LEE'S LUUU SLllTTED TKRIAT TENNIS RACQUETS WILL Improve -Your Game SEE THEM AT Lahrs Hardware 1032 O ST. Eye Strain Causes E-1EAE5ACIKIE Makes EXAMINATION WILL COST YOU NOTHING Daniel D. Draper OPTICIAN 1137 O ST. ENSIGN'S FOB SERVICE IN CAB OB BAGGAGE ENSIGN OMNIBUS & TBANSFEB CO. FISKE and MEGINNIS ARCHITECTS 533 Bankers Life Bldg. Lincoln, - Nebraska WARM'S Originator of MODERN SHOE REPAIRING 5c Shining Parlors in Connection 1140 0 STREET Play Ball ! Spalding and Victor Baseball, Tennis and Track Outfits Gymnastic, Athletic and Play ground Supplies - LAW LOR CYCLE AND SPORTING GOODS CO. 1423 O St. Typo Blur Makes Eyes Tired THE VARIOUS ENGINEERING COURSES AT NEBRASKA Electrical Engineer Receives Broad Training Prepares Studentt For Future Work The Electrical Engineering Course at the University of Nebraska, under takes to give to the student the broad training in this line which is necessary for a continued growth after leaving school. As a consequence, the curri culum includes very substantial work in mathematics, physics, chemistry and applied mechanics, and these sub jects are effectively associated with ntpam engineering, hydraulics, etc., in class recitations and in laboratory practice. Into this is built the struc ture of the specific requirements oi those who expect to follow electrical engineering as a life work. This en compasses both theory and practice in direct-current and alternaung-cur-rent circuits and apparatus. Electrical laboratory work is required thru three and one-half semesters. The changes which lately have been made in the course of 6tudy and the additions made to laboratory equip ment have had in mind provision for more extended work in these funda mentals, fewer requirements but great er freedom in the choice of technical electives and the possible election of courses in economics, business, etc. This 1s the outcome of the recogni tion of the fact that the field open to well prepared electrical engineering students is widening rapidly. Manu facturing, design, operation, research and invention are not the elementary things of a few years ago. They have become complex and abstruse and re quire as well as repay much effort and study. For example the importance of the questions which are arising in the field of public utilities is ever-iLcreasing. Moreover, this type of service is pe culiarly the province of the trained electrical engineer. The telephone, the telegraph, public and private light ing, local railway service, power distri bution, all call for expert knowledge and are crowding all competitors out of the field. The problems of their or ganization, extension and administra tion are questions of public policy. They must be settled in fairness to corporation and to public. Their solu tion must be brought about by experts with engineering training and an inti mate knowledge of economic princi- , There never has opened a greater i field for the engineer than that of the public service of tomorrow. It utilizes t.vrv minute of his previous experi ence, every phase of his training, J every iota of his knowledge; it de-j mands the most discriminating Judg-i ment, every ounce of his enthusiasm. ; every inch of breadth, the highest de-j gTee of tact and every joule of bis j energy. ; PROF. O. J. FERGUSON". AGRICULTURAL COURSE MADE GREAT PROGRESS Has Proven That There is a Demand For Such Work Three Great Fields For Graduates In all educational institutions,-there is the danger of imaginative profeor putting In courses which have only a temporary value. Such professors must always be watched with more or less care for fear that they will load np their "departments with unnecessary and unimportant work. A few years ago, when, departments of agricultural engineering were be coming organized, this work was looked upon with the same suspicion that the work of such imaginative pro fessors la watched, as is mentioned above. Agricultural engineering has passed through this stage and naa proven that there is a demand for such work. It is true that the whole field of agri cultural engineering, ezceptiir that t a T Y NEBBASKAN of rural architecture and farm machln ery might be covered in other en gineering groups; that Is, farm motors might be handled in a mechanical en gineering group; irrigation, drainage and highways, in a civil engineering group; and the other lines could like wise be distributed. However, this is not a practical method of handling the work, for where is the farmer or the community of farmers who have a small lighting proposition, a small architectural proposition, a smau power proposition, a small drainage proposition or a small heating propo sition that would care to send into the city for a consulting engineer to con sider each one of the above proposi tions Independently when he could send to the city for an agricultural engineer who would come out and handle all of them for him collectively? As another verification of the fact that the field for the agricultural en gineer is permanent, consider the four institutions in the United States which are now ofTering degrees in this work and the twenty or-twenty-five institu tions or more which are teaching farm mechanics under that head or under the head of agricultural en gineering. There are three great fields for agri cultural engineers which do not over lap in the least upon the fields of other engineering professions the teaching field, which at present de mands the greatest number of the graduates in this line of work, the county or community engineer; and the rural community commercial en gineer. The county or community en gineer would fill the position of county highway engineer, county surveyor and could carry a side line of consult ing work for the rural community. The rural, commercial engineer would carry a line of equipment such as farm machinery, farm motors, heating sys tems, water system supplies, and so on, and at the same time he could do advisory work relative to engineer ing problems as applied to rural com munities and villages. The last field, no doubt, would be one of the roost Independent and yet be a good oppor tunity for any one to enter who is commercially inclined. It will not be many years until every county seat will have such a commercial company which will be handled by technical graduates, or by men who are now in the commercial field and have the MOVERS Articles Used By Students in the Full Stock Richter Drawing EMMY foresight to see the opportunities of such a proposition. PROF. lx V. CHASE. Tommy: "I want another box of those pills like I got for mother yes terday." 1 Druggist: "Did your mother ay they were good?" Tommy: "No. but they just fit my air gun." Spectator. ENGINEERS SHOW LIKING FOR DRILL Sixteen cf the Military Officers Are Registered in the Engineering College Engineering students show a special liking for drill. The records in Com mandant Parker's office at the univer sity show that of the thirty-seven offi cer in the cadet regiment, sixteen of them are students in the engineering WANTED ! Twenty-five Men to Travel, Sell, and Demonstrate the E-Z Auto Tire Pump Call Room 238, Lindell Hotel S. H. BOOKER BEST LUNCHEONETTES AND CANDLES IN THE CITY Try otxr fountain for all kinds of Lunch eontttes, Sodas and Soft Drinks. Bring her here after the Show. Lincoln Candy Kit ehon 14th and 0 Sts. TV IFPLY -STOR Our Specialty unpeenng iepanmen 1123 O Street college. Four colleges are ivnr.. ed. law, agriculture, engineering, tt4" arts and science. Out of twentyt0 sergeantR, eleven arc engineers. This proportion Is said to hold true for an non-commissioned officers. rwi Fowler said yesterday that most of iv,. officers are third and fourth vear t dent who are drilling of their ova free will. "The fact that the engineers are so ready to drill shows that iw realize the value of military training said the colonel. "I suppose that it is the mechanics of the company jrm that appeafs to them." Praise to the Modest We're modest as a violet; We wouldn't stoop to brag, But we'd like to whisper just one wod In our Issue of the Rag. We can't state it as a lawyer would In eloquence we're lame, But did you note, the twenty-first. We played some game? Instruments