.1 i i" I I' : ! ' THE DAILY NEBRASKAN The Daily Nebraskan n 1 II L 1 O J T. WilMiia. Thursday and Friday mornings of mb week by the univaraity oi neorasKsw Accepted for mailing at special rata of ostare provided for in Section 1103, Act at uccooer iviii luiowwmi z " 1922. OFFICIAL UNIVERSITY PUBLICATION Under tha Direction of tha Student Publi. cation Board Entered aa aeeond-claas matter at tha Postoffice In Lincoln, Nebraska, under Act of Congress, Marco a, ibiv. Subscription rata . $2.00 a year 11.25 a semester Simla Copy Flvsj Cants Address all communications to THE DAILY NEBRASKAN Statlnn Lincoln. Nebraska Editorial and Business Offices, University Hall 10. Phones Day ......142 University Exchange Night " - B6882 OFFICE HOURS Every afternoon with the exception of Friday and Sunday. EDITORIAL STAFF Paul C. Richardson ..-Editor William Bertwell...... M ."i Editor Merritt Benson News Editor Wm. Card - News Editor Hugh Cox , News Editor George VY. Hylton News Editor Ralph J. Kelly -...News Editor Alice Thumau . Assistant News Editor Doris Trott Assistant News Editor BUSINESS STAFF Clifford M. Hicks ..Business Manager Clarence Eickhoff Asst. Business Manager Otto Skold Circulation Manager MAY PUBLISH LIST. Third payment on stadium pledges will be due April 24. There are still a number who have made no re sponse to the appeals of the Nebras ka Memorial Association that the second payments be made. A smaller number have never made even the first payment. And now comes the news that the third installment is at hand. It is hoped that the third payments will be met on time. They are not so large as to work a hardship upon any stu dent, and there is no reason why they should not be paid when due. It may be that it will be necesary to publish a list of all students who have not met their payments prompt ly. This will not be done until about April 15, and it is regrettable that such a measure must be taken against the few who have neglected meeting this obligation. Pay your pledges promptly. SUCCESSFUL SEASON FOR RIFLE TEAM. The University of Nebraska rifle team has just completed a very successful season. Forty-nine vic tories and only five defeats tells the story. Last year the Huskers met twenty three schools, twenty of whom won from Nebraska. So this years per formance is .all the more remarkable when compared with the past years. During the ten weeks of intercol legiate shooting over 10,000 rounds of ammunition were fired every week, with a total of over 100,000 rounds. The Nebraska allotment for the year from the war department is 200,000 rounds. Capt. Huskea, Capt. Eggers and Sergeant Richardson deserve a great deal of credit for the remarkable showing of the team and they were largely responsible for the excellent showing made by Nebraska against universities in every part of the country. The College Press. BACK YARD HABITS ON THE FRONT LAWN. (The Daily Illini) The Illinois campus is one of the mof-t beautiful in the middle west. The shade trees planted on the prairie half a century ago, casting their shade on stately lawns, are a picture which can be duplicated in but few college towns. But those same mag nificent shade trees shading mud flats strewn with cigaret butts would hate little of the aesthetic about them. It has long been an unwritten law on the campus that cigarets should vanish at the borders of the Univer sity, and that students on business bound should keep to the walks. Both of these traditions are being violated of late, to the detriment of campus appearances. The question of cigaret smoking is a minor issue at this time. Cigaret butts undoubtly disfigure the campus but far more damaging are the paths which are beifig torn in the turf by the feet of those who are in too great a hurry to keep to the walks. At the present time, when the ground is soft from thaws and rains, the corner cat ting is lilMe short of vandalism. Sod torn and scuffed up now will mean blank, bare spots by summer. There has never been any "Keep Off" signs on campus lawns. There never should be, so long; as the stu dent body maintains the standards of decency and aesthetic appreciation which should be expected of college students. It is one thing to walk out across the South Campus on a sunny spring- day. It Is quite another to go tearing across Jthe grass before the THE PRICE OF PEACE. It appears that Charles Levermore, winner of the $50,000 Bok peace plan competition, is being pestered by a large number of "sucker-catchera" who are trying to relieve him of his money by selling him oil stock and kindred thine. It seems to us that thesa "surething" salesmen are over looking a bet: Dr. Levermore only wrote the plan; it was Mr. Bok who paid the $50,000 for it. a The weather the last week inspired us to poetry. We called the vprse "Halitosis, or the Breath of Spring." It was bad, so we won't publish it. Speaking of verse, we had a poet friend in the east who went crazy trying to find a word that would rhyma with bootlegger. a At least we think that's what demented the poor begger. a We were complaining the other day that our hair was becoming thin and a friend suggested that we should start reading hair-raising stories. Odd! Just that morning we were boasting that we had never struck a woman. It's surprising how often a picture of a "bo'udiorically" clad women appears in advertisements. It doesn t seem to matter whether the manu facturer is sailing automobiles, tooth paste or hosiery. a SOME THINGS WE NEVER EXPECT TO SEE. A sensational divorce case story on the back page of a newspaper. A motion picture play that is as good as its advertising. A Pi Phi by the name of Bridget O'Rielly. A risque book on mathematics. A kind-hearted traffic cop. A modest politician. A Ford limousine. . 1998. Since President Burton of Michigan University has told the world what is wrong with college students we are trying to conceal the fact that we attend a university. Don't cry, mother they lid to you ! I am not a university student, I am only a bootlegger. The English may be slow to see the point of a joke but we will bet that they would laugh their heads off at some of these American versions of English suits. Extra wide trousers cover a multitude of shins. It's astonishing how little some students read. Just a few days ago a fellow told us he didn't know the difference between the Democratic and Republican parties. We had supposed that everyone "knew that the Demo crats were represented by a mule and the Republicans by an elephant. a a Hem: "Have you seen the 'Covered Wagon?'" Haw: "No I live in Lincoln." widening an already too wide path of mud. But unless the latter custom stops, it may be necessary to pro hibit the former. Illinois students should look with pride on a set of rules would place them on the same mental plane with a group of children playing in Lincoln park. Notices. School of Journalism. 186 Ethics and the Law of the Press. Mid-semester examination Tuesday, March 25. See bulletin board. Campos Studio. Will -the students who have proof of pictures from campus studio kindly return same as soon as possible. Campus Studio. Will the following students call at the campus studio as soon as possible: Rolland Sturm, Jean Kellenbarger, P. Wellman, E. W. Morris, E. G. Lartz, Phil Lewis, George Burleigh, J. D. Wagner, Marion Yoder, R. V. Mc Grew, K. F. Burnett, Josephine Alt- man, Arthur Whitworth, D. C. Eyer, Margaret Michelmann, Merle Lcler, F. II. Luneburg, Herbert Brownell, W. N. Schronmaker, Abe Martin, J. K. Cozier, Leata Markwell, Herbert Ul- rich. Sherwood Eddy Committees. Both tha large and small Sher wood Eddy committees will meet in Social Science 101 Monday at 5 o'clock for final instruction before spring vacation. NAMES COMMITTEES FOR INTERNATIONAL UNI. NIGHT (Continued from page 1) Margaret Dunlap, Mildred Abegg, Henrietta Newman, Jessie Sutter, Jeane Holtz, Margaret Long, Mar garet Hager, ,Ruth Small, Alice Kauffman, Edith Gramlich, Mary Doremus, Sylvia Lewis, Marion Madi gan, Helen Brainard, Laura Rooney, Marie Bowden, Dorothy Almstead, Dorothy Zus't, Nevada Wheeler, Har-T-iAf Klotz. Eleanor Keating, Louise VanSinckle, Ruth Virtue, Betty Lang worthy, Eloise MacAhan, Paulina Berber. Frances McChesney, Mar garet Williams, Irnia Gulel, Anne fiordes. Winifred Steele, Eloise Mc- Moni3s, Marguerite Forsell, Caroline Airv. Dorothy Carr, Helen Cochran, Jer.nctt? Gil!, Ruth Ellworth, Agnes Anderson, Dorothy Brown, Lillian Ragsdale, Ruth Schrank, Daisy Rich, Laura Whelpley, Elizabeth Coleman, Ruth Sunderland, Arvilla Johnson, Florence Stavens, Goldie Young, Erchel Freeman, Betty Raymond, Betty Shepherd, Mary Towle, Ruth Rineland, Grace Teavey, Josephine Bishop, Margaret McMullen, Elsie Silver, Freda Barker, Arline Rosen berrv. Mary Ann Cornell, Elinor Pickard, Margaret Hyde, Ana Everts, Elsie Neely, Alyce Cook, Katherina Warner. Bob Shields, Harold Ed- irerton. John Allison, John Hollings- worth, Carrol Diller, Leo Brown, Frank Flynn, Clarence G. Olson, Robert Dunlap, Reginal Everett, Charles Warren, Paul Kamm, Dale Reynolds, Roland Estabrooks, Frank Wirseg. Charles Cox, Gorgon Up- linger, Robert McKee, Robert Black, Frank Allen, Rogar Hastings, Elton Baker, Alexander McKie, Rex Reese, William A. Prout, Donald McGregor, Leslie Cadwallader. Glcn Pierea, Ed Kubat, Gaylovd Neff. Kenneth Rystrom, Leslie Noble, Duane An derson, Ladd J. Itubka, Kenneth Neff, Harry Olds, Charles Youngblut, George Fitsimmons, Clayton Snow, Don Reese, Allen Cook, Jay Hepper- Iv. Carrol Beckman. Raymond Swal low, John Morifz, Raymond Totten- hoff, Harris A. Poley, Wendell Krause, Eldo Toniiska, Harold Close, Charlas McMrinnis. Beryl Hgem, Roy Talmadge, Willard Peilry, James Cody, Thomas Sweeney, Joe Zim- mermann, Harold Larson, Clayton Weigand, Harold Schoof, William Gross, Albert Pike, Raymond Lewis, George D. Carpentar, CharlesWelig, Blanchard Anderson, Alfred Erick- son, Stanley Devore, Art Latta, Mar- rion Woodard, Giles Henkle, Philip Tledgwick, Carl Peterson, Robert Wellington, Harold Gish, John Mad den, Noel Smith, Jere Mickel, Ben nett Martin, Ed Coats, Harry Burke, John Schrogcr. Robert Hill, Alfred Raun, Donald Sampson, Harold Close, Marriet Benson, Harold Avery, Floyd Ammar, Clifford DeFord, Herbert Oschner. Joe Pizer. Albion Speier, Clarke Gustin, August Leisy, George Bowers. Student Council. Regular nraeting Monday at 5:00. Commercial Club Commercial Club initiation will be held Tuesday at 6:45 at the Temple. All Bizads are eligible. Come and bring five paddles. Initiation ban quet will be Thursday at 6 o'clock at the Grand Hotel. Freshman Commission. Meeting Tuesday, 7:10, at Ellen Smith hall. Commercial Club. There will be a meeting of all members of the Commercial Club ticket sales committee in Social Sci ence 307 at 12 o'clock Monday. Dr. C. J. Pope, Baptist student pas tor at the University, is attending the rational convention of student pas tors and Christian educators of the Baptist church at Columbia, Mo. This meeting is under the auspices of the National Board of Education of the Baptist Church. MiimwMiumiasiwiimmnnmiinmnimiMMiimnH'iimMinHitiiirciH The Best Business Career is what every ambitious college student and senior is thinking about at the present time. Life insurance is one of the best, one of the most desirable, and one of the most satisfactory as a permanent calling. In assets and volume of business, life insurance is one of the three leading businesses of this country, yet the field is comparatively undeveloped. Only seven per cent of the economic value of all lives in United States is covered by insurance. This gives you an idea of the big field still to be developed. As to REMUNERATION, reports of college graduates who have entered business indicate that life insurance is at the VERY TOP as a SOURCE OF INCOME. Now is the time to consider what you are going to do at the end of the semester. f you are ambitious and willing to work hard and are interested to know about life insurance as a vocation, address the LINCOLN LIBERTY LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY, Lincoln, Nebraska, or call in person at 305 Ganter Building. 12th and O Street?. TUCKER-SHEAN . JEWELERS OPTICIANS Diamonds in beautiful white gold 18-k rings at $35, $45, 50, $75, $100 & up. Fine ladies and gents wrist and pocket watches at $15, $17.50, $20, $25, $35, $40, $50 and up. Fine Clocks, Jewelery, Silver war, all the new things in pearl and colored Beads, Vanities, Compacts, Per fumes, .Pocket Combs, Mesh Bags, etc. Expert ,watch, clock, jewelry and optical re pairing, class pins and rings, and fine jewelry made to order. TUCKER-SHEAN . 1123 O St. Can HicKiyr We serve the quickest and best lunch in the city at our fourtain where you can sit down at a table and be served and our lunches sure hits the spot. Fnl line of all school and drug supplies. Hickey Pharmacy Formerly Butler Drug Co. 1321 O Street B1183 Lincoln's Busy Stora Growing-, Growing, Ever Growltif lnrnifrar ii i v ' mi in - 1 "Ths Bgft for less Special Purchase Feature of New Spring COATS AND CAPES awr .:y y i WW ft In A Gold Monday feature of scores of brand new Coats and Capes at two re markably moderate prices! Each group embraces Coats and Capes so modish, so well tailored, so much just-the-thing-your're-looking-for, that too heavy an emphasis cannot be placed upon this presentation. 220 brand new garments are in the two extraordinary groups featured, nearly all just received from New York from our buyer on the ground the result of advantageous purchases and special re ductions which we in turn are passing on to you in the shape of these greater values. Coats and Capes that are a deliithtful treat in style and in -alue- model smartly developed from such rich coatiruts as Bolivia., Hiland Fleece Uryio, Polo, Camelaire. Tricotine, Novelty Plaids, Stripea and Mixtures. Ir i tsn. Bray, brown, rreen, rose, brick and other favorite uprinetime colors. blyl for every type and to meet every need and want. In two important groups. LOT 1 75 Coats and Capes at LOT 2 155 Coats and Capes at See Window Gold's Third Floor. Stenographers $250 Per Month Under the new law effective July 1 next. Civil Service stenographers ( can earn up to $3000 per year. In the last examination here an L. B. C. Birl made second hiKhest , Krade and received an appointment within two weeks. You ran do as ' well. Ask for catalog. Lincoln Business College Accredited by Natl Ass'a af Accredited Coml Schools. U B. C. Bide. 14th and P Sts. Lincoln, Nebr. W 1 j. jafisract,on vGV, on SATISFACTION Kvery garment wa clean mut receive your approval , before e cajl the iob complete. Our d veins; process Is a safe and certain una in all cases. Give us a trial. "A Trial Will Convince" VARSITY H Cleasera and Dreca- at No. 12th St. i I new Ag building, ripping np sod and .1