The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, November 29, 1928, Page TWO, Image 2

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    TWO
The Daily Nebraskan
Station A, Lincoln, Nbrik
OFFICIAL PUBLICATION
UNIVERSITY OF NEBRASKA
Under direction of th Studsnt Publication loird
TWENTY-EIGHTH YEAR
Publlihtd Tutvdsy, Wcdnttday, Thursday, Friday, and
Sunday mornlnoa during tne academic year.
Editorial Office Unlveralty Hall 4.
Bualneis Office Unlveralty Hall 4A.
Office Houre Editorial Staff, 3:00 to S:00 except Friday
and Sunday. Bualneaa Staff) afternoone except
Friday and Sunday.
Telephone tdltorlali B-MS1, No. 142) Bualneaei B-6H1.
No. 77) Night B-tSU.
Entered aa aecond-claaa matter at the peetoffice In
Lincoln, Nebraska, under act of Congresa, March S, 1171,
and at special rate of postage provided for In eectlon
1)03, act of October 1, 117, authorized January SO, 1(22,
SUBSCRIPTION RATE
12 a year Single Copy 6 cents 11.23 a semester
THE DAILY NEBRASKAN.
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 29, 1923
MUNRO KEZER EDITOR-IN-CHIEF
MANAGING EDITORS
Dean Hammond Maurice W. Kenkel
NEWS EDITORS
W. Joyce Ayres Lyman Cass
Jack Elliott Paul Nelson
Cliff F. Sandahl Douglas Tlmmerman
ASSISTANT NEWS EDITORS
Vernon Kstrlng William T. McCleery
Betty Thornton
CONTRIBUTING EDITORS
Cliff F. Sandahl Joe Hunt
William McCleery Robert Lalng
Eugene Robb
MILTON McGREW BUSINESS MANAGER
ASSISTANT BUSINESS MANAGERS
William Kearne Marshall Pltier
Richard Rlckstts
EXIT THE KINO
Football, kin of rollojra sports, will gather up
bis gnrKeous robes and descend the royal throne
today. The season will he over for the Cornhus
kers. ami for elevens from coast to coa.st. Post
Hfaaon Rames, baftles on the Pacific coast, and pro
fessional football will be the only stragglers to
cling to the exalted scat that college football alone
can occupy.
Throe months ago, when the aroma and the
zest that portends fall became evident, hundred
of young men tiotted out on college gridirons.
There were speculations as to season and as to
the players, and as to teama, Todar will see the
vast majority of those speculations shattered to
bits. The residue of a football season always
amounts to an unbeaten team or two, ten times
that many claiming the mythical honors of the
nation, and a score of truthfully brilliant football
psayeri.
The season for Nebraska lias been most suc
cessful. The Huskers rtnialn one of the strong
teams of tho country. Defeat by the Army did not.
injure tho repute of Nebraska to the extent that
is sometimes suggested. Kansas Aggies with two
weeks of rest alone stand between Nebraska and
tho first nig Six title.
After It Is all said and done, football does be
come Just & bit wearisome as the season draws to
a close. Fans are ready for a change. The crest
of popularity which rides football on the topmost
ripple suddenly recedes after Thanksgiving.
King Football deserts his throne until another
tall sets In.
PROFESSORS IN WHO'S WHO
Thirty-eight professors of th University are
listed this year In "Who's Who." according to a
news story appearing in The DhIIj Nebraskan to
day. These teachers are from practically every
college In the school, and teacu almost, every major
subject.
That so many Nebraska pro.'esbors are listed
in this national book brings home the fact that
Nebraska does have professors of note. It has been
eaid for several years that the trouble with the
University Is that it has professors who are too
good, and that, as soon as they gain recognition,
they go to some other school where they can obtain
higher salaries.
Such a thing has harpened In the past, whereby
the I'nlversity has lost several of Its most talented
professors because salaries offered here are not
as high as those offered by other Schools. That
professors want higher salaries does not make them
unduly mercenary. It Is human nature to want
as much as one can get.
There are some of these thirty-eight professors
who will undoubtedly leave the University In the
next few- years to accept better-paid positions. And
yet, there are others w-ho, because of the high
standards of the institution, and the contacts here
formed, will continue their work here, regardless
of the lower scale of salaries. True Nebraskans
are they.
THK RAUUKlt: Workmen on the library scaf
fold are not requested to show their identification
cards before going to work.
Two fellows nearly froze to death in ft class
room the oiher day. A coed thought It easier to
raise the window than to shed her fur coat.
The library has received five thousand new
books, yet there arc those who still contend that
they "Just simply can't find anything Interesting
lo read.'
A good sport expression would be something
like this: "He went through the line like water
through a leaky radiator."
Knuta Hockne says that when a football team
w ins, the students study. Judging from the number
of delinquency slips sent out last week. Nebraska
has not won as many games this year as the scores
would Indicate.
Persons strolling about the campus yesterday
were not sure whether the yelling a a rally or
the students rejoicing that an Instructor did not
give an assignment over vacation.
OTHER STUDENTS SAY
PA88INO OF THE OUOe
On corduroy pants, two corduroy pams, three
corduroy pants, the whole campus is covered with
corduroy pants. Corduroy pants have become the
rage. For several years there has been a feverish
competition among men Students In matters ot
dress, tt came to such a pass that -den, out here
where men are supposed to be men, even went to
the extent of wearing derbies and spats. Now the
reaction is taking place, and it Is coming about with
a suddenness that Is surprising.
Much money and effort have been expended
in recent years by clothing manufacturers and deal
er to develop In university men a o-called clothes
consciousness to counteract the extreme Indiffer
ence) college men had maintained toward clothing.
Their efforts were rewarded, tho students went to
the other extreme. The average male student could
rot be distinguished from a floor wnlker, as far as
clothes were concerned.
The present situation sem, in 10 bo an adjust
ment between these two extremes. The attitude
of the men ou the campus today toward clothing
Is much more rational thau the notions held by
college men In recent years. The students realize
that exaggerated carelessness nnd slouohlness In
dress create unfavorable Impression upon the peo
ple they coiiiii in contact with. At the same time
they are aware that to get the moro Important and
valuable things out of the university, and out of life
lttnlf, they cKiinot affoml to spend as much time In
matters of dress, us Is required to dress like a
fashion model. The. students adopting, this sane,
economical, sensible, and yet pleasing mode of dress
are to be commended. The dude, It seems, has
become passe on the campus of the University of
Nebraska. C. S.
BETWEEN THE LINES
By Lalelle Gllman
CORRECTIONS
A freshman hands In a paper In one of the be
ginning Kngllsh classes. When It comes back sev
eral words are marked as misspelled and upon the
margin Is found this notation, "watch your mlspelled
words." And there goes the kick out of the story
of the bald headed barber who guarantees to make
your hair grow. The crown now passes to the Eng
lish reader that checks your spelling with misspelled
words.
Of what value was the correction? None at
all. A correction by a teacher has a two-fold aim.
First, It should point out the student's error, and
second, It should Inspire him to do better. The
case mentioned pointed out his errors, but hardly
can be said to serve as an Inspiration. If the Eng
lish teacher can't spell, why should I try to learnT
Is It nlco to know moro than your Instructor?
Maybe those thoughts entered the student's' mind
and maybe they didn't. At uny rate they are nat
ural questions.
All of this leads to the rule that If correction
Is no better than that which Is being corrected,
don't make It. And that doesn't Just apply to
English. K- N-
GRAY MUSIC
By Elsie Brodkey
Oray music. . . Is it possible?
y -t'i cadence mystical.
Gray iuu.-I" In the dripping rosea
liray um If In the cold, north wind
Gray music In the bent, wet grass
Cray music In the things that pass
And leave no footprints on our doorstep.
Ah well
Oray music too in loneliness
When friends are gone
And you're alone.
And yes
Uray music-tears, not bitter tears
That mourn the passing of the years
Nor broken tears of hopes and fears
Nor happy tears with smiles nesr
Put strange tears unheralded
And passing leave one pondering.
Is there not gray music In
Such things as these?
OTHER EDITORS SAY
8CHOLASTIC SABOTAGE
Some French factory hands, grumbling
low wages and the high
celved the
over
and the high cost of living, once con
tdea of dropping their wooden "sabots"
No book-review or iidvertlse
ment fins dono Justice to "The
Great American Band Wagon." It
Is one of the most Interesting and
keenly humorous books of the
year. Charles Mei. has written
here an accurate and lively chron
icle of contemporary life In the
United Htatea. Carl Van Doran
says of it: "He ha gone out to
study the various spectacles of
American life with the raking eye
of a reporter and has come back
to write his story In a spirit which
is chiefly gusto, rarely malice. lie
has discovered that, the new civ
ilisation about which so many
critics have talked Is actually
newer than most of I hem have
realised: a civilization which must
be seen In Its latest familiar folk
ways to be understood. If low
price automobiles are folkways,
Mr. Merz considers them and not
the covered wagons of history. So
with radios, secret societies, golf,
murder trials, beauty contests,
newspaper headlines. llow do
Americans really live day by day?
Upon what meat are they fed, by
what stimulants aroused, by what
comforts lulled, by what pleasures
entertained? These are the ques
tions Mr. Mer answers. And when
he has done he has produced a
mirror of America as true as It Is
amusing."
The book opens with a descrip
tion of tho western trek, first In
covered wagons, later In cheap
cars. This Is followed by a sketch
of the open road as It Is today,
plastered with billboards and
punctuated with gas stations,
where travelers now exchange
news as they once did about the
camp-fire. lie delves Into the ab
surd rituals of the hundreds of
secret societies and lodges. The
chapter on radios is full of amus
ing jabs at the speakers and the
jaxt bands, the broadcasters and
the listeners. He sweeps aside
the new drugstore, which he
charges, In passing, as only a re
vival of tho free lunch In the old
saloon. The pomp and ceremony
of that national Institution, the big
murder trfhl, Is held up to ridicule.
And golf, says Mr. Merz, Is but a
tevlval of the old desire lo strike
into (he wilderness, cross the for.
ests and plains and rivers; but on
a smaller scale.
Universities are passed up
lightly, though the Increasing pop
ularity of correspondence courses
is pointed out, such as courses In
detecting, physical training, bee
keeping, apartment house manage
nienl.. (io Into the suburbs, the
author says In his chapter on arch
il eel ure, and view a synthetic
Spain and Italy, with cheap Imita
tions of Gothic cathedrals and Ve
netian canals. And as for the
bathing beauty contests, Men
states that It Is only an outgrowth
of the advertising scheme to por
tray a lovely figure in front of a
poor-looking ear In order to sell
the car. There Is a chapter on
tho European tourist, the hatred
of the provinces for New York,
and the rl of the silver screen.
Why, anl. t,-e author, flo men
pay money to 'it two blocks away
nnd above the prize ring and
watch two an'r.u.Is pound Kore out
of each othr? Why do we catch
up a marathon dancer or a chan
nel swimmer ntito our shoulders
and parade thi hero about the
streets? Wh Is It that a moving
picture director receives a salary
slightly less than that of the lead
ing lady and twice as large as that
of the president of the United
States? Why does "Miss Kalama
zoo." a bathing beauty who can t
swim, pose in her kitchen peeling
potatoes while photographers take
snaps of her? Why are there one
hundred and fifty newspaper cor
respondents at the trial of the
"Fted Hot Cutie" in the great lee
box Murder Case? Why do soda
fountain clerks have such a bored
nnd worldly air? Why Is John
Jones, bank. teller, a Sir Knight
Errant of the Mystic and Kxalted
or shoes Into their employer's machinery. Thoy
tried it, and the machinery stopped. This en
couraged other workers to do the same and there
ensued an Industrial reign of terror which threw
capital into a panic and left the radical labor ele
ment with a mistaken idea of Its own Importance.
These radicals saw only that they had interrupted
manufacture. They did not see that they had
thrown away the tools which enabled themselves
and others to earn their bread easily and to attain
a higher standard of living. They did not take Into
account the fact that when hunger should drive
them bark to work in the factories, capital woum i ()r(lPr of tho Hoo-hoo on Tuesday
oblige them to pay replacement costs In the form niKhts? Why ask? This Is America,
of reduced wages. . .
Sabotage in this country Is frowned upon by Head Ih" ' .real American Ma d
th. labor Arties as harmful to their own Interests. Wagon, by rharl M. will
It Is allowed, applauded and nothing done about It jwm ,)PKn t0 (tPt unprejudiced
In practically every college and university In the,,,! birds-eye-view of the condl-t-..-j
c... v.m, na.. has one of these radicals t ions in which you live. The plc-
who keeps his "sabot" in hand, waiting for an op
portunity to hurl It at the professor's head, or to
toss It among his classmates to squabble over. Per
haps the best known "sabot-thrower" is the stupid
or lazy individual who can't keep up with his class,
and who, in order to keep things at his own speed,
asks some ulterly Irrelevant question. In this way
he leads the discussion astray, or makes the In
structor "hash" over again some minor detail with
which everyone Is familiar. He fidgets nervously
anA tries to annear erv much interested in wuai
the professor Is ssyi
Ing to the audience, tho climax of
"Tho Outsider ' Is readied in a niw
dium of diversified comedy and
heavy drama which Is unusually
presented by the author. Although
tills Is primarily a love story, the
elements of play production tend
to make this primarily more Inter
est Ing due to the fact that tho end
ing of the show Is so unusual and
yet ethical.
This play will tend to Interest
the most particular audience and
the climax and ending will not bo
explained In order that It may be
more Interesting and hold more
surprises to the audience. If. Is fhe
first one of Its kind to be pre
sented by the University Players
this season.
London Press Sings Pralaee.
Tho London Chronicle, In Its
dramatic, review speaks Ihusly of
"The Outsider," "It Is good stuff.
Memorable and exciting, written
with fine sincerity, with something
that. Is almost passion, and with
dialogue that rises in the big mo
ments to a really great level of
dramatic effectiveness."
According to Ray Ramsay, busi
ness manager of the Players, "The
Outsider" may prove to be a
greater financial success than
were "The Spider," and "Two (Mils
Wanted." Tickets will go on sale
next. Monday. Single admissions
for evening performances will he
seventy-five cents while matinee,
tickets for the Saturday afternoon
show will be fifty cents.
Iiurlng the week's run of "The
Outsider" tho Cornhusker football'
warriors who played against the
Army team last Saturday will be
admitted free.
Following Is the completed cast
for the production:
Mr. Frederick Ladd, Coral Dubry.
Sir Montague Tollemache, George
Holt.
Mr. Vincent Helmore, El wood
Ttnmay.
Sir Nathan Israel, Alfred Poska,
Mr. Jasper Sturdee, Ray Kamsay.
'EalBge Sturdee, Cornelia Ayres.
Madame Klosl, Alia Iteade.
Anton Itagatty, Zolley Lerner.
I'rIM'hard, Anna Eemke.
llasll Owen, Joy Storm.
Direction of the play will bo by
Miss II. Alice Howell. Prof. Dwlght
Klrsch will supervise the scenic ar
rangements and design all sets to
bo used In the production. The mu
sic has not been decided upon as
yet. but will probably be an orches
tra of Mr. Ramsay's selection,
lures are not cynical nor mali
cious, but humorously detached.
the rest of the class
ance of being bored.
the period and he dashes from the classroom with
a self satisfied smile.
"1 knew I could stall him off." he chuckles to
a friend. "I was the next one lo be called on."
The moat disagreeable type of "sabot-thrower"
is the mono-maniac who thinks that he Is the
world's greatest authority on some particular branch
or Phase of the subject which he Is studying. If a
class discussion even remotely touches upon his
weakness, he propounds some supposedly weight y
questlon which makes the Instructor stagger for a
moment and spend the remainder of the period in
s futile attempt to answer It. Such an Individual
holds the rest of the class In supreme contempt and
looks curiously upon their vain groping and sprawl
ing for knowledge as a scientist follows the move
ments of an amoeba stretching his pseudopodla in
search of food. The class room to him Is a place
where he may hold a private conversation with the
professor concerning recondite matters while the
rest of the class looks on and listens in envious
admiration.
Sabotage goes on In the college classroom only
becAuse both professors and students are too "kind
hearted." There Is an erroneous pedagogical tradi
tion that every question raised must be answered
no matter how Irrelevant or impertinent It Is. The
"gabot-throwers" take advantage of this to side
track class progress. The result Is that a course
which should require only odp quarter for comple
tion IS given two quarters. Twenty or thirty people
are obliged to be present at a private "silting" ac
corded some stupid pupil or egotistical mono-maniac
Why not make these "sabot-throwers" leave their
wooden shoes outside when entering a class room?
Minnmota Unily.
LEADS FOR DRAMA
ARE ANNOUNCED
folttlniietl Knnn re 1.
clan but ethics made a quack."
Iienied the sanction of the Jloyal
College to practice. Ragatzy seeks
I he crippled daughter of England's
foremost surgeon and promises to
cine her.
The story centers on the three
ami
the
SEVEN HUSKERS
CLOSE CAREERS
( ontliiurd from PnRft I.
pus, leaves another place In the
Husker forwaid wall that will be
hard to fill next year. He has
played a most consistent brand of
bnll all season and has rarely been
taken from the game. His work
against the Army at West Point,
lust week brought a great deal of
comment from the sport critics In
the east and the Cadet coaching
staff.
McMullen was placed on one of
the All-Anierlcan selections last
year and Is booked for a like po
sition again this year. He has
been a big cog In the Nebraska
lino this year and helped account
for the successful season that will
close tills afternoon against the
Manhattan team.
Playing beside- McMullen and
Holm is the fourth Husker player
to graduate this spring. He Is Ted
James, center on the Nebraska
eleven. James came to Nebraska
from Greeley, Colorado, and has
played consistently on the Corn
husker team for three years. The
record set by James this season
is hard to beat. He was in every
game for four quarters and was
only taken out once. He Is con
tddered the most consistent lines
man In the Dig Six conference and
will be greatly missed on the
Hunker eleven next year. With
three men leaving the Nebraska
team, there will be a great gap in
tho Cornhusker forward wall to
fill next fall.
James was also the klckoff man
for Nebraska during the first half
of the season and his kicks were
as consistent as Ids playing. On
defense as well as offense, his
work In the Scarlet line was of
the stellar variety. For three years
he has handed the ball to Ne
braska backs with an unerring
ability. This year James went
through the season without mak
ing a single bad pass to the re
ceivers In the Husker backfleld.
His work has stamped him one of
the greatest Cornhusker centers
ever to play on a Husker team.
He ranks with Hutchinson and
other famous centers who have
played ou the Cornhusker team.
Aahburn Plays Last Tims
Clifford Ashburn, 190-pound Ne
braska end is the fourth man from
the Nebraska line to leave the
ranks of the Scarlet and Cream,
and the fifth graduating player.
Ashburn Is another man that lias
played a consistent brand of ball
all season and his work on defense
has caused critics to place him
high In the country's crop of end
men. During the Pittsburgh game,
his work In the mud battle was
v,.ii,,r,iiiv tiHiiiant and again
against the Army, the Nebraska
wing man was in tne mica 01
every play. Next year when the
Husker coaching staff returns to
roll out the pigskin and get fn
readiness for the 1929 season, Ash
burn will not answer. Ills time
wn .ni-vn.i nn the Scarlet
eleven and his place will De open
next year.
Merle uver, renter, and guard
on the Nebraska eleven Is the next
man leaving the Cornhusker foot
ball camp this year. Zuver ac
counted for one of the Husker
touchdowns this year when he
snagged a fumbled pass and ran
for a touchdown In the Oklahoma
game at Norman.
Walter Drath, guard, Is the last
man to leave the Husker team by
the graduation route and although
he has not played In every game
this season, his work, when In the
battle, was consistent and of the
real Nebraska type. Iratlt Is a
190 pound linesman and comes to
Nebraska from Herndon, Kansas.
UNIVERSITY SCORES
HIGH IN 'WHO'S WHO'
Continued From fa 1.
Oraduate college; Guernsey Jones,
professor of English history; J. 12.
Leftossignol, dean of tho College of
Huslness Administration; Hufus A.
lijman, dean of the College of
Pharmacy; Raymond J. Pool, pro
fessor of botany; Louise Pound,
professor of English.
William E. Sealock, dean of
Teachers college; I,. A. Sherman,
ranking dean and professor of Eng
lish lanugauge and literature.
Goodwin D. Swezpy, professor of
astronomy; 11. H. Waite, professor
of bacteriology and pathology;
John E. Weaver, professor of
ecology; Hutton Webster, professor
of social anthropology.
Maurice H. Weseen. professor of
business English: Henry A. White,
professor of English; D. I). Whit
ney, professor of zoology; C. C.
Wlgeens, professor of horticulture;
K. II. Wolcott, professer of zoology.
TURKEY DAY TILT
WILL DETERMINE
BIG SIX WINNER
nntlmiil From !ttv 1.
plains of West Poiut. Clair Sloan,
Husker hack, Elmer Holm and Ray
mond Richards are suffering from
tho game with the Cadets and will
not be in ton-nolch condition for
(lie game with the Aggies this aft
ernoon. Wednesday night the Nebraska
squad tapered off w ith a light work
out and" the Tuesday night scrim
mace session closed practice affairs
for tho season. A large crowd of
Thanksgiving fans are expected to
attend the game this afternoon.
More than 15.000 tickets have al
ready been sold according to John
K. Selleck. business manager of
athletics and he predicts that many
more will be sold at the gate this
afternoon.
('ouch Beaig has not announced
his starting lineup for the game but
It Is probable that the regular
eleven th.it started against the
Army will line up against the Ag
gies this afternoon.
At the klckoff seven seniors who
(have played brilliantly throughout
!the entire season bring to a dose
j their gridiron career. Starting in
the Cornhusker backfleld will be
Co-Captain Ultie Howell, fullback,
who plays his last with Nebraska.
In the line will be Co-Captain
Elmer Holm, Dan McMullen, two
Nebraska guards, Clifford Ashburn,
tr,.K. UL ., j.ml onrt Ted Jo ma xr-
braska center. Zuver and Drath
complete the list. Those mea en.
ter the game this afternoon to turn
their last game with NebraaVa Into
the win column and take the Big
Six conference football champion-
sllln-
'Y' WORKER RECEIVES
NEW EGYPTIAN POST
CoatlnnkJ from Iu
velop comparatively nev aewocts,
tlous at that point.
Egyptians Are Kssei
At the Y headquarters fa Aralt,
provision Is mad for adequate
creation, reading, and Tarted.
ports. From this Mlf-supportlnx
association at Assult, tho Y. M. C.
A. hopes to branch out through
many of the larger Egyptian cities
and Is already training aervtral
men for the Important secretary's
position.
"Egyptian young men sn katn
students of public affairs and are
anxious to solve the particular po
litical and economlo problems fac
ing their country," writes Mr. Hoi
combe In a communication, to O. D.
Hayes, University Y. M. C A. sec
retary. In spe ''tn of the valuable as
Ice be! ne in Egypt by Mr.
Holcom i't, other workers, Mr.
Hayes btrtnses the point that these
efforts are not only of Interest to
Y. M. 0. A. members but also to
the student body as a whole. "The
fact that Mr. Holcombe Is a for
mer student here makes his work
of special Interest to Nebraska
men and women," he concluded.
'ROYAL REVUE'
PRESENTS CO-ED
Continued Front rf t.
of the position at a higher lerel.
"The honor should be quite a
worthy one," one co-ed declared.
Maybe It was the publicity, maybe
It waa the honors attacked to it
which attracted the co-eds, but the
main drawing point was the honor
of being the "Sweetheart Of Ne
braska."
Sweetheart Will Be Tradition.
The "Sweetheart" Idea is a new
one. Other colleges have beauty
judges pick their prominent coeds
but Nebraska has picked theirs by
the vote of the men who know the
personalities of the girls they doK
lgnate as their choice on the bal
lots. The election will be made
tradition of the university and will
take place, annually.
T f -v-'
r
mat
r ww
m ' hall Ido
JJ) with
Call
B3367
VARSITY
CLEANERS AND DYERS
Ing to him in particular while characters. I-alage her father an
. , I Ilagatzy, and the treatment of tt
yawns and gives every appear- . , f k dramatic, exc'tln
The bell rings for the end of j romantic, besides maintaining
suspense to the fever pitch until
a second before the final curtain
drops. "The Outsider" as It. has
been hinted at, Is the physician and
practitioner, nagatxy. who attempts
to cure the crippled glii.
With an outcome that Is surpris
YOUR DRUG STORE
Sum wns too !'! wo could not
brli.K the Army Mule hnrk to Lin
coln to tie It on the f'atnpus this
time, but we'll do ll Hie. Iirxt.
The Owl Pharmacy
148 No. 14th St.
Phone B1063
Toutwcnd portrait photagropher-Ad
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Your headsizo isn't an larger
. because it's smarter lookng .
in a Derby
ll'a the same hcadsi.e
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ciatp a
Watch
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Tfrms
CLUB
PLAN
CHRISTMAS GIFTS
ON EASY PAYMENTS.
MAKE YOUft SELECTION'S NOW. SMALL
PAYMENTS NOW AND THEN M'ARE IT EASY.
BOYD JEWELRY CO.
1042 "0" CLUB PLAN JEWELERS
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138 So. lath
To Complete
Her Formal
The (liscrimbtfithift im will h
a a exacting in her choict of
evening footwear a arts ioat
irtth her gotcn.
Footwear helps complete th en
semble and we are showing serera.1
numbers that are regarded among
i ho smartest foo'.wear for renin
dress.
Featuring n silver kid pump
irifh narrow fitting hel
slender, graceful line.
Patents at $6.00
Satins at $7.00
To be had in a complete size range,
AAA to B.
71
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'' ,, fa in u it
1038 "0" St. 3
TWO STORES