THE KENTUCKY KERNEL.

Page 6
Suits Fretted 25c

DRY CLEANING COMPANY

CO-E- D

II"

PATT HALL PERSONALS
H. Orccn,

Louisville,
spent Suntlny with her daughter, Miss
Roberta Green.
Mrs. L. T. Crnbbe, of Louisville,
spent Sunday with her dnugthcr, Miss
Anltn Crabho.
Miss Alice Mueller, of Hellovuc, visited her sister, Miss Eleanor Mueller,
Sunday.
Mr. J. I Whlttlnglilll, of Oklahoma
City, n former student of the University, spent Sunday with his sister,
Miss Florls WhlttliiRlilll.
Mrs. W. K. Risque and daughter,
Ida Kenney, of Midway, visited Miss
Juliet Lee Risque, Monday.
Miss Eliabeth Beckner was In Winchester Sunday.
Miss Maud Asbury spent the weekend with her brother, Mr. O. T. Asbury on the Winchester pike.
Miss Anna Mae Yarblo, Myrl Mitchell and Lora Robertson spent Friday
night with Miss 'Maud Creekmore on
Columbia Avenue.
Miss Lorine Combest, of Hamilton
College, was the guest of Miss Clara
Whitworth for the week-enMiss Stella Pennington is at her
home in London this week.
Misses Margaret Harbison, Matilda
Moore and Nancy Buckner, of
were the guests of Miss Sarah
Harbison, Sunday.
Miss Mary Ricketts spent the week
end at her home in Mt. Sterling.
Miss Eula Daniels, of Georgetown,
was the guest of Miss Louise Mills
Sunday.
(Miss Louise Mayer was with Miss
Freda Laub on Harrison Avenue, Sunday night.
U.

of

Shel-byvill-

HAYDEN

C. R. McGAUCHEY,

Suits Made to Order $18.00 and up
PHONE 62LY

CORNER
Mr.

Suitt Cleaned and Pretted $1.00

PERRY.

The engagement of Ellis B. Hayden,
of PariB, and Miss Elizabeth Perry,
of Milton, Pa., was recently announced
at a dinner given in honor of the
bride-elecMr. Hayden is an alumnus
of the University, being a member of
the '14 graduating class from the College of Mechanical and Electrical Engineering. After graduating he accepted a position with a large Canadian company, with whom he worked
until a year ago, when he was given a
more lucrative offer by the Milton
Manufacturing Company. The bride-elec- t
is a daughter of one of the most
prominent families of that eity and 1b
a popular member of tfie younger society set.
t.

KERR GIVES HOLIDAY
At the request of Dean F. Paul Anderson, and on motion of Commonwealth's Attorney John R. Allen, Circuit Judge Charles Kerr haB declared
Saturday a holiday in honor of the
Golden Jubilee at the University, and
moved the usual motion docket up to
Friday. A number of the members
of the local bar are graduates of the
University, and several of them are
members of the faculty of the College
of Law.

Eat Your Sandwiches
and Hot Chocolate at the

WOMAN'S EXCHANGE
207 W. Short St.

BE HELD

TO

Proprietor

Students Always Welcome
ISf S. LIMESTONE

Give Ut a Trial and Be Convinced

Y. W.

C.

THIS MONTH PARTY

M. C. A.

A.-- Y.

WELL

ATTENDED

Miss Laura Spurr

dance of the season,
8:30 to 11:30
-

will give her opening
FRIDAY NIGHT, OCTOBER 6
Over Fayette Drug Co.

Admission 50c
Try-O- ut

For Strollers Is Guests

The Strollers, the dramatic organization of the tJnlverslty, will hold
their "Amateur Night" celebration the
evening of October 31, and all students not members of the organization will be given a chance to show
the dramatic talent they possess at
that time. Full plans have not been
announced as yet, but all those who
Intend to enter the competition should
begin getting their "stunts" in shape.
The Strollers is one of the livest organizations on the campus, and Is on
a firm basis financially and artistically. The club has its own Btudlo in
the basement of the Main Building,
where the rehearsals are held, and
this room has been beautifully furnished with the proceeds of the plays
given in past years. Each year a
standard play is given, and last year's
production, "Father and the Boys,"
was declared to be the best amateur
show ever staged in Lexington. Full
information about "Amateur Night"
will be published in the next issue.

CHEMISTRY ARTICLES

FOR STUDENTS' USE
The Manufacturers' Record, a magazine devoted to the future industrial
development of the South, has a number of articles in the issue of September 14, which will be of interest to
University
students, especially
to
those in the chemistry department. A
copy of this magazine can be secured
from Dr. L. C. Daniels or from Dr.
M. H. Bedford, in the old chemistry
building.
Among,
the interesting articles
which appear in the magazine are the
following: "Chemical Science and
Chemical Industry," by Ira Remsen,
President Emeritus of Johns Hopkins
University;" The Role of Chemistry in
the Industrial Development of the
South," by Charles H. Herty, president of the American Chemical So
ciety; "The Synthesis of Southern
Wealth," by Arthur D. Little, former
president of the American Chemical
Society; "How to Correct the Economic 'Balance in the South," by John
C. Hebden, general manager of the
Federal Dyestuff and Chemical Corporation; "Progress in the Chemical
Development of the South," by David
T. Day, petroleum expert; "Chemical
Industries in the South and the Tremendous Development in the Near
Future," by Edward Hart, professor of
Chemistry at the Lafayette College;
"The Development of Chemical Industries in the South and Southwest," by
William B. Phillips; "An Opportunity
for the South in the Dye Industry," by
P. R. Moses; "The South and the
Awakening of Chemical Industry," by
A. S. Cushman; and many others.
SENIOR MEETING CALLED.
The Senior class will hold a meeting immediately after the chapel rally
this morning, In front of the Civil
Building. A matter of great importance will come up and every Senior
should be there.

Have

Time

Announced For Tuesday, October 31

One

Joyous

Refreshments
a Feature

STAR self filling FOUNTAIN PEN

The joint social of the Y. M. C. A.
and the Y. W. C. A., which was held
In the Y. M. C. A. rooms In the Alumni
Hall last Friday evening was a grand
success. A largo number of students
attended and had the time of their
consisting of
lives. Refreshments,
brick ico cream and individual cakes,
added interest to the occasion.
The bald heads of tho Freshmen
were very conspicuous, but tho girls
did not seem to notice them as they
gave them preference to the
who were there expecting to
The time
receive all the attention.
of departure came before any one
realized it and the guests reluctantly
departed.
upper-classme- n

MOVIE AUDIENCES TO
HAVE A RARE TREAT

$1.

GUARANTEED

WILLIAM E. STAGG, Your Druggist
rmmmintimiimiintmrniiifwmmHtimitrmmmtnmimMtmtfU

Lexington College of Music
441

West Second Street

Regular Conservatory Course in AIL Departments
g
Tuesday Nights
Sight-Singin-

Orchestra

Wednesday

Nights

FACULTY
MISS ANNA CHANDLER OOFF
MR. EDWARD WEISS
MR. HARRY MUELLER
MR. LAWRENCE A. COVER
MR. PER NIELSEN
MISS MARY FRANCES SCOTT
MR, BRUCE REYNOLDS
MR. SUDDUTII OOFF
MR. ALBERT F. SMITH
MISS ANNA CHANDLER OOFF

Pianist
Concert Pianist
Concert Pianist and Organist
Tenor Soloist
Norwegian Baritone
Soprano Soloist
Concert Violinist
Portrait Painter
Impersonator, Reader
Director and Business Manager

..'

PHONE 639--

Arrangements have been made with
the Universal Film Company to have
representatives here today and tomorrow to film the
between the
Freshmen and Sophomores, to take
pictures of the football game between
We make a Specialty of Live Lobsters, Crab Meat and
the University of Kentucky and
Reel Foot Lake Fish and Frogs
University
and of various
phases of the Golden Jubilee.
The pictures will probably be shown
BEGINNING
Especial University
first in local theatres and then in varistudent classes, Tuesday, TUESDAY
ous parts of the country. Not only
Thursday and Saturday
will they prove highly interesting, but
evenings. 8 to 10:30.
OCTOBER
will also serve to give the University 106 WEST MAIN STREET
prominence. This 1b the
first time that activities of the University have been filmed, but the fact
that the Universal Film Company has
Th.y Do First Cits. Work at the Right Pric; Quick mm! SatUfactorr Service
asked permission to Aim the happenAMERICAN DRY CLEANING CO.
they have
ings this week shows that
Clifford DoUon, Our University of Ky. Representative
255 N. LIME
PHONE 1271
not passed altogether unnoticed.

LEONARD HOTEL

IIZ

J

Van-derbi- lt

Hughes School
Of Dancing

i

d

Have You Tried The American Cleanery?

FRESHIES LONG SLEEP

IS FINALLY

BROKEN

Free - For - All Wednesday
Night Starts Inter-Clas- s
Spirit
After peacefully sleeping for almost
a month, the Freshmen awoke with a
start Wednesday night when the
Sophomores were preparing to paint
out their numerals on the Gym Build
ing. The fight which was started by
was taken up with
the
Vigor by the freshies and sophs and
for two hours the campus presented
much the same appearance as a battlefield.
Both sides claim the victory, the
sophs on the grounds that they succeeded in their purpose and the
freshies on the groundB that they got
the best of the fight and also painted
up their numerals in other places,
which locations are In their opinion
just as good as the Oym Building.
Class spirit has at last come Into Its
own and all day yesterday the members of the two lower classes gave
their class yells, and held organization meetings in which they swore to
have vengeance on the other class.
upper-classme- n

SENIORS
If you want to see a regular line of CANES
at reasonable prices, come down to
The Caskey Jewelry Co.
127

West Main Street

For the GAME
Pennants 30c to $1.50
Banner $2.50
COLLEGE VIEW BOOKS 50c
Ready for Mailing

MEGAPHONES AND COLORS

University Book Store
J. F. BATTAILE, '08, Mgr.

*