SUNDAY, .rnii. 27. Iff ISSUE OF BLUE PRINT IS rinccrs Week Featured' W. ! .L!n.. PnmnlMo III niuya4,,"w """c'nv Program Given. KNIGHT WRITES ARTICLE Rvrtneera' Week Issue of the Ne T Blue Trlnt la out and will rUrtbuted Monday morning. Tacordir.s' to John M. Clema. ei1-iaMn-chlef. The lasue In largely .reted to Engineers' Wwk activi ty and tba full program Is riven. A History of Kngineers' Week" tai "A rablt of Engineers' Night" wjoha Clema and Bernard Rob ar Included In the program. jTth latter the author describe u tpectator'a feeling aa he trav lai through the varioua displays Knight Writea Article. Tto Totaah Industry of West ,n Nebraska," M rtlcle by Kd vtrd M. Knight, electrical engl Merinf '3 deacrlbea the Industry k aa built up until It Involved -. minions, loan aiaappearca overnight with the ending of the vtr. The nuge piams mai nan furnished the country with potash Au the war were forced to dose down because they were un able to compete wan uerman nrtcea. The neceaslty of the de velopment of Nebraska potash so tM UDIieu siaics win uui ne ue- MMtent on another country for an fadUpensible product la pointed by Knight. C. R. Hanna, research engineer of the Westingbouse Electric and Manufacturing company, gives a viry Interesting discussion of dif ferent typ" OI ouna recoraerj films ln his article on "Recent De TeloDments ln Talking Movies.' He also points out the value of the photo-electric cell in recent discov eries. "Trends In Heat Transfer," by Pr. D. F. Othmer, chemical cngt aer, Eastman Kodak company, fives methods of transferrin; heat Is boilers and power generation sad gives some of the chemical Beioi of eliminating boiler shale. He also describes the applications to heaters and condensers. Wiltse Contributes. "Dependable Comnuo ication from Ship to Shore" by H. G. Wiltse, electrical engineering '30, Is an article giving the possibili ties of the new telephone service between trans-Atlantic ships and the United States. This service is made possible by a series of tele phone and radio relays. Dean's Corner by Dean O. J. Ferguson deal with "The Hazard in Going to School." He gives sta tistics on the numbers that drop out of school for various reasons, tells of some of the handicaps ov ercome by students. His figures show that less than 10 percent of the students who enter as fresh urn graduate ln four years. ffliiisTELis April Issue Has Article By Chancellor; Lists Office Nominees. April Issue of the Nebraska Alumnus forecasts some of th? events which are to take place In connection with Round-ITp week, the climax of the year for Nebraska alumni. Round Up week this year la to be built around commencement, and elaborate plans, including luncheons, class breakfasts and a production staged by the University Players are be ing" made. "More Than Brick and Mortar," and article by Chancellor E. A. Burnett, is a message to Nebraska program of the university. Chan cellor Burnett states that social l"e is necessary aa a relief from the monotony of constant study, as ' means of giving the student a eertain poise and ease in any com pany in which 'he may later find himself; and If properly directed nd carried out, as an inspiration nd desire to achieve a large place ta the world. Candidates Named Nominees for association offices Md for the board of directors have been announced and will be elected by mailed ballots. Pictures and an ccount of the nominees form the Jor part of the article. New alumni clubs have been or fanized in Julesburg. Colo., and tor the Ogden-Salt Lake City re tlon. These clubs have already "n granted charters. The next Issue of the Nebraska Alumnus will be the Round Up is J which will come out during Round-Up week. AGGIES GET READY FOR CARNIVAL FITE (Continued From Pace 1.) J"n. who is supervising the show Heading the bill of entertainment ' polo game between the Fort Yook club and the Ak-Sar-Een "2 botn o' Omaha. Three and five gaited classes of "din8 horses, roadsters, high Jumpers, a big six tandem bitch owned by tho Union Stock yards j Omaha, and an intcrsorority rid J"? contest are other numbers in "e horse show. Dancing Pageant. "Mother Goose Mav Dav." a H E0s,?'p New Spring Showing Nationally Advertised Line MADE TO ORDER CLOTHES Worthy of Your Inspection! SUITS, TOP COATS and SPORT MODELS $25.00 330.00 $35.00 LOBJ HELLS- Display Rooms 721 Federal Trust Building Phone B-3425 13th & N Sts. Lincoln, Nebraska loin. ui2"l.,VrB e"""',v ln nl'rpw.1 " " J ' V':" ' one of the . n" r".ic having ?!''?' !' " ""Men ,r "i nrl from the campus. Tin- rail I, lm,j t, iii... go thnM.uh th busmen ,V ' termmair t the r...Ke aitrr eit mili'i ; n i.:nrt,l,. I i,,,v i Mhinrv. i.t trti, a member i.f the junior hoard, is duelling the pniade. I.JIM year Itl.OoO 1,,-nple it. nessed the results ,.f u, wrk , b(Hi c,.l,.Ke Minimis nrganure.1 into eighty roniiniiie.-s and controlled by Junior and wni.ir fnr ImisnIs "A ktiipeiiiloua tak." suii d Mvm Krolik, of ix-witt, manngrr of the senior ooarrt -Hut we are trying to lnimv ihi inu fair, and yot stay within a :1,imki bud get." Signatures cf People Who Arc Graduating From Ag CollcgcWantcd. Striking a new note in features for the Coinhusker Countryman, college of agrii'iiltiiie publication a novel idea is being worked out for the fly-leaf of the May issue of the magazine. Thes,c plans were re vealed yesterday by Harold Mar colt, '31. editor. A page will lie devoted to the signatures of all the seniors in the college who are graduating. Mar cott explained. A special sheet of paper has been drawn up and has been plated in the office of Dean V. V. Burr in Agricultural hull. All that is necessary for the seniors to do, Marcott continued, is that they stop at the office ami sign their names some place on the paper with ink. The names are not being written in parallel lines or in any definite order. They are be ing written on places ch..-u at random. Some will be at acute an gles, some will be inverted, while Borne will run into or over others. The idea, the editor added, is to present a very informal effect, as though all of the graduating stu dents had autographed the maga zine. All seniors are being asked to sign their names to the sheet of paper by Mav 1, it was stated, in order that the copy may go to the engravers. PLYMOUTH STONE DEDICATION WILL BE HELD TODAY A historic stone from Plymouth, Kngland, bearing an inscription chosen by Calvin Coolidge, will be dedicated Sunday afternoon, at 4 o'clock at Twentieth and D streets. The stone is the f,ift of the town of Plymouth, Kngland, to the First Plymouth Congregational cnurcn of Lincoln. A new home for the church is now under the process of erection. The stone was used as a door step 400 years ago for one of the Pilgrim meeting houses in Ply mouth. The pilgrim fathers, their forebears and descendants trod over it for several centuries. The inscription scelcted by Cool idge is "God sifted a whole nation that He might send choice grain into the wilderness." It is taken for the election sermon of the Rev. William Stoughton, which was de livered in 1(5(58. Weaver to Speak. Governor Arthur J. Weaver and Honorable Charles A. Goss, chief justice of the state supreme court will speak at the dedication. Fred B. Smith, moderator of the Con gregational churches of America will deliver an address on "The ronlrihutinn of the Pilgrim to America.". The stone was presented to the First Plymouth church as the re suit of the work of its pastor, the Rev. Ben F. Wyland. Mr. Wyland was an exchange preacher to Eng land from America in l'J23 and the stone was given in recognition his work. Mi s Slianafclt (nvra ' Lecture at Fairlmry Miss Marjorie Shanafclt spoke before several group meetings at Fairbury the past week on "Seven League Boots." She addressed the woman's club, Tuesday afternoon, the college club of Fairbury In the evening, and spoke before the WneH mectinc of the senior and Junior high schools Wednes day. Davis Coffee Shops Day and Nijht - 108 N Facing Campus 1131 Fountain Service n "" " cm- T1IK DAILY M Capl. Spocrry, On Nebraska Cadet Slatt, Was Among First to Aid in the Relief of Leprosy Sufferers It In a far rry from tin- ittlc isl.tml if Oulion. nf tin riiiliiiinc group, wIh iv li'pi-i-H lav mil tluir ilnja in impt o luiht i v, to tliu caiiipiik of tin- l uivi i-vity of Nilnnnka. Ami it im n hliuuiio btniy tliul ('nptMin liiitifrii'il W. Spocriy, coiuiiig to Hie N.luimKa'i;. O. T. f. nu t in S. pit mlur, l'.l'."j, t-ll t.f tin" trip as he uimli- it. Dispatched to the Philippine bv " oiders of the war department tn I cour niu. h moie than la jeiil 1021. Captain tHNirv attended by I n hl,h ,n U" Vnl,H RU,M "' ihanre a meeting of the Kn.ghls i Kurolan,.untriea. It waa never of Pvthia. at M.n.la ln ihM ! htf ""y Insufficient to meet meeting it Mas refuted U.at one of the lodge members had recently been wnt to Oilum as a hopelci.' caiw of leprosy. The man. a. dice man of Mniuia. had Ix-en noticed by a doctor, trxtvl and found di aeased. He had thereupon Ixeu or dered to the leper colony without even a chance to ieak to his fm lly. , Spoerry Offer Aid. The lode di"cu-ued way of helping the nun, and talked of sick beprllU. emergency funds and like method. Captain' Soerry rose and bluntly utaled that "he wan going down there." He or ganized a little exedilion. and se cured four ticket from the Gov ernor, Leonard WihkI. At ft o'clock in the morning. April ft. 1922. the lilllo group left Manila on their errand. The expedition had collected I many books and magar.ines i which ' they later found were useless, since only eleven of the colony, the Americans, were able to rWidl a large assortment of toys, and many phonographs and records. Barbara Spoerry, the captain's daughter, now a Junior at the Uni versity of Nebraska, had aided In collecting toys and equipment for the party. Resolutely refused per mission to make the trip with her lather, she went with the group to the dorks, and slipped on hoard the ship without the captain's knowledge. He did not d'scover her until It was too late to turn back, so she accompanied him on the three day trip through the colony. Doctors Scarce. Culion, an isolated little island of the Philippines, in the direction of Borneo, was the home ot a colony of 5.600 lepers. The captain found only five doctors for the whole group, four F.lipinos and one white man. Dr. H. V. Wade, who had arrived only two weeks earlier. The four native doctors, aided by six Catholic sisters, had been car ing for all the cases. Later on. a Protestant missionary and his wife came to the island, and after the little expedition had reported the conditions it discovered, the staff was increased to sixteen Filipino doctors and two Ameri cans. During the three-day stay at the colony, the captain visited more than 1,000 cases who were unable to walk. He found more than 1.300 children in the colony. His first thought was that some method of birth control should 'be practiced. Discovering that the disease was not hereditary, and that leprous parents could bear clean children, he conceived the idea of separat ing the children in a different colony, treating them, curing the parents, and then reuniting the families. Today "Welfare Village," organized by Governor Wood, is a realization of this idea. Formerly the children were forced to remain with the diseased colony, and frequently contracted leprosy themselves. Little Money Available. The Filipino government. Cap tain Spoerry reported, was spend ing one-third of its total revenue on public neaitn, ana a sixtn oi this sum went to the cure of lep-1 rosy. While this amount is of i? fl''" yl ' friT: Yi V f e,!n w,nn 4." ''Jq Vs-" ly UG"NEn lu JE E'IBR0 WN ll fVl t ' " II '''iff Tm A" hnicolor If HI Mu,lcaI Knockout T Y ' V fl ice I v" O'NEILL fl ' ll H l-LlL! ' II 4$! 3SA fl chorus of vnfw'n h,t" nl If ll k,8t ndymWoriUf 'Td un- 1 1 i i H I Show.: i, 3 , r 1 imSKAN the iieedn of the situation. It al lowed but fifteen renta per day for nieala for each cae, and only 11 per year for clothing Tne Ameri cans In the colony were forced to live on I hi same allowance, unless they reeivrd help from outside. Ir. Wade, a i, led by the KnlghlH of Pythias, and to-ojie rating with the governor, has aucceeded in clearing up the colony fairly well, so that conditions at the present lime are much belter. At the time of Captain Spoeiry'a visit, more than 1.000 cases needing hospital attention were left outside, due lo lack of room. The total laboratory equipment for the study of the di sease, included one miscrosope and ten reagent bottles. Spoerry Lectures. On his return to the United Slates, Captain Spoerry made a three months' lecture tour, dunne leave of abitence. at his own ex- pense. He spoke daily during the summer of lt2rt. doing what he could to help the situation. The Knights of Pythias organ ized a committee of ten members of Congress, to push an approp riation bill for four million dollars, to combat the disease and help clean up the colony. Governor Wood, on his own initiative, had appointed a committee to solicit voluntary contributions, to the total of two million, to be used for an emergency relief fund until the governmental appropriation could be secured. This organization re quested that the appropriations committee suspend action until It had reached its two million goal. Publicity, it said, would hurt its cause, if the people heard that congress vas doing sompthinjr they could not be persuaded to give from their own pockets. Over Million Secured. Up to date, $1,700,000 has been secuied. The congressional group is waiting its time to proceed with the task of securing its appropria tion. Prospects for a satisfactory working out of a solution to the problem seem very good, the cap tain reported. Much has been done, i and much more is planned. I The United States has a leper colony of its own, at Carville. ln Louisiana. The institution is known as a "marine hospital" and at the last reports contained Zb6 lepers. Most of the esses were immi grants, coming from the port ci ties on the sea coasts. While blood tests are used, the germ may sometimes lie dormant in the blood for as long as thirty or forty years, the captain stated. It can not be detected at this stage. Cause of the disease Is unknown. It is little contagious, if at all. Chalmougra oil, a recently discov ered remedv, is an effective cure, Captain Sperry said. Injected in the vertebrae twice weekly for' eighteen months to two years, it 1 completely cleans up a case. The I remedy was discovered in an odd i manner. ! One colony in India, found to have very light cases of the di-1 sease, was louna to De cnewing regularly an oily nut, a variety of betel nut, the Asiatic's tobacco. The oil, refined and distilled by in vestigators, was finally recognized as a practical cure for leprosy. To- day its use is universal. MiMrrtl Jolmaoii la To I'rrarnl Itrtiul Mim Mildred Juhnaon Mill pre Mnl hT Junior recital in vulc at the Temple theater, Tburaday ni imuig at 11 a. m. 8be ta student with Lillian Helms Polley. fraenua. Vrtnr S lu m'ftMU im-ii; OltM-ll. O u.l mi 4tOv anlor, SrlMi. M im. iimi.i rt.i. ! r) lot on Mpt'ii II. Iaimjin. Tl Kul Tr. I Av Tl". !.. H kt.Mllfhl. lrlf Ki(kl (.'li I b livin ItmitH Tfw at1ln TM tons. Hartiw H4r rim tl'irfiwl J4inii. . hirtl.- ! lit Ri.rtwiAl, lirirrM. H. m UMttll l I'atlii., aflltll. I fMltim, ItiMnMt, r Iivim that Jaa (IlK.I t ranri Mitr)), ftrromM1 MANY EVENTS ARE SLATED FOR WEEK (Continued Krorn Tage I t eers' week at the University of Nebraska. Field Day Wednesday. Activities for the week atari u 11 o'clock Wednesday with a con vocation and pep rally In the Tem ple theater. Lunch will be served at Antelope park and noon and In j the afternoon the field day activ I ities will take place. Knglneera banquet will be held ' Friday evening at the UnColn ', hotel. The "Sledge" the engineer's ; acandal sheet will be released, ! Signm Tau pictures will be die- ! tributed. and the Nebraska Blue j Print stsff for next year will be i l announced. Roy E. Cochran. Ne braska state engineer will address the gathering. University Playera will present their final production for the yeat this week. 'Hamlet." a Shake spearian production, has meen se lected. The play will open on Fri day. May 'I. and continues until Thursday, May 8. Farmers Fair Saturday. Farmers Fair la scheduled for Saturday, May 3. Classes on the college of agriculture campus on ' Friday, May 2. and Saturday, May ! 3. are suspended. Agriculture ; students taking coursea in other ; colleges are excused from classes from 12 to 6 o'clock Friday and from all classes Saturday. A parade, exhibits, flower show, quilt show, pet stock and rabbit ' show, Miller pony ride, a pageant, 1 side shows, livestock parade, anorpheum and follies, horse show, ' polo game, horse pulling contest. , style show, dance and motion pic- j mrv bit some oi me neaauners mentioned on the program. SCHOLARSHIPS FOR BUSINESS STUDY FILLED (Continued From Page 1.) I research and further rounding out their scholastic training by tak ing advanced courses in econom-1 ics. business organization, and si-: milar fields. The scholars in this way collect material which they ; submit in thesis form to meet the requirements for the master's de gree. These theses are later worked , over and condensed by Dr. Robb, ' ana published as research bulle tins. Material for no less than twenty-five research bulletins has RENT CARS Models "A" Fords, Chevrolet sixes and fours and Reo Wol verines and Flying Clouds. Special discount on Chevrolet 4 cylinder cars and Reo Wolver ines. Reservations held until 7 p.. m. . 8ime charge begins at 7 p. m.. Plenty of cars at all tiroes. We will appreciate your businesi. . 1120 P Street Always Open Motor Out Company been collected In ttila way. J These buiinena reaeauh si hoi-1 ambipa were first awarded in the' year 1971-23. since when fiom1 three to five s, holarships bave I been fiveu annually, the uundwr depending rhletly on the numhrr' of competent students available for the work la the past i. hoi I arships have been giwn by O. J ' Vn THEATRE ' ,"Tr . t ' 1 samsaai at , " Ail.40v.60Chil.l5 f 7 VsSHOWS I to 5-7 to II nr. i.aiciisS Lr at l.ovr. s i.irs v luxwrsi: hi: is V3. . , S AI IJAII)!! N, T ' J George Bancroft Portrays a ma V I f who knows his strength tor lite but 1 r not his strength for love: . George "LADIES BRUTES" WITH mnYASTOa rlUOllIC MARCH 0 Qaramount Should he love her and ruin her life? Or send her back to her world of fashion and ruin his own life? A new kind of role for Bancroft and his most completely thrilling! n i i i w 1 ADDED , I I It OUR CANti in "A Tough Wimrr" JJJJJ3 A Screii Novelly ZZZZZaZV Aintd by 1 I TTN Stuurt Symphfiny III I I I 1 I A F WW Paramaun- Oon0-A Lo ii,i,,i,i,i,,,ii.i...i,!,ii 1 1 1 rr- II.IIII...II i iiijii i Mjjin iiwiiiiiiiiii li 'jy- VTit "11 'i-i. -V VX t '"U . - ' ' - - & Still Keeping Their "i'inny Side in" These Lovers Come Back to You! CHARLES FARRELL Singing With JANET GAYNOR MntH3 IBLOJES With William Collier, r. Louise Fazends Hedda Hopper Join the fun and keep smiling with Janet and Charles 1n then merry successor to "Sunny Side Up!" They'll delight you with their sly love-making. Amuse you by their hilarious antics! Thrill you by the melody of their caressing singing voices! They do everything you want them to and MORE! I 3L7g Tiinrn r're. II V. HidUa. William Cold. Miller and Paine, Mrs It C Rud-e. Frank H. Wood. W. C fUrklry, and Oori;e V. Holmes. The number of echoiaralitpa rouifl he Uurraaod and no douU will be as fast aa there Is an increase ta the number of suitable candidates. Ihe awards ape made only to tbe SrM students In the College. LOVE Qidurc O.V THE STACK Marion Wilkin H"ra 11 u p. C'- '?--A Song fl THnYirrn.. I '"ITi-."1"' fa. JOu u... -" l-'ki Vyc '," V 1