THE DAILY NE1IRASKAN MITT- .-.....- -i- THE DAILY NEB riilillHlicil Riimlny, liicsilay, Wednesday. ThurHilny niiil Krlilny of t'lu'li week by the I'nlvermtv of NetiniNka. Ofr'tlC'IVI. VN1VF.U91TV l'l'llMCATlON I iulir the (llrri'tlon uf I lie Student I'ub-lli-nttim Ittmril. Kiitt-reil kb keroml Iiink iimlter lit the poHtitllli-r In l.lni'olii, NflTiiHlui, under Act of CniiKreoH. March tf. Will. HuliHrriptl'.n rate- '!.M) per yenr el. per M'lneMier MIiikIp enpy 5 cent KIMTOKIW. STAl'F JACK At NTIN Kdltnr-ln-t'hlef OIIMV II. . VNTON ... AcIIiik .Mini. hint or IKKNIK. WATSON nNiirlnte Klilriilue l.iic Nimvn llrrhrrt Hrowiirll, Jr New KillihiU'llie von MinekH lU . s... .. .., Cliurles Mileliell Spurt illlllll lltlliliK ' ... . . . . ..II.. I.'..- AhhImIIIIII r.uuor; iriir in mini, ..u.. ltrlxer, and tiertrmle I'utterNiin. AkMuiiI Society Klltor: Zellu (illhnur, dertrmle (n.lllil. mill iilnru Millllimer. Womeii'ii Atliletlen: Sue Slllle. Kxcliiinire Kdltor: ry Sheldon. Cyril CoiimbH! Prui.uitle K.dltor. Feature writers: Jo I'eliur,. Thoniun, Alice Mrvrim Typist Telephone 11-3311. It mini 2tll. "I " Office houri.! Kdllor-ln-eliler iind Mun- nirlnK F.dltor Three- o'clock dully. HI SINKS STAFF JMKS FIDIXKK HiiMlneBii Mutineer ClItTord lllekn Clr. Mnniiirer Fdltnr I il II or Editor I ,l I Hi i Fdiloi Mary News F.dltor for thin Iue HKKHKKT HKOWNF.I.l.. JK. AWGWAN. Today the Awgwan subscription campaign starts. It's a real magazine that i3 coming to Nebraska this year! It has many features not present last year and the price Is reduced. For years the comic has been noted for its wit and humor. It is a common occurrence to have it's jokes, its car-! toons, and its vitkisms quoted in the best professional and amateur fun mag azines in the United States. The Week ly fim reviews are users of Awgwan material. Last year the rrice of the magazine was two dollars this year it has been mt to one dollar for the entire nine numbers. Most of the editorial force of last year is back and are already working on the first issue which will appear October third. A more highly organized editorial staff this year vi!l result in a publication that will ever be a pleasure to readers. Four big "N" blankets are being given one each day to the co-ed that sell the most subscriptions to the monthly. You'd better get your dollar ready for they have some mighty con vincing arguments for Awgwan if you hesitate. Awgwan represents the laughing side of your university life. It brings out the things you like to laugh at, the funny things that take place in classes, and brings a happiness to its readers that make Awgwan Day, each month, a enjoyable one. Subscribe today. for an education. We spend inoey only for candy and movies ; u college edu cation Is u primary investment. It is the most profitable investment one can make. It brings larger returns. It brings returns In money, but the re turns in money are Insignificant as compared with the larger understand ing of life it (4)11 tributes, as compared with the spiritual development it in jures, as compared with the "homo fueling" it gives you as a citizen of the world. The opportunity trken, the Invest ment made Grinnell college becomes a possession. It becomes yours. It be comes yours In spiritual fee. It is a unique and extraordinary possession. It goes with you wherever you go. Tho you go to the African jungles to serve humanity, it gos with you. Tho you go to the uttermost parts of the world, it goes with you. The college has be come yours. It is your support, your credential, your demonstration of ca pacity and power. Moreover it goes with you to the end, and Into the Great Beyond. You leave money behind, and all things material; but your collage Its ideals, Us reali ties, the truth it has given you, the life it has enriched these all go with you as you pass over the Great Divide. These are golden days of promise for you. Wrapped in them are all the real ities that make life worth while. May you see and know this now. ( A man can master no one else until be msBters himself. THE TWENTIETH CENTURY. Today the last lap of the big atdlet-k- ticket race is on. Over nineteen hun dred tickets have been sold and just a few more sales will push the cam paign over the top. You all know what it will mean to nineteen hundred stu dents if this last hundred buy. It will mean tow dollars and fifty cents in all our pockets. The successful culmination of this drive is YOUR responsibility, Mr. Ne braskan. It will show that we have the school spirit to put a drive across that really amounts to something. If you, and you, and you, all talk and talk and talk the few tickets remain ing to be sold will be gone in a short time. The Students Activities offices, lo cated in the basement at the west end of the Administration building, has the remaining tickets for sale. Get one today or sell one. CONTEMPORARY OPINION (The Grinnell Scarlet and Blue.) AN EDITORIAL. COLLEGE PRESIDENTS AND PROFESSORS TO ASSIST WILSON FOUNDATION New York, Sept. 10. A committee of college presidents and professors is to be one of the major groups to assist in the work of the "Woodrow Wilson Foundation, according to an announcement just given out from the headquarters of that organization at 150 Nassau Street, New York. Hamil ton Holt, editor of The Independent and executive director of the Founda tion, announced that Stephen P. Dug gan, director of the Institute of In ternational Education of New York, is to be chairman of what is to be caled the educational committee of the Foundation and that Professor Duggan has already outlined his com mittee and is receiving acceptances for membership on it. It is the hope of the Woodrow Wil son Foundation to rally to its sup port the largest possible body of col lege graduates and undergraduates, says Mr. Holt's statement. The pur pose of the Foundation is to honor and perpetuate the ideals of Mr. Wil son, and to use the words denning its purpose, it is to be "created by pub lic subscription in recognition of the national and international services of Woodrow Wilson, twice president of the United States, who furthered the cause of human freedom and was In strumental in pointing out effective methods for the co-operation of the liberal forces of mankind throughout the world. "The Award of Awards from the in come of the Foundation will be made from time to time by a nationally con stituted committee to the individual or group that has rendered, within a specified reriod, meritorious service to democracy, public welfare, liberal thought or peace through justice." It is proposed to give the Founda tion an endowment of one million dol lars or more, to be subscribed as a free-will offering from all parts of the country and from all classes of its people, the sum to be kept perma nently intact and the income to be used as an award or awards some what like the Nobel Prizes, one of which Mr. Wilson, himself, UNI NOTICES Silver Serpent Sliver Serpent will meet at 7 o'clock Tuesday .evening, September 27, in Ellen Smith Hall. Green Goblins All last year Green Goblins are re quested to be present at a special and very important meeting to be held at the Delta Tau Delta house Thursday evening at 7:30. Tlense be on time. Valkyrie There will be an important meeting of Valkyrie at Ellen Smith Hall Tues day evening nt 7:15. All members are requested to be present on time. Ag College Convocation ' There will be a special Agricultural College convocation in room 304 Agricultural Hall on Tuesday Sept. 27, at 11:00 A. M. All Agricultural Col lege classes excused . Scabbard and Blade Scabbard and Dlade meets in Ne braska Hall at 7:30 p. m. Tuesday Sept. 27. Episcopation Club Meeting There will be an Episcopalion Club meeting in Faculty Hall on Tuesday, Sept. 2" from 7 to 8. The Wayne club will hold its busi ness meeting in Room 111 "U" hall next Wednesday evening at 7 o'clock. All former Wayne normal students are invited to attend. Block and Bridle. Block and Bridle club will hold a meeting in room 305 Agricultural hall on Tuesday noon immediately after Ag college convocation. All members out. Union. Hike to Antelope park, Friday Cot. 1. Meet at Union hall at 7:30 p. in closed meeting. University Directory. All fraternities and sororities hand in at once a complete list of present members for the university directory to Eugene Ebersole, business manager of the directory. Sunday, Sept. 25. Catholic students club 2:00 p. m., cathedral hall. Meinorah society, open meeting, S p. m., Faculty hall. Tuesday, Sept. 27. VcHpers, 5 p. m., Ellen Smith hall. ' Episcopalian club meeting, 7 p. m. Faculty hull. Scabbard and Blade meeting, 7:30 p. m., Nebraska hall. Silver Serpent meeting, 7 p. m. El lei. Smith hall. Valkyrie meeting, 7:15 p. m., Ellen Smith hall. Wednesday, Sept. 28. Omaha club meeting, Social Science, hall. Thursday, Sept. 29. Dean lleppner's tea, 314 p. .m. Ellen Smith hall. Commercial club meeting, 11 a. m., Social Science. Dr. Spoehr's lecture, Chemistry hall. Green Goblin meeting, 7:30 p. m. Delta Tau Delta house. Freshman men mass meeting, 11:00 a. m. Temple. Freshman Girls Mass meeting, 11:00 a. m.. Armory. Friday, Sept. 30. Delian open meeting, 8 p. m., Temple theater. Acacia House dance. PI Kappa Phi house dance. Saturday, Oct. 1. All University party, armory. Faculty, Ellen Smith hall. Chi Omega house party. Silver Lynx house party. Nebraska Wesleyan football game. Student Council The Student Council will meet at 5:00 o'clock Tuesday afternoon in Faculty hall Temple Building. Glenn Munger, President. Military Notice. The Wednesday afternoon section In military science will be from 3-6 p. m. as given in the catalog. The store-room, basement 8-12 and 1-6 daily except Sat urday afternoon for the issu ance of uniforms to students taking the second year of the R. O. T. C. basic course. All sophomores are required to be in uniform beginning Monday September 25th. holds. a The money is to be raised without th y 9. 3? Get it at By Pres. J. H. T. Main. The welcome Grinnell gives to you is not perfunctory. It comes from the heart, tl meets you more than half way. It fives you promise, toda-, that it will stay with you thru the college yars, whether you are an old stud ent or a new one. so th?t you may fin ish your course with joy. Grinnell college is an opportunity. It is offered to you in all its richness. It is your privilege to take the opportuni ty and to realize it. It is your glorioui task to demonstrate, for yourself, Grin nell as an opportunity. The college op portunity, here or elsewhere, is a prob lem to be solved. It is a mountain to he climle3. It is an ideal to be realized. An opportunity means defeat, or it means victory. Which shall It be for you? It is wholly witiin your power to ucide. The college is an investment It Is stupid to say that we spend money usual campaign or drive methods since the committee feels that sucl a means of money raising in this in stance will be unnecessary so long as their purpose is only to afford "Amer icans an opportunity to pay tribute in lasting form to the democratic ideals of another American who has served his country and the world, and who achieved greatly and suffered greatly." I Franklin D. Roostvelt, President Wilson's assistant secretary of the navy, is chairman of the National Committee of the Foundation, and Cleveland H. Hedge is chairman of the executive committee, which is composed of the following members : Mrs. Carrie Chapman Catt, Frank I. Cobb, Stephen P. Duggan, Mrs. J. Malcolm Forbes, Edwin F. Gay, Mrs. J. Borden Harriman, Edward M. House, Frederick Lynch, Henry Mor genthau, Adolph S. Ochs, Frank L. Polk, Miss Virginia Potter, Miss Caro line Ruutz-Rees, Mrs. Charles E. Sim onson, Mrs. Charles L. Tiffany and Mrs. H. Otto Wittpenn. State chairmen are organizing In thirty-six states, it Is announced, and nation-wide organization of all the states will be completed early In Sep tember. Great interest In the move ment has been manifested by women, Mr. Holt says, and a national wom an's committee is being organized by Miss Virginia Totter. lis FILLER'S RKSCRIPTION HARMACY a 'ft DON'T FORGET Cigar Store Corner 13th and N Cigars Cigarettes Candies Magazines rv . n mi There's no argument about quality being cheapest in the long run You have only to wear one KUPPENHEIMER suit to prove that fact conclusively $35 $40 $45 & : C. Ft. A Co., 1921 Adding Style to Quality STYLE is to quality what a polish is to fine wood. A cheap coat of varnish will put a bright temporary gloss on good old mahogany, but it takes thorough workmanship to put on that lasting polish which brings out its fullest glories. So does perfect tailoring bring out the richness of fab' rics and style in clothes. It is their per' fection of tailoring, fit and finish that gives to Stratford Clothes their mv equalled style. It pays to buy the best. COHN RISSMAN G5 COMPANY CHICAGO The new Stratford styles for Fall and Winter again definitely attest to the fad that Stratford designers are anticipating America's style trend. Stratford Clothes are 'also distinguished by several vitally important and exclusive tailoring features. Sack coats are made with the exclusive fabric trim no body linings to wear out They have two-way pockets. All coat seams are silk-satin piped. All trousers are made with double crotches and double pocket stays. The new Fall and Winter Styles are now on display -TM MOMS t CC&TMKJC