MEDAL OFFERED TO BEST MARKSMAN OFFICERS OF COMPANY A DESIRE COMPETITION. Drills Will Continue All Winter In Gymnasium—Allen Sterling Takes First. The officers of Company A, the University militia, have offered a valuable silver medal as a prize to the best drilled man in the company. The winner will be decided by a series of competitive drills to be held every month throughout the school year. The winner in each competitive drill will wear the medal until the next elimination drill. The man who wears it the most months will receive it at the end of the year. The first competitive drill was held in the gymnasium Tuesday night and was won by Aller Sterling. Captain Steele has announced that the winter's indoor shooting will begin Thursday evening in the gymnasium. He will divide the company into four equal sections and the members will compete with each other every Thursday night. In the spring the section that has made the highest total of best scores will be given a feed by the three losing sections. K. N. G. HAS PRACTICE Good Scores Made on Rifle Range Fridav. Capt. Horace E. Steele and first lieutenant Sam Fairchilds, of provisional A, University K. N. G. took a detail of 12 men to the rifle range southeast of Lawrence last Friday for rifle practice. Some very good scores were made, several men qualifying for marksmen and two for experts. Make Young Men as Unlike Their Fathers as Possible—Woodrow Wilson THE BUSINESS OF A MODERN UNIVERSITY "I suppose there are still men who think of universities as remote and cloistered places, where men think of that imperfect account of life which is contained in books, and do not look directly upon the actual facts. But that is not the kind of university I have known. I remember of telling a body of gentlemen who looked well dressed and comfortable in New York not many months ago, that I understood the business of a university to be to make young gentlemen just as unlike their fathers as possible. Of course, I hastened to explain that I did not mean any disrespect to the fathers; but that by the time a man had gotten old enough to send his son to college he had established himself in some kind of success and got the point of view and separation of some particular occupation, and to that degree he had rendered himself unable to see the general conditions of the country, and that I understood the business of a university to be to generalize the generation, to take them away from the prejudices of their fathers and lay before them afresh the map of life which men had traveled generation through generation, making their own fortunes, unassisted by previous generations, except in so far as the experience of previous generations had afforded them a standard of conduct; so that each generation might look afresh upon the fortunes of mankind and how that the work was an unending work of lifting men from level to level, a new achievement and fresh discovery. That is the spirit of the modern university—not to keep men anchored in the prepossession of the past, but to take them to some quiet upland where they may see Woodrow Wilson in the American Educational Review. The latest things are always found at P. & N. Photo Co., over Bell Bros. A nifty hair cut at the College Barber Shop. INNES' Have you tried P. & N. Co., on koday printing? SUIT DEPARTMENT Classy styles in Coats-Plain, Fancy, also Reversible. Styles that sell on sight because Snappy and Stylish. SUITS We are having surprising success with Suits. SWEATERS Our Suit Department is one of the finest in the state. We will be glad to prove to you that you can buy here the very Latest Styles, at Lowest Possible Prices. Innes, Bullene & Hackman PIPES See our window this week. Pipes from 3 for 5c to $10 each. 2500 Pipes to select from. GRIGGS' 827 Massachusetts Street. 827 Massachusetts Street. Protsch Fall Suiting See A. G. Alrich for proper form in society stationery and dance programs. 744 Mass. St. CHAS. C. SEEWIR 917 Mass. St. Printing and Engraving INDIAN STORE. A Place to Eat. 1009 Mass. St. FRED W. CLEALAND, Prop. PEERLESS CAFE FEIN'S for Tungsten or New type Mazda lamp and all gas light supplies. 929 Mass. St. Albert R. Kennedy DENTIST Bell 1515. Suite 5 Jackson Building. OF COURSE YOU KNOW that you can't keep flaxseed in your hand—it runs between your fingers. your mongers. Money, in this respect, is a lot like flaxseed. Keep it in your own hands and it will get away from you—little by little—till it's all gone. Put your money in the hands of this bank, where it will be held as securely as flaxseed in a canvass bag. LAWRENCE NATIONAL BANK RAYMOND'S DRUG STORE 831 Mass. St. Kodak Headquarters. Toilet Articles THE FLOWER SHOP Don't Forget her Birthday. Call up 621 Either Phone. MR. and MRS. GEO. ECKE, Phones 621. 825½ Mass. Phones 621. Particular Cleaning and Pressing FOR PARTICULAR PEOPLE Lawrence Pantatorium 12 W. Warren Both Phones 506 Here's One Cloth= ing Story that you've never heard before. 729 Mass. St. We've a different story to tell because we're in a different position from any other clothing house in this section. We're going to do things this Fall and Winter that will establish our right to first consideration when you think of clothes. We have chosen the greatest line of Kuppenheimer Clothes ever shown hereabouts; it's a wonderful assortment of the finest clothes ever made; you'll delight in selecting an authoritative style from a stock so resplendent with good styles and exclusive fabrics. Every one of these garments HAS been marked at an "economy price"'—that means MONEY SAVING. We've accomplished reductions in price and increase in worth by economical store management—by a DETERMINATION to BUILD UP a continually increasing business by giving more value than you've EVER received before. J. HOUSE & SON