t THE DAILY KEBRAB KAN New National Defence Act May Work a Few Changes In the University Regiment Captain Parker, commandant of the state University cadets, has applied to the war department for details of non commissioned officers in the active service, and for privates in the army reserve corps, to assist in the instruc tion in military science at the state University. . The request was made in accord ance with the provisions of the new national defense act, passed by the last congress, and under which the University cadet corps will be gov erned in the future, Adjutant General William M. Cruik Bhank asked Captain Parker to submit bis request for the detail, and the ap plication, when sent In, asked that We Develop Films FREE! BASSLER'S STUDIO 1406 O Street FRED SHEPHERD For District Judge ENDORSED BY THE BAR Tucker & Shean 1123 O St Manufacturing Jewelers and Opticians Class Pins and Rings of All Kinds GiKen Beaute Shop EDITH BELLE LEWIS 237 S. 14th B 1926 Foot Massage a Specialty All Ailments of Feet Treated MARY E. FORBES Chiropodist EAT AT PUTCH CAFE 234 No. 11th Street JLli Do You Need A NEW PAIR OF ENGLISH SHOES "We have a full line of them in plain or fancy tops leather or ruhher soles. Regular $3.00 values 4.00 V 3PULAT PRTCTD MT7V3 WEAH v' Vi. army men be detailed for both the farm and the city campus companies. .Become Reserve Officers The new national defense act pro vides regulations governing the train ing of University men so that they may become members of the reserve I officers corps of the regular army. When it becomes of full effect, cadets at the University may elect a four years' course that will result in their being paid for their service in their senior and junior years, and make them eligible for actual service with the army at the pay of second lieutcn- ' ants of the reserve. The course for the first two years provides for at least three hours per . week of instruction in military scl- 'enee, a requisite that is met by the drill requirements at the University now. For the third and fourth years the men would have to take five hours per week, and serve at two camps to fulfill the army requirements. j This means that vne cadet camp, j formerly enjoyed by the cadets but i abolished several years ago, will have to be given again. It will be optional i with the men when they take the camp, but at least two must have been in their course before they com- ' plete the requirements. i To Be Given Commutation The law provides that when any member of the senior division, under , which the University would come, has completed two academic years of serv- , ice in that division and has been se lected for further training, and has agreed in writing to continue in the reserve officers training corps for the remainder of his course in the insti tution, he may be furnishpd at the ex- i pense of the United States, with com mutation of subsistence, that is, he I will be given cash equivalent to the i cost of rations regularly served to the I various army units in garrison. ! This means, according to Command ant Parker, that the cadets in fhe ad vanced years would receive approxi mately $9 a month from the govern ment. This fund will soon be avail able for the cadets now in the regi-mr-nt, and those who have completed the requirements will be paid for the time they have served since the first of July last. In securing this, the cadet signs the following contract: ; Signs Contract "In consideration of commutation of subsistence to be furnishpd me in ac cordance with law, I hereby agrpe to continue in the reserve officers' train The College World IT PAYS Statistics sometimes teach whole- some lessons. A recent example is : the survey made of 100 Kansas farms, j According to the figures, the farmer I with a high school education is mak- ing 70 per cent more profit than his ! neighbor with only a common school i education, while the college graduate i is earning an income so much greater j than that of either that he is frankly in a class by himself. However much ' the public may be surprised to learn ! of such a wide divergence, their amazement will probably not surpass thai of the farmers themselves, who, it is said, before the survey, had no I idea that education could make such , a difference in the value of agrleul- to be one more practical answer to he popular question, does it pay to go to college? Christian Science Monitor. OHIO STATE MAKES BONDED ! . CONTRACT FOR WINTER'S COAL ! Ohio State University. Although 1 there mav be a shortage of coal this winter, there will be no cold feet in the university, for the authorities have protected themselves against emergen cy by making a bonded contract with the Victoria Coal company of the Ath ens county mines. This year the con tract bond has been doubled, from . $5,000 to $10fo00. Exchange. OTHERS HAVE THEIR TROUBLES TOO e-'tation Is growing stronger in some colleges and universities in favor of abolishing chanel service. Re ocMv at Syracuse only ten students attended the chapel exercises, and this rmber was made up of one freshman, fo"r sophomores, and five Juniors. The sen'ors were not represented. The at- ing corps during tie remainder of my course in Nebraska University, to de vote five hours per week during such period to the military training pre scribed, and to pursue the courses of camp training during such period, pre scribed by the secretary of war." When the unit of the reserve offi cers' training corps is established at the University, there will be issued to each member of the unit this uniform: One pair of olive-drab woolen breeches, one olive-drab cap. one olive-drab wool en coat, one pair of canvas leggings, one set of cap and collar ornament, one pair of russet shoes. To those students who go to camp, this additional uniform will be provld- !ed: One service hat, one hat cord, two j pairs of olive-drab cotton breeches, and two olive-drab flannel shirts. New Gun' to Be Used It shall also be the policy of the government to issue the latest model of arms. This means that as soon as the equipment is available, the cadets will be supplied with the latest Sfring field rifles, replacing the Krags now in use. The Springficids are the same calibre, but thpy have a much greater velocity. When the cadet reaches the end of his college course, and still wishes to continue in the array service, if he meets every requirement of the gov ernment regulations he will be al lowed to serve in the regular army as a temporary second lieutenant for six months at a salary of $100 a month. At the expiration of that time he gets a commission in the reserve army corps, and is subject to call within ten years, in tim eof war. and he may be called for a period of fifteen days that may be extended, for service dur- ! ing peace. Under the new plan the third and fourth year of training will contain more of the theoretical side of the service than has been presented here tofore. Instruction in the psychology of war, the general principles of strat egy, international relations and similar topics will be given. A few changes may be made in mat ters of detail. The war department suggests that the time of drill should come before 4:30 in the afternoon, while now the drill period is from 5 until 6. The strength of the com panies here may have to be raised, as under the new system, companies are to contain from fifty-five to eighty men. The war department discourages bands as large as the one the Univer sity has. tendance at each exercise avfraes only twenty-five. Exchange. It is said to cost $600 more now to send one's daughter to a well known college, not a thousand miles from Boston, than it did a few years ago. The impression should not be allowed to obtain, however, that this or any ctl.er college is an exception to any eer.eon.iic rule. It costs considerably more than it used to to send one's daughter anywhere. Christian Sci ence Monitor. THEY HAVE NO AESTHETIC SENSE UP THERE (From the Minnesota Daily.) "Everyone seems willing to trade all ..he scenery on the campus for a month's work with good pay." Ex change. THEY'LL NEED A LOT The New York authorities have been seriously considering the installation of slates and slate-pencils for paper The scarcity of paper is explained by some as being the result of the war ring nations using up all the available supply for printing excuses of their conduct, and telling how peaceful they really are. Exchange. INFLUX OF WEALTH All the embers of Battery B of Purdue were in a cheerful mood yes terday as the result of the receipt by each man of a check for one dollar. This was in payment for two days' service in the militia previous to the time when they were mustered into the federal service. Exchange. The new dean of Harvard college came to the institution from the state of Washington. The recently elected dean of the Harvard law school is a native of Nebraska. The dean ot the MEN ! JUST ARRIVED ! lOO PAIRS OF Cordovan In both cherry, tan and black; extra heavy soles, wide heels At $6.50 The Shoe You Can't Wear Out Get your pair now while we have your size h l II v Dayli graduates' school at Harvard is a na tive of Pennsylvania, and came to the Massachusetts institution from the University of Wisconsin. As the Har vard Bulletin says, these are signifi cant facts. A university that wishes to gain or to retain a national constit uency must erecruit its teachers on a national basis. Some day, probably, both Yale and Harvard will, for a change, try a western-bred president. Exchange. BOOKS SEEK OUT GUARDSMEN M. A. C. officials are making an effort to enable college seniors who are with the state guard on the Mexi can border to graduate with their class next June. Books have been sent to till such students, with detailed in structions as to courses of study, written work and examinations, and the president of the agricultural col lege announces that every effort will be made to enable the student guards men to keep up their collegiate work. Michigan Daily. The executive committee of the ath letic association of the University of Nevada is considering the abolition of all athletics for one year, due to the Jack of financial support by the under graduates. Exchange. ON THE BORDER Out of the companies of cadets at Iowa only six members answered the roll this year. Upon investigation it proved that all the others were at the border. Exchange. Coach Howard Jones, of Iowa, is so pleased with the spirit shown at last Saturday's game that he has inaugu rated one day & week on which the rooters can view their favorites in uniform. Exchange. , U. OF OREGON OPENS NEW PRACTICE HIGH SCHOOL University of Oregon. The innova tion of a university high school was begun Monday, September 18, at the University of Oregon. The school is to be a laboratory for the teaching of. pedagogy. The quarters will be in the new School of Education building. The attendance will be probably about ninety. In the school it is intended to ; employ experimentally the latest I methods in teaching. A goodly pro- j portion of the future high school teach ers of the state of Oregon will have had ibeir Instruction In pedagogy in the university high school, and the device of such a school has been adopt ed so far by only a few universities. Exchange. Oglethorpe university, which this fall, after a lapse of fifty years, has reopened its doors, is a picturesque ex ample of what faithful effort and pa tient waiting can accomplish. Not only is this Georgia institution again welcoming students, but it has begun the second chapter in its history In a new building, said to b9 the finest of Its kind in the southern states. Ogle thorpe university closed its doors on S S S f I . l ill . X X. "V account of the civil war, but, being founded on something more permanent than the war and its attending condi tions, it has been able to renew its usefulness, notwithstanding difficulties that many would have regarded as hopeless. Exchange. Apparel proclaims the freshman girl as well as the freshman boy at the University of Montana. During the first week of school all first-year girls must appear on the campus wearing hair ribbons of a vivid green, under penalty of a punishment the nature of which is not known. Exchange. Francis Stirling editor of the Jack-o'-Lantern of Dartmouth, has been sus pended from school because he criti cized members of the faculty for their stand on the question of preparedness. Fellow students have petitioned for re instatement, and a demonstration is also planned. Exchange. . -tQclcomc N.S 13Q So. 11th STREET SUBSCRIBE FOR The Daily Shoss Ml IRLILU WAR COURSE FOR PRINCETON A new course in military history and theory has been started at Princeton this year. The course will be a three fifths elective for juniors and seniors. The course will take up the military history of the United States, its pres ent policy, and practical exercises. Exchange. BARRED FROM SOCIETIES The literary societies at Oberlin col lege are considering the proposition that no freshman should be considered eligible for membership during the first semester. Furthermore, before he could become a full member, it would be necessary for him to deliver a carefully prepared address before the society members. Exchange. Wooster is trying out the push ball contest this year for the first time as a means of settling the annual fresh soph squabble. Exchange. Cafe Stu&cnts iMsbraskan