fLJB -j' THE DAILY NEBEASIAF 1 Copies of OLD PHOTOS ' FREDERICK MACDONALD 1309 O Street, Room 4 Phone L4022 Quick Service Oper at All Timet Orpheum Cafe opeolal Attention to University 8tudente GILL EN 'S JOHNSTON and APOLLO CHOCOLATES Always fresh at the TERMINAL DRUG STORE EAT AT PUTCH CAFE 234 No. 11th Street CLEANING SERVICE You need not 1iuve an ex tensive Vardrobe with our prompt service nt band. riione us any day if you want garments cleaned and pressed by evening. We can do it and do it right. LINCOLN CLEANING & DYE WORKS 326 S. 11th Lincoln, Neb. LEO SOUKUP, Mgr. Keep Carbon Copies of lectures, theses, etc. This can' only be done by buying or renting a typewriter. Special rates to students. Phone or call at L C. Smith & Bro. Typewriter Co. LINCOLN, NEBR. 3 n Another Great SHIRT SALE At Klines $1.50 and $1.25 Madras and Percale Shirts in fast colors. Sizes 14-19. Sale Price ENGINEERING WORK FOR CITY MECHANICS (Continued from Page One) ranged for mechanics and shop men, treating of the use and application of drawing instruments, projection of solids in orthographic projection, lso metric projection, making drawings of machine parts, and elemental machine design. Those taking the work will provide suitable instruments. Shop Mathematics A lecture course on Monday even ings by Trofessor Warren Ichler, deal ing with elementary mathematics and its application to shop problems. Sub jects: (1) Fractions, decimals, com pound fractions, converting fractions to decimals, etc., (2) proportion ap plications in shop, (3)square root and cube root applications In shop, (4-6) mensuration applications "In shop, (7-10) algebra, addition and subtrac tion, multiplication and division, sim ple and simultaneous equations. Those having had elementary mathematics will be given more advanced work. Maximum number of students, twenty five. Production and Heat Treatment of Iron and Steel A series of practical talks on Mon day evenings by Professor Thomas H. Smith, on the production of iron and steel These will be followed by lec tures on te various processes by which irons and steels are made and prepared for commercial purposes. Il lustrated with lantern slides. Sub jects: (1) Commercial irons and steels compared, (2) mining and trans porting the ore, (3-4) blast furnace processes, (5) bessemer and open hearth steels, (C) wrought iron and crucible steel, (7-8) cast Iron and mal leable castings, (9-10) heat treatment of steels. For registration and further infor mation concerning this work one must see A. A. Reed, acting director, 203 Administration building. 6,000 NEBRASKANS COMMING AG WEEK BETTER FARMING AND HOME MAKING THE SUBJECTS Dairy Building Dedication a Feature of Organized Agriculture, "January 15 to 20 The historic carriage used by Ben jamin Franklin in olden times, which has been on exhibition In the state historical museum In Madison since 1893, has been formally given to the Harvard museum by Mrs. Frank Crown. Ex. Vi ENUS !Oc PENCIL 17 Perfect Degrees from 6B Softest to 9H Hardest and hard and me dium copying Like a soft-leaded easy marking pencil t Take the higher numbered B's such as 313, 4B, 5B. For the extreme limit of softness 6B is with out an equal and is used by many as being the ideal of all pencils. Medium degree is IIB. H's are the harder grades, 211 or 311 being medium hard, and GIL etc., being used for thin, clear, fine lines of detailings. Your professors will confirm these statements as to the merits of VENUS pencils. Note the distinctive VENUS water mark finish when you buy. If is beautifully smooth and even in texture. It rubs out pencil marks perfectly. Grav, and does not cause discolora tion. 12 sizes from 100 to a box to 4 to a box. Box price $2.00. Venus Erasers are the best erasers; Ask for them by name. For Sale by Your -Supply Store. AMERICAN LEAD PENCIL COMPANY 215 Fifth Avenue, Dept. H.H. New York Correspondence Solicited While "councils of war" continue to be the order of the day In fighting Europe, Nebraska farmers and their wives will gather at Lincoln at the University farm, January 15 to 20, for a mammoth "council of peace" In the interests of better farming and home making. The occasion for this great gather ing is the annual week of Organized Agriculture, as the simultaneous meet ings of twenty-eight agricultural and home economics associations of the state at Lincoln during the winter ia termed. Each year, progressive coun try men and their wives have made this trip to Lincoln to talk over their common problems, and each year has seen an increasing attendance. It Is estimated that last year more than 6,000 Nebraskans attended the com bined sessions; and evidences point to an even greater attendance this year. The list of associations to take part in this co operative affair this year fol lows: Board of agriculture; corn Im provers; state, county and district fair managers; conservation and public welfare commission; state dairymen; agricultural development commission; extension federation; farmers' con gress; farmers' co-operative and edu cational union; florists; good roads; grange; hall of agricultural achieve ment; home economics; horticultur ists; ice cream manufacturers; live stock improvers"; Aberdeen-Angus breeders; dairy cattle breeders; horse breeders; Hereford breeders; Red Poll breeders; Shorthorn breeders: live stock sanitary board; poultry breders; pure grain and seed grow ers; rural school patrons; sheep breed ers and wool growers; stock feeders; swine breeders; thresherraen; veterin arians. Dairy Building Dedication One of the big features of the week will be the dedication of the new $200, 000 dairy building. Wednesday, Jan uary 17. Members of the board of regents, officials of the University, and prominent dairymen will take part In the ceremony. A corn show, conducted by the Ne braska Corn Improvers' association eaeli year, will offer $300 in cash prizes besides farm machinery, tro phies, and other special premiums. A manure spreader Is offered as a grand championship prize for the best ten ears of corn in the show. The corn exhibit will occupy space iu the audi torium, as will the apple, flower, and potato show held under the auspices of the Slate Horticultural society. Ex hibits for both of those shows are ex pected to be the largest In years. Hon. Herbert Quick of Washington, D. C, widely-known writer on agri cultural subjects and chairman of the federal farm loan board, will hold the center of the stage on Farm Loan Day, as Friday, January 19, has been named. He will give one talk In explanation of the new federal farm loan act, and another to county agents, extension workers, and others Interested in as sisting farmers to organibe national farm loan associations. BRIEF BITS OF NEWS Mary M. McDowell is to have charge of the primary work at Superior, Neb. She will have charge of over a hun dred pupils In two rooms. Lora Dale Is to teach In the grades at Columbus the second semester. Grace M. Hall has been offered a position in the Junior high school of Norfolk. 50 COMMERCIAL CLUB MEMBERS FEAST (Continued from Page One) studies as commerce could not be taught effectively. Sam R. McKelvie. editor of The Ne braska Farmer, and republican nomi nee for governor In the primaries of the last campaign, emphasized the importance of the work done In the University by the Commercial club, (c n I Kjl : I TO Daily Nebraska "Do You Want One?" CALL AT Student Activities Office And Let Blunk Tell You How To Do It and advised the members to prepare for work in city commercial clubs after graduation. The Commercial club of today Is fast growing Into a com munity center, Mr. McKelvie declared, and the expansion of the scope of these organizations to Include the ru ral districts was the beginning of a new era. The last speaker was A. W. Jef fries, an attorney of Omaha, who traced the relationship of the Uni versity commercial club to those out in the state. He complimented the club on the progress It had already made lit "making itself heard or out side the University, and recommend ed the continuance of this policy. The student council at Wisconsin Is considering the sending of the univer sity ambulance into the war zones of Europe and having It manned by Bad ger students. Already there are four Wisconsin men on their way to the French service and will arrive at Mar seilles by the end of January. Ex. The Harvard Union reports a loss of $8,224.87 for the fiscal year Just passed. This is $2,000 greater than the loss of last year. The largest gains were made in the restaurant, which is run on a basis of double profits. Ex. " Michigan students took a day off before Christmas vacation started -and took baskets to nearly 60 dependent families in and abcut Ann Arbor. Re po.ts say that the time spent was well regarded in satisfaction. Ex. i : ! V llbiiiiC!: i; e W ''k-JC.- fH'VM.. ':'!;!, :;ri!i'! -mil V mm $5 jAm Me N OLUS the outside shirt mad M underdraws are. one garment. ' This mean that the tli!rt c:m't -work out of the trousers, that there are no shirt tails to bunch in tent, that the drawers "suy put," to say nothiiifj of the comfort and economy of (mvin rurmrnt. OLUS is coat rut, opens all the way down doaedcrotch, closed back. See illustration. For full, tennis and field wear, we recommend the secial attached collar OLUS with regular or short sleeves. Lxtra sizes far very tall or stout men. All shirt fabrics, in smart deiif-us, im Wing silts $1.50 to $10.00. CIX'S em ptooe PAJAMAS tot toMclftf. irtilnt tn4 comloraMr leefi. Mxie on tK him srlmHple u OLt'f Suirt com o. rtevH tack, cioml crotch. No striae t tishtoa or com Ioom. tl.oO to I3.BU. Ask your dealer for OLUS. Booklet oa request. PHILUPS-JOKU C0K9.V.1T, M.km 1199 brmi way, Ntw Terk Off! N