Cold Weather ''Means that it is time to buy that new Overcoat. Maybe your old one is getting a little shabby or out of date. We have a great assortment of clever Military, Belt, all around styles at only LAW DEBATERS PREPARE FOR KANSAS CITY CONTEST Tryouts Postponed Until First of Next Week Account Examination Today Waffles and Coffee 15c I At .; HENDRY'S CAFE 136 North Eleventh Phone B 1589 Lincoln, Neb. Tucker-Shean 1123 0 Street Mfg. Jewelers and Opticians Dealers in Watches, Clocks, Diamonds, Jewelry, Sterling Silver and Op tical merchandise. Expert Watch, Clock, Jewelry and Optical Repairing if 31 it i SI e tl 3? It I 5 jpliitiliiifi Tryouts for the debating team which will represent the Nebraska college of law In the debate against the Kansas City College of Law to be held at Kansas City December 21 will be held the earlier part of next week Instead of today as was pre vlously announced. This change has been made necessary by the mid- semester examinations which will be given In the freshman class in con tracts this morning. Three regular and one alternate debater will be chosen at this pre liminary contest which promises to be an extremely interesting - one. There are a number of men in the college who have had previous train ing in the work and two were mem bers of the varsity debating team last year. J. Q. Young, who was chosen for the first team of varsity debaters in last year's tryouts, and D. G. Eldrldge, an alternate of the regular team, are among those who will enter the preliminaries. The question to be debated Is "Resolved, That the United States during and after the present war should oper ate the merchant vessel which she is now building." Reports from Kansas City indi cate that the Missouri men will of fer stiff competition and are confi dent of championing over the Ne braska debaters. The Nebraskans feel, however, that with the mate rial at hand added to the training that most of the man have had they will be able to gain a favorable decision in the final struggle at Kan sas City. Dr. Edwin Maxey of the college of law, who has written a text on In ternational Law and who as an au thority on questions of this kind, will coach the Nebraska team. CHRISTMAS STORE t The -brimmng with gifts for everybody NEBRASKA ALUMNI WRITE ON VARIED SUBJECTS (Continued from page one.) MANY STUDENTS LEAVE FQR WAR SERVICE (Continued from page one.) Every Weight of Underwear for Men is found in the LFAVIS Union Suit for Fall and Winter ; cotton, cashmere, cotton nnd worsted, silk and worsted and Sea Island cotton mercerized. You can get light, medium or heavy weight LEWI UNION SUITS Priced, $1.50 to $6.00 and Higher We display and sell these famous LEWIS Union Suits and I want you to examine the differ ent' weight and materials, and the generously pood coustrvc tion and then note the big consumer-value. fraternity. Bill Day has held down 'he position of center on the var sity football team during the past season and was awarded all-Missouri Valley honors by several critics. Bill is a member of Phi Kappa Psi. Farley Young played a guard posi tion on the football team this year and made a remarkable record for a first year man. Farley is a mem ber of Kappa Sigma. Neuhall is treasurer of sophomore class, Cran dall has shown up well in freshman football this year. , Both are mem bers of Alpha Sigma Phi fraternity. It is rumored on the campus that Edson Shaw, ex-captain of the foot ball team, and Sam Kellogg will leave school to join the colors. The withdrawal of all these football men will be a hard blow to Nebraska's team next year, and It cannot be said that Nebraska is not doing her duty In the way of giving her best men to the cause. IMPORTANT CHANGE IN ORPHEUM PROGRAM Next Monday, Tuesday and Wednes day, 10, 11, 12, are the last days of Western Vaudeville at the Orpheum. Beginning Monday matinee, Decem ber 10, and ending Wednesday mat inee, December 12, at the Orpheum, Thos. II. Ince presents "CIVILIZA TION," the million dollar spectacle by C. Gardner Sullivan, with music by Victor L. Schertzinger character ized by the New York World as "a gigantic moving picture of war and its consequences" and one which "pleases Ince on an artistic footing with David Belasco." Beginning with the night perform ance, Wednesday, December 12, the Orrheum's Martin Beck "big time" Orpheum Circuit bill will be p'ayel Heven times a week Instead of six as heretofore. This will give those on the walling list for permanent season reservations an opportunity to secure good seats for the big sh"w Vedne3lay niihts. Therefore, after the dates named, the Orpheum's "first hilf" will be devoted exclusively to big moving pictures the best prolusions thit money can buy opening wlh "Civil. Iatlon;" and the "nt hvr wl cnslt of Roven performances of the two-a-diy Orpheum Clr-H' "ho of vaudeville " ACME AMUSEMENT CO. Adv. od of Attack In Kindergarten," which was published recently in the kindergarten and the first grade. Last spring Miss Wilson was pri mary editor of the Nebraska Teach er. She is spending this year in ad vanced work at Columbia Univer sity. An article entitled "The Begin nings of Poetry," by Prof. Louis Pound, professor of English litera ture, was published in the 1917 pub lications of the Modern Language Association of America. V. L. Havens, ex-'0f, commercial attache of the American embassy at Santiago, Chili, has published a text book on railway engineering, which is the only book of its kind in the Spanish language. An article on "Electric Arc Weld ing," by H. L. Unland, E. E. '10, has been published in a recent issue of the General Electric Review. Un land discusses the principle factors involved in electric arc welding and cutting and mentions cases where the process may be used to advan tage. Fred M. Wirt, C. E. '13, formerly a assistant professor in charge of farm machinery at the Kansas state agri cultural college, has written a "Lab oratory Manual in Farm Machinery," which is being adopted as a text in a number of schools. mm V V, I I 7 Y I ) feafcw..., n - i urn--in,r-irrrr"ivtn in in iq-aif r -in K:::v::::yyv:':;ii - m -mtmn tm -m MISS IRMA KOMLOSY, Dancer Extraordinary, With FLORA BELLA At THE OLIVER Saturday Matinee and Night tV'VAX xy V v,VWVJ . V .. . & ' Hit M- '7s St he ir W V j ( UK x xx U Pnts sis I'M.' '31 "I- '; in r 111 rr- if Movd wants to e you lm vmr printing Lcet Claps scrf pli, R. '13, on face an '"'U. Boturnt tt R-'Hc 0Trf frr Rnn'r' I Lct On rimnr- - I 'pha 7ea fr'p'-!, ' nrno W. F Ro'-Tt" ' ' "'"Tf return to R m I . O.Tice. '' 1 i 'fv 1 'fx V AC H1EYEME NT Twenty-Eire "yrars -ago the General Tc Tm'set freertTienpIrTt-DTreiearch. Licctnc (company wa founded.. Since then, electricity has sent its thrill through the whole structure of life, Eager to turn wheels, to lift and carry; to banish dark, to gather heat, to hurl, voices and thoughts across space, to give the world new tools for its work electricity has bent to man's wil; Throughout this period the General Electric Company has held the great responsibihtiesand high ideals of. leadership.. It has given tangible form to inven tion, in apparatus of infinite precision and gigantic power. .And it has gone forth, co-operating with every industry, to command this unseen, force and fetch it far to serve all people. By the achievements which this com-, 'pany has already recorded may best, be judged the greater ends its future; shall attain, the deeper mysteries it yet shall solve in. electrifying more and more of the world's .work. ;' it