading rooms, and bowling alleys. Shower baths and plumges will be included in the equipment and a large banquet hall will fill a long felt need of the association. "BEAT KANSAS." Drake Students Boost Kansas Game With Electric Sign. For a half mile in three directions, the hugh electric sign of the "Fighting Fifty" club "Beat Kansas" was visible. High on the top of the observatory it shone out announcing to all University Place the slogan that is to be uppermost in every loyal student's mind for the next three weeks. Drake will beat Kansas! Drake must beat Kansas! but the only way that it can be done is for everyone to boost and show our Bulldogs that all Drake is behind them. Everyone who can beg, borrow, or steal the money must plan to see that game, but if these methods do not appeal to you be- gin now to save your pennies. A special will in all likelihood be run and at least two hundred should go, in order to make the excursion a success—Drake Daily Delphie. TO GIVE $50 FOR A SONG Drake Musicians Will Compose New School Song. A prize of fifty dollars will be given by a musical society at Drake University to the student or alumnus who composes the best Drake song. It must be absolutely and originally Drakish, trimmed in Blue and White, and breathing, a spirit of bulldog tenacity and fight, of culture and refinement, of class room, stadium and campus. The prize money will not be paid until the song has been thoroughly tested by competent judges and by the students and members of the alumni who are to sing it.—Drake Daily Del phie. Senior Girls' Meeting A meeting of girls of the senior class will be held in the chapel Thursday at 12:15, to discuss an unique method of raising funds for the proposed Woman's Building. NOW FOR GOLF FINALS Championship Lies Between Bar-teldes, Jones, and Kinnear. The second round of the Oread Golf Club's Tournament has been played off with the following results: Dr. G. W. Jones defeated A Sterling 5 up and 3 to play; L. W. Kinnear defeated H. W. Josselyn by default; O. A. Barteldes defeated W. S. Johnson 7 up and 5 to play; C. H. Johnson defeated E. M. Briggs 3 up and 2 to play; L. W. Kinnear defeated H. W. Josselyn 7 up and 6 to play and O. A. Barteldes defeated C. H. Johnston 4 up and 3 to play. This last match qualified Barteldes to a place in the finals. L. W. Kinnear plays Dr. H. T. Jones in the semi-finals the middle of this week and the winner of this match will play O. A. Bartelder for the championship in the finals Saturday of this week. The tournament so far has been exceedingly satisfactory. The green has been re-surveyed and is in perfect condition. A large number of spectators have been viewing the games with much interest. Yesterday Prof. M. W. Sterling, captain of the team, received a letter from Lieut. Krueger, captain of the army team at Fort Leavenworth, challenging the Oread team to a game one week from next Saturday to be played in Leavenworth. Last spring the Army and Oread teams interchanged games, each team taking one game. The game next week, as the "rubber," promises to be of interest. A return game with the Evanston Golf club of Kansas City, Mo., will probably be played later in the season. At a meeting of the club las week the following officers and committees were elected: President, F. W. Blackmar; secretary, E. M. Briggs; treasurer, D. L. Patterson; captain of the team, M. W. Sterling. Committee on ground rules, C. H. Johnston, L. W. Kinnear, W. S. Johnson, A. J. Boynton, C. H. Gray. Grounds committee: M. W. Sterling, A. J. Boynton, J. G. Gibb. Membership committee; F. W. Blackmar. E. M. Briggs, D. L. Patterson, J. G. Gibb, H. T. Jones. Committee Draws up Regulations Governing Tryouts. The committee elected by the men interested in tennis met this morning and drew up the following resolutions which will govern the tennis tournament for this school year. TENNIS RULES MADE All students of the University may compete in a tennis tournament to determine the school champion. The drawing shall take place Thursday morning, October 19. The schedule will be printed in the "Kansan" of October 19. All names of entrants shall be sent in to committees by Wednesday evening, October 18. The committee is endeavoring to secure a trophy for the winner of this tournament. Give name to one of the following committee. Earl Hawes, Ben 1703 Contrary to the usual custom of holding the tennis tournament in the spring, the committee has decided to hold the tournament in the fall. This plan will allow more time to select a team from the squad in the spring. There were objections to holding the tournament on the indoor court, hence—the above plan. The tournament shall commence Saturday, October 28. The names of contestants must be sent in to committee by Monday noon, October 28. The list of eligibles shall be published in the Kausan of October 26. Rules for the tournament shall be posted in Fraser hall and in Robinson gymnasium. H. M. Allen, chmn, Bell 650 H. M. Richardson 354. Fed. H. G. H. M. Allen, chmn., Bell 650 Miss Una Merryfield of Baker University spent Sunday and Monday with Misses Minnie Dingee and Avis Middleton. Miss Eva Betechtel spent Saturday and Sunday at her home in Hiawatha. Mu Phi Epsilon, the music sorority, has pledged Kate Caldwell. Desirable room for rent to young ladies at 1408 Tennessee. Phone, Bell 1128. 14 3t. ALUMNUS DESIGNS BUILDING Graduate of '09 Has $450,000 Contract. Prof. H. A. Rice has a fine display of pictures of a large building now being erected in Toledo, Ohio, under the supervision of H. C. McClure,' 09 , one of his former students. This building, known as the Jessup W. Scott high school, will cost about $450,000, covers an entire city block, and contains 8,000 cubic yards of concrete, 800 tons of steel work, and has a floor space of 5,000 square feet. It will be as large as our new administration building when completed. SOCCER AT MISSOURI A Former Harvard Player Will Aid in Coaching. Columbia, Oct. 17.—Scooter foot ball was started by the students here this week. Harry Tidd, the assistant track coach, will have charge of the teams at first. H. M. Burrows, of the department of English who was a member of Harvard's first soccer team, has volunteered to assist in getting the game started among the students, and will give as much time as his duties permit to the men playing soccer. To Investigate Resources. State Representative Kerr, of Independence, has been added to the list of 15 helpers whom Prof. Haworth is diresting in his recent investigation of Kansas-Oklahoma gas and oil fields. Kerr is an experienced oilman, with his aid Haworth hopes to soon finish his investigations, which will contain several volumes of technical reports. The first bi-monthly recital by the pupils of the School of Fine Arts will be given in North College chapel at 4 o'clock this afternoon. Prof. Erasmuth Haworth will go to Chicago next Monday to attend a meeting of the American Congress of Mining Engineers. C. G. Farnsworth, a senior in the College, has an article on the causes and effects of the Kansas winds in the October number of the Kansas Magazine. "Billy" Miller, who played half on the football team in 1907, is visiting at the Beta house. He is practising law in Topeka. the most stylish shoe made. Let us fit you in one of the new models. MECHANICALS TO TRAVEL Starkweather's Five Day Trip Including Many Cities. Monday, October 16, a party of about ten seniors and advanced Mechanical Engineers left on their annual inspection trip, under the supervision of Prof. P. F. Walker, who left Friday in advance of the main party. The party will go to Chicago and Milwaukee, visiting the Hawthorne works of the Western Electric Co.; the steel plant at Gary where the largest gas engine driven plant in the world is located; the lubricating oil plant of the Stands and Oil Co., at Whiting; the Allis-Chalmers plant in Milwaukee and other places of interest. The trip, which is the best ever yet given, will last five days. The Presbyterian girls of the University will give a music] next Tuesday night for the benefit of the women's dormitory. Celebrate Alumni Day Sidney W. Briggs, a graduate of the School of Engineering, was in Lawrence Friday on his honey moon. He is now located at Chareton, Iowa, superintending the building of a cross-cut on the Rock Island's new short route between Kansas City and St. Paul, Minn. The Phi Delta Theta fraternity celebrated Alumni Day, Friday, October 13. Fifteen of the old members returned and many were the reminiscences recounted and the "scraps" retold, mixed with valuable advice for the active members. A big "feed" was given in the evening, followed by speeches and songs. Owen Carl to Kansas City Owen C. Carl, formerly of Peckham's, of this city, is now with Rothschild & Sons, on Main at Tenth, Kansas City. In his new location Mr. Carl is able to show his Lawrence and college friends the very latest and best in men clothes and furnishings, as the Rothschild store, which is one of the largest and oldest in Kansas City, carries only the top-notch lines, such as Stein Block clothes. Stetson and Dean English hats Manhattan shirts and others of like grade, and caters to the very best class of trade. Rothschilds are style-setters of the west and Mr. Carl will be glad to have his friends call and see the nobibiest and newest in all lines of men's wear. Mr. Carl has a great many friends here who will be glad to know where he is located and take advantage of the first opportunity to go and see him—Adv. Copyright Hart Schaffner & Marx COLLEGE men know a lot about clothes; some of them would say that they know more about clothes than about calculus. They don't learn clothes from books; the subject isn't taught as a part of the course; but they know just the same. They're interested; and they study each other. The fact that college men pretty generally know and like Hart Schaffner & Marx clothes is an important fact; you men who are through college, and who never went to college, can learn something by this. The clothes are here for you. Suits $18 and up. Overcoats $16.50 and up PECKHAM'S This store is the home of Hart Schaffner & Marx clothes REGAL SHOES KNOX HATS