Clever Styles in Tailored Suits Worth $18 to $25 Special this week $15 at . . buyer for less than usual. Sizes 14 to 18 and 36 to 40. On sale $15 this week at About 25 Suits of especially desirable styles, cloths and colors; purchased by our New York less than usual. Sizes 14 36 to 40. On sale $15 at Ladies' Silk Hosiery Black White and Colors, $1.25, value, at a pair, $1. Innes, Bullene & Hackman BONES AND TAMBO FOR THE ENGINEERS MINSTREL SHOW WILL FEA TURE THEIR RECEPTION Freshmen Will Become Well Acquainted at Dean Marvin's Annual Entertainment. At a meeting of the engineers yesterday morning the final arrangements for Dean Marvin's reception to be held Friday, November 10, were completed. The Dean and Mrs. Marvin together with Chancellor and Mrs. Strong will compose the receiving line and will be ready to meet their guests sharply at eight o'clock A committee composed of three members of the faculty will introduce the students to those on the receiving line. Committees made up of upperclassmen have been appointed to introduce the freshmen to each other and to the other upperclassmen. These committees will also look after the freshmen throughout the evening and see to it that they have a good time. The reception will last until ten o'clock during which time refreshments will be served in the Dean's office Music will be furnished by the Engineer's Glee club. The stunts given by the different schools promise to be the most interesting part of the evening's entertainment and will be started promptly at ten o'clock. A minstrel show by the upper-classmen will be the first "act" on the program and some clever parodies on the prominent students and professors of the Engineering school are being prepared. Following this the members of the different schools will put on five minute stunts each. The entertainment will be closed by the glee club. The meeting this morning also decided to have the president of the Engineers appoint a committee of five, one representative from each school, to look after all social events that will be given in that department of the University during the rest of the year. The appointments will be announced at a later date. Notice. .The Mechanical Engineering Society will meet Thursday evening at 7 o'clock, at 1301 Ohio street. L. L. Brown will speak about the equipment of the Indiana Steel Plant. There will be magazine reports by Tangeman, Van Houten, Phillips, and Coggins. KANSAS RUNNERS ENTER WESTERN CONFERENCE Coach Hamilton Expects to Take a Team of Cross-Country Men to Iowa City, Nov. 25 to Iowa City, Nov. 25. While the Jayhawker football squad is hard at work preparing to win the Missouri Valley championship, another contest is approaching in which a valley title will be at stake. On November 18, the morning of the Nebraska-Kansas game, the all Missouri valley cross-country run, the first of its kind ever held, will take place at 11 o'clock. In the race there will be runners from each of the six conference schools, Nebraska, Missouri, Drake, Amer, Washington and Kansas. The University cross-country runners have been plugging away getting in shape to bring the title to Kansas. The men who are showing up well are Patterson, Murray and Evans. Coach Hamilton also hopes to have the University represented in the Western Conference run at Iowa City, November 25. The names of the entrees for this race must be sent to the secretary of this Conference the day before the inter-school cross-country run here November 11 and Coach Hamilton therefore has asked the cross-country runners to report to him in the gymnasium Wednesday. He will watch the runners closely in practice so as to be able to pick the strongest team to go to Iowa November 25. The course for the University cross-country race has been laid out as follows: Leaving McCook field the runners will follow Mississippi street up to the college campus, west on the campus drive to the Engineering building, north one mile, west one half mile, south two miles, east to the University power plant, north over the golf links to McCook field. The course will embrace a distance of about five miles. Fourteen Men go to Emporia And Wichita. SOCCER BOYS ON TRIP HAVE SECURED SPEAKERS Prominent Engineers Will Add dress A. I. E. E. Members. The University soccer team plays the Emporia Normals at Emporia today, and Friends University at Wichita tomorrow. If "dope" can be applied to soccer, the Kansas squad should win both of these games as they have defeated them once this season on the home grounds. The men who are making the trip are Coach Root, Beamer, Lowellen, Ebnother, O. Jones, Zimmerman. Nesbit, Crawford, Miller, Allison, Sweeney, Gunning, Robinson, Dunbar, and Carpenter. The University branch of the American Institute of Electrical Engineers, through Prof. C. A. Johnson, has booked lectures for the winter by the following men: C. C. Witt, engineer of the Public Service Commission, Topeka; Gordon Weaver, manager Kansas City, Kansas Electric Light Co.; W. F. Flynn, of the Standard Electrical Co., Kansas City, Mo.; B. F. Eyer, professor in electrical engineering, K. S. A. C.; R. O. Ripley, electrical engineer, Wichita; J. T. Skinner, manager Lawrence Street Railway; Mr. Seabury, manager Kansas City branch of General Electric Co.; and Mr. Welsh, chief engineer Kansas Natural Gas Co., Kansas City No dates have been definitely set as yet. Mining Journal to Meet. Mining Journal to Meet. The Mining Journal will meet Wednesday afternoon at 4:30 in Haworth hall. Professor Haworth will speak on "Proceedings of the American Mining Congress," which convened in Chicago October 24-28 last. SUBSTITUTE FOR RUBBER. The Black Helmet society will hold an informal smoker at the Phi Psi house this evening. Osage Orange May Furnish Such a Substance. In place of riding up the hill on the conventional rubber tire of our bicycle or automobile, we may enjoy the sensation of riding on a tire made of the Osage orange. Prof. H. W. Emerson of the Chemistry department and Karl Roese, a senior in the School of Pharmacy, are making experiments with the "hedge balls which may revolutionize the entire rubber industry. Here's a Bargain. Professor Emerson was studying the Osage orange a few days ago to find if the plentiful fruit could be put to some practical use. He found that the oranger contained much resin and many of the properties or rubber. The substance Professor Emerson hopes to obtain from the orange is rubber-like, and he believes that it may be of value to put with rubber and improve the quality. The University Extension department is now using room 117 as a part of its offices. This room was formerly occupied by the School of Education, but it has been turned over to the Extension department to be used in connection with room 115. Between the lines of this notice, which appears on the bulletin board in Fraser, lies the sad, sad story of some fat soul's aversion to gymnastic excercises: "For Sale: A large sized girl's gym suit. Has been worn so seldom that it does not show having been worn." Will Address Journalists J. D. Rickman, superintendent of the printing department at K. S. A. C., will be the guest of the Department of Journalism Wednesday and will speak at 10:15 to newspaper students and friends upon the subject "How an Editor is Benefitted by a Knowledge of the Back-Office." "Life" is offering a novel and money-making plan to men and women who are working their way through colleges and professional schools. You can find out all about it by sending your name and address on a postal to Life's College Student's League, 17 West 31st St., New York City. Woodward & Co.'s "Bound Corner." Kodut Corner The original Kodak shop. Every practical thing of Eastman's in stock. Premos and films. Finishing done. Prescription work an esteemed specialty. PECKHAM'S The Young Men's Store SOMETIMES young men are a little inclined to go to extremes in the matter of clothes styles; they want things that are almost freakish in design. Such clothes are made for such men; but as a general rule Copyright Hart Schaffner & Marx Hart, Schaffner & Marx young men's models are for young gentlemen; college men; high school men; young fellows in business. We sell these clothes to such young men; the styles are not freakish, but they're correct in every detail; and the clothes are tailored for service. They're the real economy clothes; they pay 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 Regal Shoes ADMINISTRATION SPOON Extra Heavy Weight,a Great Beauty,for $1.50