THE DAILY NEBBASEAN THEATRES ECONOMY IN WARTIME Oliver Theatre New Cloth Hats MR. GWILLKIMBY FINALLY GETS DOWN TO BEDROCK. TONIGHT AND ALL THIS WEEK Every Night at 8:15 Matt., Wed. and Sat., 2:30 BARROW-HOWARD PLAYERS KINDLING" Night 50c, 35c, 25c, 15c Mat. 25c and 10c ORPHEUM MON.. TUE., WED., MAY 10, 11, 12 Superb Scenic Spectacle DAMON AND PYTHIAS" Endorsed by Knights of Pythias Three Shows Daily at 2, 7 and 9 Mats., All Seats 10c. Night, 25c Coming Thursday "THREE WEEKS" The Love Drama Which Startled Two Continuents Visualized nra.iflii!iMM J. C. Lewis Jr., and Company The Gazers "By the Sea" "The Silver Cup" "A Lily in Bohemia" Hearst-Selig News nmurs GLASSY caiby HBIBR DRUG CO. 18th cad O STREETS NORTHWESTERN TEACH- ERS AGENCY The leading Agency for the entire WEST and ALASKA. Now Is the beet time to enroll for 1915-16 racancles. Write imme diately for free circular. BOISE, IDAHO PROPER STATIONERY iILLERS RESCRIPTION H A R M A C Y Cor. 16th & O St Phone B4423 nrnnnc none UbUIIUE. Uliuvi (printing 1313 IN STREET ii SPA 19 Get your Lunches at the City Y. M. C. A, Cafeteria Plan 13TH AND P WARIHON'S Shoe Repair Factory ad Shining Parlor 1140 O Street Headquarter for Students SIMMONS THE PRINTER 3I7 8l2th PHONE B23I9 AH Luxuries and a Few of the Neces sarles Being Cut Out, He Now Buys Small Boys' Watches by the Gross. "It didn't eeeni po66ible that this fc-uropean war business could ever af. feet our income in any way," 6aid Mr. Gwillkimby, ' but it did hit us finally in a way that we had never even dreamed, of; and then, like so many other people, we were forced to econo mize. "A man never can tell what he can do till he has to, but then he can do most anything. In our household ex penses we found many things that were really only luxuries that we could lop off without suffering, and then we went through what in flusher days we should have considered as necessaries and cut down on them, finding among even these things many that we could do without; and lastly we cut the things we had to have right down to the bone. "With all these sacrifices, changes and revisions we finally got our ex penses down on paper below our re duced income; but somehow, in actual practice ft didn't work out that way. Instead of having as we now should have, even on our smaller means, a little surplus, we still had every week a little shortage. It never struck me where that leak was till one day it came to me all of a sudden that I had forgotten to figure into our expenses the cost of our son's watches! "Our boy, like most boys at the present time, carries a watch; but I doubt if any other boy on earth is as hard on watches as our boy is. He regulates his watch about seven times a day and sets it seventeen times. About twice a week he takes the back and front off his watch, looks in at the wheels and stirs them up a little and moves the hands. "Once in a while he takes the works out of a watch, but I have never yet known him to put them back. Fre quently he drops his watch, as likely as not on the floor. In one way and another he uses up two or three watches a week, an average of a dozen a month; and whenever he broke his watch he would come to me for a new one and I would give him the money freely. "But, cheap as these watches are, we couldn't possibly do that much longer now; and the question was what should we do about it. for he had got to have a watch somehow; we would sooner go without milk on the table than ask our boy to go without a watch in his pocket Then I had another bright idea, on which I am now acting. "I now buy our watches by the gross instead of singly, thereby making a considerable saving; enough, in fact to bring our expenses down to Just below our Income; and I now expect that we shall be able to hold things sc until the great war is over and our in come gets back to normal." Steam-Dried Hay. The up-to-date well-equipped farm seems now to have a method of pro tection during the hay season, against the losses nblcb have been experi enced In so many cases by tbu wet ting of the xain and the preventing of proper drying. Experiments show that grass can be dried by steam within thirty minutes from the time it is cut, and then be ready to be stored away. The product thus ob tained is superior to the ordinary sun dried product, baring a sweeter flavor and keeping fully as well. This can be applied, of course, only on a farm that has a steam plant, but It is fairly simple, and it certainly seems to promise to the farmer a protec tion against one of his inevitable trials in the past Deduction. "Are you sure Mrs. Flrmly's an restors fought in the War of the Rero. lutionr , "Yes" replied Miss Cayenne. "1 feel convinced of It If she inherits any of their traits of character there Is no doubt that they fought In any thing that offered an opportunity." SILK AND PALM BEACH In Up- 7b- The-Minute Shapes $2.00 ATHLETIC UNDERWEAR Some Cut in V-Neck Style With Extra Narrow Shoulder Straps "GOODKN1T" B. V. D. SUPERIOR $1, $1.50 & $2 A R M S T R ON G'S HIGH SCHOOLS WILL DEBATE SATURDAY Eighth Annual Debate Will Be Held on Fete Day Twelve Districts to Send Representatives For the eighth annual state debate of th Nebraska High School Debating League at 10 o'clock Saturday morn ingHigh School Fete Day in Me morial Hall, arrangements have been completed by the twelve district cham pionship schools and the league presi dent, Prof. M. M. Fogg. The judges of the debate will be Dean William G. Hastings of the Col lege of Law, Prof. George N. Foster of the College of Law, and Mr. Albert Watkins, historian of the Nebraska State Historical Society. Most of the delegations from the twelve competing schools will arrive tomorrow. Six are coming all the way from Trenton in the Southwestern district, from Sargent in the West Central district, and from Geneva, Central district. Oakland, in the Northeastern district, will send five. The High School Debating League Club, which this year has a member ship of 101 University students who were league debaters, is to take an active part in making the vistors feel at home. Members are going to be at the stations to meet the delegations RADNOR LJv RADNO&- tJ n 'J. liJ!r lN-bw Arrow COLLAR from their respective districts. The club officers, Robert B. Waring, Law '17, Geneva; E. D. Klddoo, '17, South Omaha, and C. D. Foster, '17, Kear ney have sent a circular letter to the members calling their attention to the debate. Six speakers will maintain the affirmative and six the negative of the proposition that the United States should -adopt government ownership and operation of railroads. The Beat rice, West Point, Lincoln, Geneva, Sargent, and South Omaha representa tive will have the affirmative; the Alliance, Blue Springs, O'Neill, Oak land, Kearney, and Trenton represen tatives the negative. THE University School oflusic Established 1694 Opposite) the University Campus Eleventh and Q tastruction fives 1b all branches of noiic. Students nay caroH at any time. Befinnen accepted Pricei reasonable WILLARD KIMBALL, Director You have economized all this year, A Present To a Friend will give real pleasure. SEE OUR SOUVENIRS ! Hie UNIVERSITY BOOK STORE Phone B-3684 310 No. 11th LINCOLN GRADUATION SUITS The most perfect tailoring possible the very newest models beautiful fabrics lasting service are all combined in these clothes. $5 $20 $25 $30 FAR O U HAR'