The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, October 26, 1927, Page 2, Image 2

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    THE DAILY NEBRASKAN
The Daily Ncbraskan
Sutton A. Lincoln. Nahraska
OFFICIAL PUBLICATION
UNIVERSITY OF NEBRASKA
TJaa.r attraction of th fitud.nt Publication Board
TWENTY -SEVENTH YEAR
" raolUhod T.Jar. Wedn..dar. Thuradar. Friday, and Sunday
nomine darlna th acadsmio yar.
Editorial Offle.-UnWtr.lty Hall
Off.c Bulili, 8Uff, .ft.rnoon .xe.pt Friday
Bunaay.
and
and
. . .,. in, ... B68I1. NO.
Tlphea Editorial! dobi. no. .
77, ntf nt dood.
- . .l. In T.ineoln
t.d a. 7d;"""i Varch Y 1879. and at apoci-l
N.bra.ka, nnd.r net , of Conany. .March a. . br
nt. of poatag pro .
1117. autnomoo. --
ft 7'-
SUBSCRIPTION RATE
Slngl Copy a e.nti
11.15 a a.m.t.r
Lm Vane.
Oscar Norllng
Ruth Palmer
Carald K. Griffin
Edward G. Dickion
atunro Knar
VJitAr.in.Chi.f
Managing Editor
. AssT Managing Editor
Asst. Managing cunur
NEWS sUlliua
ASSISTANT NEWS EDTIORS
Paul F. N.l.o Miar)ce Konke
CONTRIBUTING EDITORS
Kenneth And.raon
Munro Kezer
u.r. 1.0ms Freeman
Ethelyn Ayr.
Betty Thornton
Florone. Swihart
Dean Hammond
Kate Goldstein
Maurie. Spat
Joye. Ayr.
Florence Seward
Otho K. DeVilbis
Richard F. V.tt.
Milton McGrew
William H. Kearn
J. atarshaU Piti.r .
D..1..I. Manaff.r
Asst. Buaine Manager
. Circulation jn.
Circulation Manager
HARD AT WORK
In the "Think-Shop", Nebraska's historic debatf
seminary, three men are plugging away daily reading,
nolg, compiling, and organizing vast quantities of
material in preparation for the coming Nebraska-Cam-
bridge debate. , .
Unheralded by the press, unmentioned in campus
conversation, without the publicity that fastens itself
to most college activities, they are drilling at their
subject- Ordinarily there is not the spectacular in col
lege debating. Certainly the rigorous and intensive
work preliminary to a debate holds nothing of interest
for the average student. There is rarely anything of
the picturesque in college debating. It is too serious,
too logical, too deliberative.
Elements bordering on the spectacular and pic
turesque, have, it is true, been injected into intercol
legiate debating in the innovations of recent years.
But it still lacks the qualities which permit the arousing
of such enthusiams as characterize athletic contest
This does not mean that debate is inherently less
exciting. To a well-trained mind, it may be more excit
ing than any other college activity. It does rot mean
that there is nothing picturesque in debating. The dif
ficulty lies in expressing its picturesqueness. It does
m.n that, there is no action to a debate. But it
does mean that its action is of a different type. The
action of a debate is not physical but mental, it is
..nunmuith more difficult to interpret.
Despite the inability of debates to be attractive
externally to such a large number ol people as am
letics and others contests, it continually draws a group
of diligent workers. There is an undefinable element of
interest which keeps students working on debate in a
way that few will work on anything. The team for the
Cambridge debate is no different from other Nebraska
teams in this respect. The team is different in that it is
to engage in the most important debate ever scheduled
for a Husker debate squad.
If the picturesque and the spectacular are lacking
in ordinary debate, they are certainly not lacking in
the coming contest English debaters have swept the
country by storm in the last few years with their
sparkling personalities, clever handling of their sub
jects, their freedom and ease on the platform and
their humor which has often been more effective as
argument in their debates than their logic. The coming
Cambridge debate holds greater possibilities of interest
than any intellectual contest conducted on the Ne
braska campus in recent years. It will have all the ele
ments which claim the devotion to debating of a limited
few years ago. In addition, it will have definable ele
ments of interest, in its uniqueness, its picturesque
ness, and its international character.
FEES FOR ACTIVITIES
The present method of campaigning for funds
with which to finance university enterprises such as
athletics, student publications, debating, and the like,
is so unsatisfactory that a better method should be
adopted by university authorities, in which all worthy
school activities should receive financial support equal
to the scope of the activity. Some university organs
are always successful in securing subscribers, while
others have often found themgelves in debt. The whole
scale of university activities should Lie systematized,
and a regular student fee required of all students at
registration, to cover the cost of such worthy univer
sity undertakings deserving of the support of the en
tire student body.
The activities and publications represent a vital
part of the life and spirit of the University. School
spirit is founded on the love and loyalty and participa
tion a student gives to his school and its enterprises.
There are bound to be many people who, if canvas
sed for subscriptions, will always fail to purchase,
simply because they do not realize the necessity of such
activities in a well-rounded education. Loyal support
ers will always subscribe, while those who do not think
such is necessary, or are disinterested, are not being
fair to themselves or their school, and fail to help out
with a subscription.
The reduced rate for university athletic events
has proved popular; why not apply the same theory to
all worthwhile university activities? A special student
fee, to be paid by all students during registration, to
cover subscriptions to the main university publications
. and the Cornhusker, would be a happy solution to the
problem. Such a fee would also undoubtedly reduce
the individual rate to a figure far below what students
would pay, if they subscribed separately to such uni
versity publications. Or the fee could cover both atb
letics and activities.
Other schools have found the plan a success, in
that it assures the whole-hearted support of the entire
student body in the most important university under
takings. This university cannot lag behind in a matter
of so much importance to the existence of the neces
sary and worthwhile student activities.
PLAYING THE GAME
"I believe a lot of our alumni, much more than our
student body, are taking the game of football a little
bit too seriously. I do not believe that thin U fair
the coach, or to the game itself," says.Knute Rockne,
iamous Notre Dame coach in one of his recent publica
tions.
Coach Rockne goes on in the same paper to say
a lot oi oiner things concerning football and victory
Bvi Tie ror-ca wWcn could we'.l be translated to tbs
I .j brack a campus. Co art Eeare was subletted ta mi.
iieralie criticism by the unthoughtful a very cWrt
t'.me e,; Ur:lefis a full realization of the football tiit-
;;ui .r ? ir-vn t the front, another defeat wocld
a.-;ac.Btus.j.,7 'crir-.t dowa toother storm of M-klr-i
Eotkr.e'g comments are so pertinent to the situa
tion here and his position as a reliable observer so well
established that it seems well to quote rather freely
from him. Continuing from the extract above on Losing
Games, he says:
"I believe that the alumnus who has just seen
his team go down in defeat should take every factor
into consideration before he puts too much blame on
the coach, or any of the individual players. There are
a lot of things which may lose football games. First
there is the fact that a team may have too hard a sched
ule, poorly arranged, and with a bad anticlimax. Sec
ondly, a team may be crippled at just the wrong time
through losing one or two valuable men. Thirdly, there
may be bad breaks in the game, such as dropping for
ward passes, fumbling, over which the coach has no
control. Again, the team may be tired and stale from
too much traveling, and may not be able to play its
best in one or two games. Last, and very important,
is the fact that what has appeared to be very fine ma
terial mnv nrnve to be very inferior material.
"If men, who have been coaching twenty or thirty
years cannot tell whether or not a man is a gooa loot
ball player until he has been tested and tried, how can
a lot of lawyers, doctors, and barbers have such an
expert point of view that they can look over a squad
the first week out for practice, and say with sbsolute
certainty that 'there' is wonderful material? There are
many, many other facors which we need not go into
here, and which our alumni would appreciate if they
were brought to their attention. However, the alumni
should realize that loyalty isn't worth a nickel unless
it works both ways.
"If the team shows it has been well coached, fights
to the last ditch, and lives up to every tradition of
the old school as regards sportsmanship, morale, and
physical condition, the alumni should not feel bitter
if the team is beaten now and then. The most success
ful schools in athletics are those which have retained
coaches over long periods. The most unsuccessful
schools in athletics are those which allow their alumni
to have them chasing rainbows. I mean by this that
they keep looking for the 'miracle man' to coach their
team. Practical experience would show them that there
is no such man. If they get a fairly good man, they
had better keep him."
In regard to 'oyalty, he says, "The alumni expect
the coach and the team to intensely loyal. The alumni
can show their loyalty by their actions in defeat, and
standing by the team and coach, particularly when in
other years this same team and coach have had a fair
measure of success.
"The campaign for the entire season should be
mapped out ahead of time, though of course, the coach
may adapt himself to whatever should arise during the
fall. However, a campaign for the entire fall must be
mapped out ahead of time and adhered to, to a cer
tain extent It is quite easy to prepare for one or two
games, and win these one or two games. However, in
the middle west where the coaches have five, six, and
seven hard games, the task becomes extremely difficult."
THE
SPECTATOR
Notices
Dramatic Club
The Dramatio Club will hold a B"1"
Thursday evening. October 27. at 7:80
o'clock. In th. Dramatic Club room of the
Temple Theatre. , . . .
Try oute for th. Dramatic Club will be
held Thursday, November S.
XI Delta , m . .
Meeting at Ellen Smith Hall Wedneaday
October 26, at 7:00 P. M.
1 Uuftln
A meeting of the junior class will be
i i . i- i c : ..lttii!-111Tt1 ml A
neia in nwiai ocicik -
o'clock, Wedneaday, October 26. All Junior
urged to be present.
Corncob
Corncob meeting on Wednesday evening
at 7:15, room 154 in the Temple.
Campus League of Women Votera
The Campus League of Women Voters
will hold a meeting Wednesday at 5 p. m.
at Ellen Smith Hall.
Pan Hellenic Meeting
A college Pan Hellenic meeting will be
held today at 5:00 P. M. in Ellen Smith
Hall.
Prairie Schooner
A meeting of Sigma Upsilon will be held
. dr: 1 TTi...itv 1 i Vi rm r mn
in ine umce ui mc uiu.vi..vj ..
in the Library building, second floor, at 8
ociock rriaay aiternoon.
Calendar
Thursday, Octob" T7
School of Journalism Dinner Col
lege Bookstore.
Friday, October 28
Bizad Banquet Chamber of Com
merce. Phi Sigma Kappa Fall Party.
Beta Theta Pi House Dance.
Lambda Chi Alpha House Dance,
Saturday, October 29
Cadet Crawl Coliseum.
Kappa Phi Holloween Party.
Theta Xi Fall Party, Lincoln Ho
tel.
Sigma Phi Epsilon Fall Party,
Scottish Rite Temple.
Valkyrie Dinner Dance, Univer
sity Club.
Alpha Tau Omega House Dance.
Xi Psi Phi House Dance.
Zeta Tau Alpha House Dance.
My dear Spectator,
I must confess that I am sending you the enclosed
bit of "original" poetry (?) merely to see what you
will do to it.
I take myself seriously, of course. If I didn't no
body would. But really that might apply to you too.
Eh, what?
I'm from Kansas, I don't know why but we'll let
that slide. I'm a freshma nand I haven't found the
"why" of that matter either. In fact I've discovered
there are a number of things I don't know the "why
of. But that's aside from the matter by the way, just
what is the matter? Are boh of us crazy or is it just
you?
About the poem (?), it was written (I haven't
reached the composing stage yet) in a fit (or misfit)
of homesickness. I know it's terrible but I have a well
developed curiosity so it's up to you.
Lunatically yours,
Jacques.
It is only Fitting and Proper that I commend
Jacques, my Correspondent, for his excellent literary
Taste and Judgment I have observed that it is not
Easy for an artist to judge of his own Work, and in
deed there aie numbered among my Acquaintances a
great many who can not see a Fault in their own
Works, and so it is all the more Laudable in Jacques
that he pronounced the above Judgment upon his Poem.
It chances that I agree with him in this Concern, and
therefore I shall not print his opus.
But there are other more pressing Matters for my
Attention, for since my last Appearance in these Col
umns events of Moment have transpired with such fre
quency that the Campus has become a veritable Hotbed
of Opinion and Discussion. Perhaps it is Fair to trace
most of this Disturbance to the honorable Regents, who
held a Meeting on Saturday last, for they made the
Announcement that Action will be taken in regard to
students' possession of Gasoline Motor Vehicles, also
that Fees will most probably be increased within a
Year. The latter Question holds for me no great In
terest, but I am mildly concerned in the Matter of
Automobiles, although I myself am a walking Man,
and since I never make Engagements with Women, feel
no need for a Vehicle; it has seemed to me, further
more, a Confession of Weakness for a Man to drive
an Automobile to his Classes every day, and I think
I should have an Emotion somewhat akin to Shame
were I to need Transportation to and from the Campus.
But my principal Interest in this Matter is in the Dis
cussions that have ensued, and my Friends have found
me ready to listen to their Arguments on the Affirma
tive and Negative sides. I recall now that one of my
Friends remarked yesterday that his chief source cZ
Joy in the Event of a banishment of Cars would be to
see Sam St John and a certain young Woman walk
from the Campus to the Idyl Hour. I am sorry I can
not supply my Readers with the time of this Woman.
but since I am not interested in those Creatures I
rarely if ever bother myself to remember the Names
of Women I meet or hear about
In regard to the Letter in yesterday's Paper at
tacking my Incomprehen.ibiU, I wish to sympathize
with P. M., the Correspondent Poor chap, he has been
unable to understand the Poems that have appeared
in my Column, and his Communication forces upon me
the Realization that perhaps my Poets have not been
Grounded we I enough in the things of this World, but
have allowed ti eir Muses
not remembering that most Students are compelled by
mc.r mres io aecp Dotn eet upon the Earth. I
have communicated my Sentiments in this regard to
the Poets who contribute to my Column, and for today's
Piece they have collaborated in a Verse which they
aimed to make intelligible to even the most unintel
ligent Freshman.
DOUBT
Th. elouda float by,
Kavaniy a alitor. on tb. deep sea
Of evening.
I feel luring lips
And caressing .yea.
Hut I wonder.
Why docs tb. faltering brook
A sry t"t rrw dim cr.d dl.T
And wV dtwa th wtVtai bird
Cry far far into th. darkness I
And oh. puppal
Why ar rhinoeariT i
Radio Program
Wednesday, October 26
9:80 to 9:45 a. m. Weather report and
announcements.
10:S0 to 11:00 p. m. "What the Study
Clubs are Doing this Month, by Mrs. True
Htimemaker. A menu and some recipea.
12:30 to 12:45 p. m. "What We are Do-
ign in Home Economics," by Miss Mar
garet Fedde, chairman of home economics.
8:00 to 3:30 p. m. Sociology talk.
"Psychiatric Aspects of Crime," by Dr.
Karl A. Menninger, of Topeka, Kansas.
7:30 to 8:0 p. m. Talks. "Hot Lunch
the 4-H Way." by Miss Allegra Wilkins, As
sixtant state extension agent in agronomy.
"Abortion Disease in Farm Animals." by
Dr. L. V. Skidmore, assistant professor of
animal husbandry and hygiene.
Thursday, October 27
9:3 to 9:45 a. m. Weather report and
"a few minutes with old friends," by T. C.
Diers, announcer.
(Other periods silent.)
Friday, October 28
9:30 to 9:45 a. m. Weather report and
announcements.
10:30 to 11:00 a. m. "A Book Review."
by Mrs. True Homemaker.
12:30 to 12:45 p. m. "Alfaira and Clo
ver Seed Prospects," by P. H. Stewart.
8:00 to 8:30 p. m. Modern Advertis
ing, by r. C uiood, prolessor or. adver
tising and sales management.
"Measles a Dangerous Disease, by Dr.
Charles Harms, resident physician.
7:30 to 8:00 p. m. The second or a aer
ies of talks on ballads and folk lore by
Prof. L. C. Wimberly. of the department
of English, with song illustration by the
announcer.
"What the Mechanical Engineer Can Do
for Nebraska fby Paul Allerton Oushman,
associate professor of mechanical engineering.
Saturday, October 29
9:30 to 9:45 a. m. Weather report and
more "Old Hymns" by the announcer.
(Other period silent.)
LARGEST RALLY IS
BEING ARRANGED
(Continued from Page 1)
lies and get into the swing of things
before the Friday night rally. An ef
fort is also being made to revive the
custom of singing Nebraska songs
at the beginning of each class hour.
Upperclassmen who are familiar with
the custom as practiced in previous
years are requested to initiate the
freshmen into this traditional and ef
fective form of "football psychol
ogy."
The Syracuse rally will be the first
event on the "Dads' Day" program
Students are requested to bring their
"dads" to the affair and let them see
the spectacle of thousands of wildly
cheering students staging a genuine
Nebraska football rally. The rally
will be as much a part of "Dads
Day" as the game itself. Don't let
dad go home without seeing it!
to tho
m alT.
TEFFT WILL SPEAK
AT WORLD FORUM
Continued from Pag 1)
the differences in regard to the life
of the student.
The meeting today will last from
12 o'clock to, 12:50, after which an
informal discussion on the subject
for all those who wish to take part
will be held. Meetings are held reg-
ularly every Wednesday noon . at the
Grand Hotel. Tickets for the luncn
eon may be for twenty-five cents.
BRITISH DEBATE
SEVEN SGH000LS
(Continued from Page 1)
prepare for Rdmis:-;-.u i re r
Robert 15: Mu.-. ow aeUter this
year at Nebraska, prepared to enter
the law college by taKing an arts
course at Maryville college, Tenes
sec. He debated formerly at He
bron, Nebraska, which is his home
fnwn Mr. Rnldwin is in his first
year in the college of law. He is
also interested in dramatics.
Misa Margaret Fedde and Miss
Mary Ellen Brown, of the University
of Nebraska, are attending meetings
of the Nebraska Federation of Wom
en's clubs, held at Kearney, Nebras
ka. The meetings were begun yester
day, and will last until Thursday.
Miss Fedde is the head of the
home economics department, and
Miss Brown is head of the extension
service of the same department. Re
ports on the meetings attended will
be made by these two representa
tives.
Miss Anna M. East, former TJni.
versity of Nebraska student, visited
the home economics department last
week. Miss East was graduated from
Nebraska in 1912 and is teaching at
present in the Metropolitan high
school in Los Angeles.
A picnic for the faculty of the
home economics department was held
Monday evening in Bethany grove.
A "hobo," who recently died in a
charity hospital, was found to have
left $40,000 to the medical and law
schools of Northwestern University.
Engineering Socfoty . .
Holds Opn Meeting
The first of a series of open meet
ings of the Chemical Engineering so
ciety of the university will be held
toncht in room 206 in the Mechan
ical Engineering building. The show
ing of the film, "The Store of Fire
clay Refractories," will be the fea
ture of meeting.
Prof. C. J. Frankforter of the de
partment of chemistry will talk on
the subject of the film. The public
is cordially invited to attend the
meeting.
The annual extension conference
of the home economics department
will be held at the Agricultural col
lege October 26 and 29. Mrs. S. P.
Davis of Syracuse, Mrs. Clifford
Eshelman of Red Cloud, and Mrs. L.
L. Fink of Hastings will speak at this
conference.
"Factors which make county pro
ject work successful ' is the topic of
Mrs. Fink's talk, and the other speak
ers will discuss various phises of
club work.
:
m
It's not conceit, fellows
but we've been told wc have a wonderful line
of TIES, and to prove it we invite you in to look
them over.
ex m
Women in Texas University will
have their own cheering section and
their own cheer-leaders.
A new shipment of KNIT TIES Includes bright
and snappy patterns in Jacquard figures and
ravon crochet. Handsome SILK TIES come in
stripes, clusters, jacquara uguica m if
prints, paisley effects, floral designs and candy
3tripes. Priced, 1.00.
MOGADORS in new bright-colored patterns,
and SILKS in plaids, stripes, moire and satin
affects, many of them hand-tailored, are priced
i.50.
All HAND-TAILORED ties feature many new
ideas in pattern and beautiful silks. Priced,
2.00.
These have snap they're worth a special trip
to see. Hand-tailored MOGADORS and SILK
TIES importd by us from Europe. Priced, 2.50.
Men's Wear First Floor.
fe. iffl'fP ftrSfi 3
The Permanent Wave Has Gone
Collegiate
By G. F. CHAMPE
f.
ltHriiMi,vui(aa
mi.
Special Service to r
Oriental Students
Canadian Pacific's White Em
preu fleet offers you the largest
and fastest liner to the Orient,
all at low cost, and the high
standard of service everywhere
maintained by the "World's
Greatest Travel Syatem," Fre
quent (ailing from Vancouver
and Victoria. To Japan 10 days,
then China and Manila.
Always carry Canadian Pacific
ExprcM Company's Traveller'
Cheque, negotiable everywhere.
full ' Information, tatting data and plant of '
nips from local auamthip agentM, at
"R. S. Elwarthr, Staamanrp Canaral Ag-aat,
71 E Jackson Blvd., Chicago, 1U. For froifht
applr to C F. Nichols, District Freight
Agant, 72S W. O. W. Bldf, Omaha, N-blaaka.
CHAMFE Says
The permanent
wave h?.s become
on every campus. The col
lege woman has a well earn
ed reputation for smartnss.
She is much addicted to
sport clothes, for, outdoor
activities form a large part
of her daily routine. Hats
are taboo on the campus,
locks float in the breeze
much of the time. Yet there
are teas and dances and
other social activities for
which she joyfully doffs her
tailored tweeds, and revels
in the feminity of chiffons
and taffetas.
The college woman was
among the first to adopt the
bob, for it met her require
ments of both comfort and
style. But when she became
a devotee of the bob, she
also became devoted to the
curling iron. She found it
dangerous and not always satisfactory, for a
five minute walk from sorority house to the
campus in damp weather was sufficient to
erase the result of an hour's work with the
curlers.
This year we find that the college woman is
letting her hair grow longer and there is no
better antidote for the horrors of the growing
out bob than the pemanent wave. While it is
not my personal belief that hair will ever be
worn long only that the bob will be worn
longer, so that it can be done up with a trans-
iormation in the evening for formal wear and
worn down in curls or neat little "buns" at
the nape of the neck, with the soft undulating
waves of the permanent framing the face,
during the day. The convenience of shorter
hair means too much to the college woman
who appreciates the time savings it offers to
ever go back to hair pins and false hair.
The wave of feminity which has begun to
sweep the country as a reaction to the extreme
boyishness of the mode has reached the
schools and the young women have succum
bed. And in partially giving up the precious
boyishness that they have found of surpassing
comfort in their active lives, they have found
a new satisfaction in the permanent wave.
Once the hair is waved by the permanent wav
ing process and set by expert fingers, the
youn.r woman may go blithely from swimming
pool or shower bath to tennis court and then
the evening's dance, without endangering the
appearance of her coiffure. In the morning
when s le tumbles out of bed with only a few
minutes to make an eight o'clock, there is no
ume ior iussing with her hair. Deft fingers
G. F. Champe, Beauty Culturist, Offers ,1
among the colleg women.
Last Spring Champe's gave
thirty-t h r e e permanent
waves in one sorority alone.
There is not a sorority at
Nebraska that does not have
at least a few women who
have received a permanent
wave at Champe's. So far
this semester we have given
at least 250 permanent
waves to women at Univer
f'ty 'of Nebraska many of
whom are letting their hair
grow longer and who appre
ciate the value of the per
manent wave during such a
trying period. You are able
to do so much more with it
and make it look so much
better with the natural curl
a permanent gives to your
growing-out hair.
is
quickly follow the comb and then neither rain
nor damp, nor wind can mar the careful
grooming of her hairdress.
The beginning of the Fall semester of 127
sees the permanent wave an established mode
in absolute
Suggestions On Dressing the Bobbed Hair disf avor this year - the
younger women are looking
That Is Being Let Grow Longer. t0 the permanent wave noW
for their year round curl. A
fingeY wave just before an affair gives the hair
the formal dressing that once the marcel ser
ved. The permanent wave does not bring in
its wake broken ends, broken down hair struc
ture and other inconveniences as does the
marcel.
Champe's are now offering the Nestle Circu
line Permanent Wave at only $5.00. Whether
it be waving the difficult Mae Murray or
Wind-blown Bob, that is, short curls all over
the head which is believed to be the most crit
ical test of the hair-dressers skill or the weav
ing of longer hair that is being let grow out
the Nestle Circuline Permanent Wave as given
by Champe's achieves the most beauty and ar
tistry as we link beauty with science and ex
perience. Champe's are able to take the woman student
anytime between classes, in the late after
noon after school and even certain evenings
without previously made appointments or de
lay. You have the choice of two new beauty
shops the recently opened beauty shop in
Speier's on the mezzanine floor which is under
the direction of Mrs. G. F. Champe, and ?fl
the most beautifully appointed and preten
tious shop in Lincoln.
Also Champe's Beauty Shop, 1229 "N" Street,
located on the second floor over our famous
Lincoln Theatre Building establishment. This
new shop has just been newly decorated,
equipped and furnished and is the largest
beauty shop in the West now able to give
J 00 permanent waves each day. You are cor
dially invited to vhft either chop, see how
permanent wave is given and make any in
quiries. Only the most experienced and
skilled operators and guaranteed workmen-
ship in both shops.