THU DAILY NBBB18K1N BISHOP HOMER STUNTZ SPEAKS TO LARGE STUDENT GROUP (Continued from Page I.) pointed out some of the most funiom examples In history. ,The Bishop asked nil young people about to stait their careers to, forget personal ag grandizement and seek to serve. The program in full was ns follows: After College What? The Faculty Wonder What? Dr. Lida B. Earhart. The Alumni Know What R. O Williams, '91, Law, '93. The Students Han What' Harry D. Hubbard, Mary J. Baker. Bishop Homer C. Stunt z, D. D., L. L. P., presented by Chancellor Avery. Students Yell and Sing. During the banquet the University orchestra played and between course the students were led In Nebraska soifrs and cheers. "IT lT-Uni" was re peated again and again and the audi ence stood as the orchestra played "The Scarlet and the Cream." The committees in charge of the banquet were as follows. Laurence E. Slater, general chair man. Tickets Jack Virtue, Janet Mait land, Marion Mote, Asa Hepperly. Arrangements Floyd S. Oldt, Grace Stuff. Decoration Glen Dorsey, Olive Hartley, William Aldstadt. Publicity Herbert Brownell, jr. "Any scientific study of man must include the religious element," Bishop Stuntz said in opening his talk. Any other view would be narrow and un scienific, he continued, and has been proved over ,and over again in the countries which have no schools, no churches, no libraries, except those brought by the missionaries of the Christian religion. Bishop Stuntz told the students that in the long run it was the riches of character, of sympathy and of gratitude of a nation, which counted more than money. He pointed to George Washington as a man known and loved all over the world because he devoted his life to the service of others. As examples of people seek ing personal gain he turned to Bene dict Arnold, Napoleon and Charles I. Ho repeated his call for Christian workers and said that thirty Univer sity of Nebraska students going out into this kind of life work would be able to make their influence felt all over the world. Christian Religion Ahead Bishop Stuntz, who has spent about twenty years of his life In the foreign missionary fields, painted a sorrowful picture of the conditions particularly in ndia today. He said that there were many towns in that country which had never had a sermon preached in them and that a great number of towns did not have a single Christian institution. "The Christian religion is the only faith which is con tinually making converts today," he declared, showing that the whole world awaited the missionaries from North America. While the Moham medan faith is making some headway in Africa, it is weak, and the Buddhists and others are not making any progress. The Friday evening banquet was the culmination of the work of the Committee of Two Hundred on the MISS BENNET TO HOLD VOCATIONAL CONFERENCLS (Continued from page one.) service Tuesday evening and tell something of her work and the oppor tunities for girls in business. A luncheon will be given Tuesday noon so that l niversity girls win have a chance to hear Miss Bennet before her main address. Tickets for the luncheon are 40 cents and may be secured at Ellen Smith Hall on Mon day. At the tea to be given at Ellen Smith Hall on Wednesday, opportun ity will be given to each girl to meet Miss Bennet personally. The employment bureau in Chicago, of which Miss Bennet is head, is one To Well Dressed Women .We are prepared to do your pleating-, hemstitch in?:, embroider your dresses, make your but tons' and buttonholes, and alter any kind of gar ments. The BUTTONHOLE Phone L486S 220 South 13th St. i Play Ba Limber up your baseball arm and get that old pep back again. Be used to a good glove or bat before the season starts. That's what helps your game. WE HAVE EVERYTHING IN THE LINE OF BASEBALL GOODS. LAWLOR'S The Sporting Goods Store" of two in the wholo country. She is active in finding positions for Uni versity girl graduates in all the states in tho west. -Ml SPECIAL CONVOCATIONS FOR BEN CHERRINGTON (Continued from page one.) United States during which he has assisted in organizing summer groups in Boston, Worcester, New Haven. New York, Rochester, Cleveland, De troit, Columbus, Indianapolis, Chicago, Minneapolis, Denver, Pueblo, Los An geles, Seattle, San Francisco, Houston, Tex.; Wichita, Kas.; Kansas City, Mo., and Omaha. At the present time, Cherrlngton is head of the college Y. M. C. A.'s in the Rocky Mountain region. Ho was graduated from Nebraska in 1911 and served as student secretary at the University of California for a num ber of years. He will go to Europe in June to tako charge of student work there and will devote considerable time to study of the industrial situa tion in England and on tho continent. HACKWARD STUDENTS have frequently gone up with the "heads of the class" when properly fitted with glasses. HALLETT Optometrist Estab. 1871 1143 0 PILL RESC HAR 1 Remember f The New Bicycle Store when purchased from us. Flo o C. Belote gi 123 No. 14th The Bicycle Man Lincoln 1 $2-50 There's never a reduction n Armstrong's quality but there's a very great reduction in price. BEAUTIFUL patterns in woven madras with satin stripes; corded madras and woven madras of exceptional qualities: all tailored and finished down to the minutest detail in con formity to the Armstrong standard. Five dollars was the price a few days ago when they sold for what they 'were worth. Now, your choice of the entire lot at $2.50. ARMSTR ONG CLOTHING COMPANY Xcbraska's Largest Exclusive Mens and Boys' Store Home Style Malted Milk 25 Cent LLER's RESCR1PTION MACY 117-119 South 14th St rr