NEBRASKAN Cliff Scott'a Music. B14S2. GATUN LAKE (S BIG AFFAIR T n E DAILY If ' Reservoir, Built by Americans, Far Outdoes Anything Els That th World Has Known. The government fisheries bureau Is ! 8 Every Weight of Underwear for Men is found in the LEWIS Union Suit for Fall and Winter ; cotton, cashmere, cotton and worsted, silk and worsted and Sen Island cot ton mercerized. You can pet light, modi urn or licay weight LEWIS UNION SUITS Priced, $1 50 to $6.00 and Higher We display and sell these famous LEWIS Union Suits and want 3ou to examine the differ ent weights and materials, and the generously good construc tion and then note the big consumer-value. Collars FOR SPRING CASCO-lVSin. CLYDE-2' a The Corset Is the Foundation . Your college outfit starts with a iiiiii MS Your figure will be graceful, and you will have distinct style, irrespective of simplicity in dress, and your health as sured. Moreover, a Redfern Model is so ideally com fortable, fitting so natur ally that its wearer may do any athletic stunt as easily as she dances, rides or walks, in her corset. Be sure to have your Redfern Corset properly fitted before you choose your suits and frocks then their correct appearance is assured. planting On tun lake with fishes. Th first shipment for the purpose, made hy steamer the other lny. consisted oi catfish, Ktmflsh, carp ami Mnck bass, all of "flnireillnE" size. The has were planted In the t'hagrea river, the prln el pal tributary of the lake. A I'huraoh of the twelfth dynasty constructed a reservoir (known today Au 1 lil-A LtAhll.' U' square miles. It was an artificial lake, regarded In Its day as one of th wonders of the world, and was de signed to regulate the flow of the Mle. In Its way It was the most remark able engineering achievement of an tiquity. Hut flatun lake, on the line of the Panama canal, beats It. being about three times as big. Its object Is similar namely, to take care of the flood waters of the Chagres river and prevent them from doing mis chief. Oatun lake Is the largest artificial body of water ever known In the world. It Is, In fact, the most Impor tant feature of the translsthmtnn ennal, extending rwo-ttrirds of the dis tance from the Caribbean sea to the Pacific ocenn. It occupies a basin that was dry land before the canal was built; and because the area covered by It Is very hilly and topographically Irregular, It stretches In a multiple of arms fa? up Into Its marshy shores. One renson why Its shores are marshy Is that In Its shallows there develops with astonishing luxuriance a kind of grass whfch sends out run ners in all directions. On this account Its banks are not easily accessible even to small craft. As for fishes, It Is hoped that they will multiply and furnish a worth while food supply. Appearances Were Against Her. An amusing story was told to me the other day concerning Lady Sybil Grant, daughter of the earl of Rose ber.Vw It appears that her ladyship, who la an onthuslnstle war worker, recently nsslsted In waiting upon some wound ed soldiers nt n concert and tea got up for their entertainment. At the close of the meal one of the guests, not in the least realizing who she was. shyly offered her a tip, which was politely declined. "I really don't heed It, you know," said Lady Sybil smilingly, "I've got plenty of money. "Is that so?" exclaimed the soldier, in tones of evident surprise, allowing his gaze to rest on the plain linen overalls she had donned for the oc casion. "You've got plenty of money, have you?" Lady Sybil nodded assent. "Well, miss," was the somewhat dis concerting reply, "you'll excuse me saying so, won't you? But you don't look It." Pearson's Weekly. Three Seasons In Year. The Egyptian year was divided Into three seasons. These were Shnit, the season of waters, being the time occu pied by the .rising spread and reces sion of1 the Nile : Plrut, the season of vegetation ; the Shonmu, the season of harvest. These seasons are supposed to have been arranged hy the god Thot. Each season was divided into four months and they were known in official documents by numbers only. Thus we hnve the first, second, third and fourth months of Shalt, the months of each of the other seasons being designated In the same manner. Each month, how ever, had a patron god and the people ordinarily gave to It, in their dally In tercourse, the mime of Its god. These deity names of the months were tran scribed into Creek, then into Arabic and are now largely used by the Chris tian Inhabitants of Egypt in prefer ence to the Mussulman appellations. ; Sailor Now German Prisoner. Men serving on the destroyer Jacob Jones of the American fleet In foreign waters had a terrific fight with the sea after their ship had been sunk by a German submarine. The attack came suddenly, late in the afternoon. Al though every effort was made to re turn the fl).1it and save the ship, she finally settled and went down. Many of the men got Into the boats and on the rafts and a great number were seen swimming in the sea. -Two of these were picked up by the Germans. One of these men, John Francis Mur phy, Is now held as a prisoner by the Germans. After having gone through the ordeal of being torpedoed Murphy mude a heroic struggle to save mem bers of the ship's crew. No further news has been heard from him beyond the fact that he is held prisoner In Germany. Murphy was a ship's cook, first class, on the Jones. Men and Needles. Some men are like rusty needles; the best way to clean and brighten thera Is with work. Youth's Companion. is" ' f o v v i yv--- J.n-- r-vv i . .. v.- ,-. x , ; . . ' . . .. , h " t - I - l.T. . i. - i ; ,--1 f. f ' "ft . i Z ' . v - . ill.. - f - Kt. rr- r :it I i -- ' . .', .V - si ACHIEVHHHNT Twenty -five "years "ago the General EletJtric Company was founded. Since then, electricity has sent its thrill through, the whole structure, of life. Eager to turn wheeK 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 wi!L; Throughout thisperiod the General Electric Company has held the great responsibilities. and high ideals of. leadership. It has"Kt;free"pu;niKrcearch. It has "given tangible form" to" invert-1 tion, in apparatus of infinite precision and gigantic power.1 .And it has gone fortlvco-operating with every industry, :o command this unseen, force and fetch it far to serve all people By the achievements which this. cotn;. pany has already recorded may best' be judged the greater ends its future; shall attain, the deeper mysteries it yet shall, solve in ele&rifying more and more of the world s work. 1 ft- v. "Cum Laude" Sweaters Funny how ubiquitous a sweater is. From matricula tion to craduation its uses are multitudinous, its paths de vious. And how nomadic, too. The athlete's luxurious shaker. proudly alphabetted, migrates from "stude" to co-ed, from frat house to girl's dorm. If it's a Bradley, it abides there. Ask for them at the best shops. Write for the Bradley Style Booklet. RRAniFY KNITTING CO I)e1avAn Wis. jf ""1 EVMM 1 Wis m w W -i. . -vv . ' '. M t'r- ..:..:::.:!, : 'i :.. ... ' :( - ' .,: . '4. . VI f r ? v v ' " r " L-, ' .J - v , - - - -4 t- " ! S , 1 . rrr -. . fc x . S v 4 ' ' -1 , i ! ; ; ? 1 ' . J r: 1 ir-, - . ...w- -r I ? ; - -4 -v.;. .;. - " i L ' -' ' ... i'C :." . A " '.. ' J.A.. i i . ; - - .. .' ... ... 5 - ; 1 $3.50 up