THE I) A I I. NKHii A SK A N TEACHERS' COLLEGE TO BE SCENE OF FOUR MEETINGS The Teachers' College will be used o its full capacity thlB evening. The DR. BARKER TO LECTURE TODAY ON SEX HGLB... .-- nm V .,,e WEEK MAi. MARMEINSISTEES DAVID SCHOOLER NAT NAZAREO, JR. ATLANTIC FLEET JAZZ BAND FELIX Be" JACK FOUR READINGS LACHMANN SISTERS EVA TAYLOR A CO. KINOliKmo TOPICS OF THE DAY Iu.ti 25 & 50c; Eve., 25 & 75c Ifilllllil I : MON.-TUES. WED. William Farnum IN HEART STRINGS And Comedy "Darn That Stocking" Shows at 1, 3, 5, 7, 9 rfirt0?-- fcMH" O' -QCtjL ill' MON., TUES., WED. ELSIE FERGUSON IN "COUNTERFEIT" A Stirring Romance ot Adverv ture and Mystery MR. and MRS. CARTER DE HAVEN In Their Firat Comedy "HOODOOED" THE GREAT HARMON A Novel Violin Virtuoso Pathe News "Towcs of the Day" Pathe Review Rialto Symphony Orchestra Shows Start 1, 3, 5, 7 and 5 Mats. 20c; Night 30c ALL THIS WEEK REX BEACH'S Great Drama of the North The Girl from Out side CHARLIE CHAPLIN In Thirty Minutes of Laughter "THE VAGABOND" News and Topical Pictures " WELLS, CARLTON AND MOORE Versatile Entertainers Lyric Concert Orchestra Shows Start 1, 3, 5, 7,9 P.M. Mats., 20c; Night, 30c; Chll., 10c Tel. L4718 1247 N, Press Bldg. I. REHMAR Tailor . Ladies' and Gentlemen's Suits Made to Order Cleaning Pressing Repairing A Good P1ao to Bat N. S. CAFE 1H South 11th ttrvex Almost always when a student or a member of the faculty think of Printing they think of GRAVES 244 No. 11th Street HEFFLEY'S TAILORS' OF QUALITY He. nth 8t Phone sV1422 JOHNSTON'S CANDY One and Two Pounds PILLE-R8 RESCRIPTION 1ARMA0T 1 L?Ssiy Scout Masters' Training Course, the Seminar In Education, the Bible training class for Christian leaders and the Training School In Vocational Education will hold meetings in the building. About two hundred and fif ty persons are expected to attend the various meetings. JEST NIGHT SKITS DUE NEXT MONDAY (Continued from page 1) The committee urges that special At tention be paid to the creation of skits and that all organizations check up their progress during any meetings held this week. A very favorable out look Is reported. The committee will have the duty of eliminating the skits of lesser merit. It urges that all re ports be specific and concrete so that no deserving skits wil be thrown out on account ot poor briefs. This Is the tenth annual Universi ty Night. It will be held in the High School auditorium, tl Is the ono night when all restraint is forgotten. DR. HOLMES TALKS ON "AN EXTRA DAY" AT VESPERS Dr. John A. Holmes, of the First Congregational Church, addressed one hundred students at the Y. M. C. A iina Y. V. C. A. Vespers Sunday af ternoon, on the subject "An Extra Day." He impressed upon them most earnestly the importance of strong lite decisions in building character. Mary Waters presided. Margaret Perry sang, Laurence Slater read the call to prayer, Just before the address. Dr. Carey B. Pope, the student pastor of the Baptist Church, gave the clos ing prayer. Dr. Charles E. Barker of Grand Ra plds Michigan, will deliver a lecture under the auspices of the Rotary Club at two o'clock thia afternoon. His subject will be "A Mother's Respon Bibllity to Her Daughter," and onb women will be admitted. Dr. Barker is an excellent speak er and his address will prove of Inter est to Nebraska women. He will give three lectures while In Lincoln, In eluding one at the High School, and another before the Rotary Club. ROADMEN OPENED THIRD INSTITUTE YESTERDAY PERSONALS Helen Forbes, a Kansas Univer sity student, spent the wt-ek-end at the Chi Omega house. The marriage of Lieutenant Thilts to Gladys Blanchart took place Mon day afternoon at Fairbury. The bride was a student at Kansas University and is a member of the Chi Omega sorority. The bridegroom is a mem ber of the PI Kappa Phi fraternity. Turner Tefft. '23, who has been ill with tonsilitis for the past week, re turned yesterday to school. - Mrs. Alfred Schalek, of Omala, Is a guest of her daughter, Zoe Schalek, '23, at the Alpha Phi house- Harlan Boyer, '23, returned yester day after spending the week-end at his home in York. Annah Belle Stniiftoff, ex-'92, visited friends in-Lincoln over the week-end. Guests for the week-end at the Achoth bouse were, Helen Faulkner, '17, of Diller; Hazel Snethan, '19, of Humboldt; Opal Nuse, '19, Sutton; Claire Neumeyer, '13, Lyons; Jucy Jeffries. '16, Mullen; Nell Ryan, Kathryn Hedfleld and Dorothy Fer guson, all of Omaha. Herman Thomas, '20, and Charles Gillllan, '20, who were delegates to the convention of Delta Tau Delta in Chi cago, returned yesterday to school. Ruth King, '21, who visited nt her home in Kearney for the week-end returned yesterday. Denman Kountze and Frank Wine gar returned Monday from a short visit to Omaha. Webb Richards '20, who for the past few days has been visiting in Chicago will return today. Evelyn Black, '19, was a guest at the Alpha Chi Omega house for the past week-end. Ruth Duncan, '21, returned yester day from Omaha, where she spent the week-end. James J. Hates, a member of the Ames. Iowa, chapter Beta Theta PI was a guest Sunday at the local chap ter house. WANT ADS. FORMER L. H. S. STUDENTS should order the 1920 LINKS now. 11.25 each; cloth, $2.00. Send orders and money to THE LINKS, Room 103. High School building. Memory books, kodak albums, diar ies and leatner no.clties fan will please you . well art p.i"r f and decorations. George Bros.. 1213 N. (Continued from page 1) struct Ion and malntalnance of state highways, the evolution pf the high way and the county bridge and highway-railway crossings. Sessions will Lo held In the Temple. The annual meeting (if the Nebraska Engineering Society will be held in the evening in Room 101, Mechanical Arts Build Ing. Monday afternoon's session ,was held In I'm Mechanical Engineering laboratory. A feature of this year's convention is the actual demonstra tion of road construction and malnte nance which will take place on East O street. All kinds of road machln ery will be used and the Lincoln Auto Club will provide cars In which the visitors will be taken out to view the work. This will take place Wed neBday afternoon. Interest in good roads Is rapidly growing in the state and this year's convention is expected to eclipse In numbers the former convention held here in 1919. This organization has no officers and no membership duea are paid. All men who are interested In the construction of roads are elig ible to this eonference. A new and exclusive model, with a modified vamp, and partic ularly "chic" heel. Elastic over the instep to insure a perfect fit. We have this tie in Black Kid, Black Buck, also a soft pliable Patent Leather. Attractively Priced Daylight C5ffiiW2torQ 8; H 3 L""'Bil HP ! Tn -.ill i- 4 Hb-y,2zi ' S lfe' ! ' '' ""'"--" '-- -W.I -'--A,.,-r,..;. X No... keitank Aclivilitt liunnt IM h'ar: SubniHrine detec'.iuu iVvices X-ray tube for mruicul service Radio telephone r.J telegraph hlectric welding and application Searchlights for the Army and Navy Electric furnncea for Run shrinkage Magneto insulation for air service Detonators for submarine mines I .cendiary and smoke bombs Fixation of nitrogen Substitutes for materials The Service of an Electrical Research Laboratory The research facilities of the General Electric Company are an asset of world-wide importance, as recent war work has so clearly demonstrated. Their advantages in pursuits of peace made them of inestimable value in time of war. A most interesting story tells of the devices evolved which sub stantially aided in solving one of the most pressing problems of the war the submarine menace. Fanciful, but no less real, were the results attained in radio communication which enabled an aviator to control a fleet of flying battleships, and made possible the sending, without a wire, history-making messages ana orders to ships at sea. Scarcely less important was the X-ray tube, specially designed for field hospital use and a notable contribution to the military surgical service. And many other products, for both com batant and industrial use, did their full share in securing the victory. In the laboratories are employed highly trained physicists, chemists, metallurgists and engineers, some of whom are experts of inter national reputation. These men are working not only lo convert the resources of Nature to be of service to man, but to increase the usefulness of electricity in every line of endeavor. Their achievements benefit every individual wherever electricity is used. Scientific research works hand in hand with the development of new devices, more efficient apparatus and processes of manufacture. It results in the discovery of better and more useful materials and ulti mately in making happier and more livable the life of all mankind, Booklet, Y-863, describing the company' plants, wilt be mailed upon request. Address Desk 37 GesieralElectric General Office Schenectady, N.Y. Company Sales Offices in 95-,im all large cities.