The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, January 22, 1931, Page THREE, Image 3

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    THURSDAY. JANUARY 22. 1931
THE DAILY NERRASKAN
THREE
to SOCIETY
Recently many of Ihe (Jrcck letter groups on the en m pus
have been honored by visitors representing their national and
province officers. Mr. and Mrs. Klmcr K. (tlcnn will be the
KueBts of the Delta Upsilon fraternity this week end. Mr. (ilenn
is the national executive secretary of Delta Upsilon. On Sun
day there, will be a dinner at; the chapter house for the guests,
ana on jvionoay ne wm do tneo
guest of the alumni chapter. Mrs
H. I. Miller, province president of
Delta Zcta, was honored at a tea
Tuesday afternoon at the chapter.
Alpha Chi Omega entertained at
a formal tea Wednesday afternoon
In courtesy to their house mother,
Mrs. J. W. Bishop.
Yellow Color Motif
Features Alpha Chi Tea
Yellow tapers and tulips sup
plied the color motif for the Alpha
Chi Omega tea yesterday after
noon, given in honor of the house
mother, Mrs. J. W. Bishop. Mrs.
J. S. Spezens poured for the
guests whe were- served by the
pledges. The receiving line con
sisted of Mrs. J. W. Bishop, Mrs.
T. H. Mauck, Mrs. Bernard OaKes
and Gwendolyn Hager. A short
musical program with Elaine
Nichols and Eloisc Real playing
4 and singing entertained the
guests.
Four Hundred Couples
To Attend Teke Formal
Four hundred couples will at
tend the Tau Kappa Kpsilon for
mal dance to be gtve,n at the Corn
husker hotel Saturday evening.
Leo Beck's orcheptra has been se
cured to play for the party. Chap
erones for the affair will be Mr.
and Mrs. Theodore Bullock, Mr.
and Mrs. C. M. Hicka, Mr. and
Mrs. Roy E. Cochran and Mrs. E.
W. McHenry, housemother.
Alpha Theta To Give
Novel Fireman's Ball
Members of Alpha Theta Chi
fraternity will hold their second
annual Fireman's Ball Saturday
evening, at the chapter house.
About sixty couples are expected
to attend the party. Jerry Staf
ford's Firemen Five will play.
Herbert Yenne, Pauline Gcllatly
and Mr. and Mrs. Charles Hinds
will be chaperones for the event.
The fireman motif will be carried
. out through costumes and decora.
nuns. uu invuia win " i
the ladies. Among the alumni ex-
. 1 1.A nnrti n Warran
inrncu 01 yo-i-i
Chiles, Bernarr Wilson. Roy
firha.ll. Milton Reynolds. John Dar-
t) rah, and Gene Eustice.
Chaperons Club Entertained
At Alpha On'icron Pi House
Mrs. Ezza Pullman. Aloha Omi
cron Pi house mother, was hostess
embers of the i
Chaperons club which met at the ,
"Your Drug Store'
Our noon lunrh business is sure
Si-owing Hnrl !uy how busy our
Soda Fountain is. We thank you.
Businrss is cod.
THE OWL PHARMACY
Phone B1068 148 No. Hi P St.
(WE DELIVER)
STUART
Vou will be baf
fled by hit fo-
like cunning,
you will shud
der at hii dor.
mg, you will
thrill at his ne
farious c s c a
paoes ana you
will be thoroly
entertained by
inn greatest of
all mystery
uramas.
The Bat
Whispers
WITH
CHESTER
M0REIS
Una Mortal
NOTE l
an will b -
rntro durlnc
Ihr lt 1
mlfiule of thi
picture.
Feature
STAGE-
JOHNNY
PERKINS
Dawn Sisters
Stuart Stage
Band
1:00, 3:30,
5:30. 7:46,
10:00
Vaudeville
3:00, 7:16,
9:31
America's Great
Lover Loves too
Well! Faces Breach
f Promise Suit!
Take keyhole
peek Into the pri
vate Uvea ol the
(rifted great!
Here'a a ild,
wicked aatiro on a
famouii family you
will recognize!
"THE
ROYAL
FAMILY
OF BROADWAY"
with
TREDRIC
MARCH
2 ;
INA CLAIRE
MARY BRIAN
12 to -25c
Now Playing
House of HiU
Linci
A.
3
V Jk
Ccming
to Thrill You!
'ELL'S
AKGBLS
Social Calendar
Friday.
Alpha Phi formal dance at
Cornhusker hotel.
A. I. E. E. dinner at Annex
cafe at 6 o'clock.
Methodist student party at St.
Paul church at 8 o'clock.
Saturday.
Tau Kappa Epsilon formal
dance at Cornhusker hotel.
chapter house Tuesday. The aft
ernoon was spent informally. As
sisting hostesses were Mrs. Zella
Wolf, Mrs. Flora Hildreth. Mrs.
Dora Finch, Mrs. J. W. Bishop.
Mis. F. Schiadcr and Mrs Eva
Langworthy. Luncheon followed
the meeting.
DELTA CHI MOTHERS
HOLD BRIDGE BENEFIT.
Mothers club of Delta Chi were
hostesses at a benefit bridge party
Friday night in the chapter house,
which was attended by fifty coup
les. Light refreshments were
served. The house mother, Mrs.
Moore was in charge of the ar
rangements for the affair.
Pi Lambda Theta
Holds Meeting
Mrs. B. E. Moore addressed
members of Pi Lambda Theta
Tuesday evening on "Collecting
Antiques in Europe." Mrs. Moore
also displayed numerous articles
which she had purchased abroad.
The meeting took place at the
home of the Misses Luciry Hill,
Gertrude Gocring and Gertrude
Beers.
DELTA CHIS ELECT
NEW OFFICERS.
At a recent election held by
members of Delta Chi Harold Petz
was chosen president for the en-
suing: semester.
The Delia jnis
hum a npcnliar custom of desigr-
nating their minor otiices wun iei-
ters of the aiphabet. Mott Johnson
... ..V. .. i , i i
was electea o. ijeonara Lrfmuji.v,
C. " Howard Jackson, "D;" Fred
Barber, "E" and Clinton Frank
man, "F."
Following the examinations next
week, a foursome composed of
Wilma and Genctte Larson, Alfred
. ,. , v,' in Snth Da-
kota Tne- Missea Lars0n, who
are members of Zeta Tau Alpha,
live at Viborg. Both Mr. Walters
and Mr. Decker are affiliated with
Xi Psi Phi fraternity. Mr. Walters
lives at. Freeman, while Dr. Decker
resides at Emery.
Defective Speech Effects Handicap
To a Person Asserts Wisconsin Man
i "There can be no more terrible
overwhelming handicap to person
! ahty, success, and well-being than
! a speech handicap, and no greater
! joy than to recover from or:."
j This was the statement of Dr.
Robert West, professor of speech
pathology at the University of
! Wisconsin, who recently returned
i from Washington where he was a
j member of the conference on child
health and protection, called by
President Hoover.
I The consideration of the problem
of the child defective in speech,
conducted by Dr. West as chair
man, was one of tne important
conference subjects. This problem
I has been the subject of a series of
I radio interviews, conducted over
i ! WHA, the university station, by
Dr. West and Frof. C. M. Wise.
; chairman of the department of
I ! PDeech at the University of Louisi
ana, who is studying this year at
the University of Wisconsin.
'During a period of over a year
preceding the conference, we con
ducted a survey, and found that in
America there 'are 1,000,000 speech
defectives between the ages of six
and eighteen," said Dr. West "Of
that impressive group there were
over 221.000 stutterers. Although
the greatest number in any year of
age seems to be at about twelve,
this does not imply that stuttering
is relaed to adolescense, but the
figures do point to its being de
velopmental, at least."
More Boys Afflicted.
"About four boys to one girl
stutter, and as they grow older the
difference in these figures increas
es, due to the fact that more girls
than beys reenter from this af Mic
tion, " he pointed.
Arguments vary as to the cause
of stuttering, said Dr. West, but it
is generally agreed that it is not
coused i'y tcr.gue-tie, enlarged ton
sils, adenoids, or any structural
defect of the speech organs. It has
its roots in the inner physical and
psychical life of the patient.
"Stuttering is probably rooed in
the disturbing function of the
nervous and glandular system,
about which very little is definitely
known, except that it is not path
ological in the medical sense, it is
rooted in the abnormalities of
childhood development, and that it
I is related to the difference between
jtexes." Dr. West explained. "A
second cause, although never suf
. ficicnt to produce a chronic stut
jter, involves a latge group of psy
I rhological factors, as: anxiety,
I fear, embarrassment, hysteria, and
I ieeling of social inferiority."
' Psychology is Factor,
j Thousands of people, he declared,
!a e troubled with these emotions,
iand do not stutter, but many who
' do stutter are bothered with them.
1 However, there is no doubt that
i these psychological factors aggra
i vale the" stuttering and cause it to
' appear where otherwise it would
I not, stated Dr. West.
"Rpsidps stuttsrine defects, out
survey showed about 115,000 cases
5T TODAY S SPECIAL j j
i Meat Loaf Tostette fl I
K Banara Nut Salad If im '
I Any Ss Prink
S Rector's I :
' I 13TH AND f ST. I
'India Is Fabulously Rich,
Unspeakably Poor,'
McGill Man Says.
im.-uiii Dully i.
Thti caste system, the conflicting
religions, the 562 Independent
states which are absolute monar
chies In themselves, and the educa
tion of some 3,000,000 persons of
innumerable mixed races, consti
tute some of the Important prob
lems which confront india today in
her attempt to change her govern
ment in which Gandhi has played
an important part. These prob
lems and Gandhi's influence on
them were discussed by Prof. L.
M. Larson, head of the drpartment
of hiitory. in the f'ual lecture ot
a series of seven given recently in
one of the courses.
Castes have been established for
a long lime and one of the classes
of people that has been created is
a class of untouchables. About 1.
000,000 people are shunned by all
above their rank and they are
completely restricted by laws.
Is a Stumbling Clock.
"The caste system is one of the
stumbling blocks which the Hindus
face today in their efforts to es
tablish freedom." said Professor
Larson. "The Mohammedans and
Hindus have alwa.v-3 conflicted in
their religions to add to the prob
lem. Furthermore about 30 per
cent of India consists of 562 inde
pendent states which are absolute
monarchies. How can these fit
into a democracy?"
PrOfcfsor Larson discussed the
part that Gandhi played in some
of these problems. Critical agita
tion spread throughout India after
the World wnr and England passed
acts to punifh the agitators. At
this point Gandhi stepped in, fore
swore Britain because of these
acts and took the side of India.
Professor Larson brought out seme
of the ideas of Gandhi. He ob
jects to all foreign influence. Gand
hi said: "India's salvation con
sists in unlearning what she has
learned in ihe last fifty years."
Need Education.
Professor Larson told of the
problems of educating more peo
ple and of the crowded farm re
gions. He spoke of India as "fab
ulously rich and unspeakably
poor." He summed up his lecture
by saying that certain ideas, such
as the idea of untouchability. must
be discarded before India can be
come a succecssful free nation.
The Lincoln Academy was lo
cated at 414 N street in 1909 and
had an enrollment of 140.
Miss Florence McGahey, now
university registrar, was the only
female student taking mechanical
engineering in 1902.
that were called, in our slang, O.
I. Oral Inactivity, a sort of
clumsy way of speaking, difficult
to understand because it lacks
precision and clearness of utter
ance," Dr. West commented.
"These cases do not increase in
number with the coming of adol
escence as with the problem of
stuttering."
In all types of speech disorder,
Dr. West told, the boys far out
number the girls. My grandmother
used to say a girl's tongue is
hinged at both ends. Dr. West
said, smilingly, and probably this
accounts for that fact.
Changes With Age.
"American children numbering
462,000 improperly substitute one
sound for another," said Dr. West.
"But. speech training seems to
facilitate the speed with which
they learn proper sounds, and the
number falls off rapidly as the
children grow older. Defective
speech of 86,000 children is due to
poor dental structure, hare lip, or
cleft palate; 57,000 children pre
sent serious foreign accent: 40,000
children have voice defects: and
4,000 paralyzed children have
some speech trouble as a result of
their paralysis," he said.
Declaring that it is of tremend
ous importance that the subject of
speech is beginning to get ade
quate atention. Dr. West said that
it meant something a happy life
or an unhappy one, to thousands
of people with remediable speech
troubles.
Provide Education Councils.
The White house conference, he
said, has provided forty-nine coun
capped children, a national coun
cil, End forty-eight state councils.
These groups and institutions such
as the University of Wisconsin
speech clinic are to carry their
work to the children in cities, vil
lages, and rural places thruout the
United States.
"Practically everyone every
where may well giveattention
make a sort of checkup, so to
speak to correct his own speech
into reasonable perfection," urged
Dr. West. "But it is more impor
tant that he check up on his chil
dren. Most adults can not relearn
! speech, but children do it easily.
I precautions should be taken by
'the mother fro mwhom the Vhild
learns most of his speech, that the
! child's playmates and teachers
have speech habita worthy of im
iitation," Dr. West said.
Twenty-nine years ago the Ne
braska Wesleyan Athletic associa
tion was considering the idea of
organizing a football team. They
were greatly influenced by the Ne
braska team.
Back in 1902. all students of
military science were required to
purchase their own uniforms.
A tailor made suit could be pur
chased in 1902 for $12.25 and they
threw in a cap with the sale.
TYPEWRITERS
F tie for the Koj al portable type
writer, the ideal machine lor the
etudent All make of machine for
rent. All makea ot used machines
on eay payments.
Nebraska Typewriter Co.
Call B 2157 1232 O St.
Ag College Publishes Bulletin
On 'Better Farming for Nebraska;
Describes Progress of Agriculture
BY BOYD VON SEOOERN.
"lUtUr Kimning for Nebraska" is the name of tlie latest
bulletin published b.v ihe colicu of agriculture. It is more than
h bulletin, for, as an introductory paragraph suggests, it is a
story of what the college is doing for Nebraska agriculture.
The work of the agricultural experiment station and the
agricultural extension service is told in this now booklet. The
offices of these two organizations u
are on the college of agriculture
campus, various outlying stations
for experimental work are the
agronomy farm, near Lincoln, the
fruit farm near Union, and the
sub-stations at North Platte,
Mitchell, Valentine, and Alliance.
At these stations problems re
lating to agriculture are studied
and solved, some of the large pro
jects requiring years of work In
analyzing, collecting data and
testing. Extension workers hold
thousands of meetings yearly and
go into all parts of the state.
Cites Progress.
Until 60 or 70 years ago, the ac
count begins, the plains territory
was looked upon only as a high
way to the regions of fur and gold
that lay farther west. Those who
broke out the prairie found a good
soil and it was not many years be
fore some of the earlier hardships
began to seem less troublesome.
Nowadays it is a common thing to
see farms equipped with excellent
homes.
But the problems of mainten
ance of agriculture as a profitable
occupation have become acute, the
booklet continues. Agriculture
must grow with the rest of the
world. There must be an organi
zation that studies, improves, sug
gests and encourages. Those are
the purposes of the two special
services.
Discusses Many Topics.
Topics which the booklet cov
ers are many. There is a long dis
cussion of crop improvement which
devotes particular attention to Ne
braska No. 60 wheat and which it
classes as the most popular va
riety of winter wheat ever grown
in Nebraska. It was developed by
the Nebraska station.
There is an explanation of the
method in which the ten-acre corn
yield contest is conducted, a con
test that has influenced corn
growers throughout the state.
Prophet of 1903 Pictures Type of
Collegians in Nebraska at Present
"It the western college student
is, in culture, scarcely the peer of
his eastern contemporary', he quite
balances the account by superior
mental power."
That was the strong defense for
Nebraska students put forward by
Benjamin Andrews, chancellor of
the university in 1903, in an article
published in the New York Inde
pendent. The Daily Nebraskan
reprinted the chancellor's article
on Jan. 16, 1904.
The article was titled. "The
Coming Generation of Western
Scholars," and makes a few pre
dictions about the western stu
dents of the next generation
(1930).
"I am speaking," said the chan
cellor, "of the usual or average
CP.e and by greater industry.
Western youth can boast as good
blood and ancestry as eastern. The
best immigrants to tne United
States have settled in the west,
and their numerous children and
grandchildren attending universi
ties are among our most promis
ing students. Western men and
women put forth effort more
naturally than the scions of fam
ilies who have been well-to-do for
generations. They possess the will
for it and also the strong physique.
"Never have I seen in the east,
save in professional and graduate
school, such desperate and unre
mitting application to study as
characterizes the mass of students
in the prairie states."
Idlers Unknown.
"Western students generally dis
play a veritably insatiable hunger
for higher education. In them sur
vives the spirit of their pioneer
fathers, who before they had
places to lay their heads, taxed
themselves to build schools and
equip universities. Western stu
dents attend college to learn
rather than to be taught. They
average, per student, many more
hours a day than eastern. The
typical college idler is never seen.
With eagerness for knowledge
the western student combines a
zeal and a power for hard work
seldom if ever witnessed in east
ern institutions.
"The outside 'seminar,' to cram
men for 'exams,' reducing the
necessity of study to a minimum,
and turning into farce so much
undergraduate 'work' at the oldest
of our universities, the west has
not been adopted.
"This assiduity in mental toil
often under the greatest obstacles
is an invaluable discipline, not
only intellectual but moral, tend
ing to form and settle a young
man's character as desultory study
could not possibly do. It is not
astonishing then, that the west
ern collegian should display not
merely much the greater power of
concentration, but also the more
earnestness morally.
"Moral Weight" of Students.
"This shows itself as well in his
A
Men's Suits, Topcoats,
Hats
Ladies' Plain Wool
Dresses
Cleaned and
Pressed
tfedern Cleaners
So!ikup & Westover, MgTS.
Call F2377 lor Service
r S
Hardv alfalfa, especially Hardis-
tan, a variety discovered In Ne
braska, receives recognition in the
bulletin, and the story of certi
fied seed potatoes is told to the
tune of many figures of produc
tion. Corn Is Fed.
Weed pests and diseases are
di cussed and estimates are made
of the value of the college and its
departments in those fields. Im
proved methods of livestock feed
ing are considered and It is stated
that 85 percent of Nebraska's corn
is fed to beef cattle hogs and
sheep.
"By far the largest item in the
cost of producing meat is the
feed," says the account, "hence
the importance of feeding trials.
Farmers have shown considerable
interest lately in barley and
wheat as feeds."
Questions Answered.
The dairy department answers
about 5,000 questions sent in from
over the state each year, an ac
count of the growth of the dairy
industry announces. Poultry rais
ing used to be a woman's job, an
other section states, but a pro
gram of research, teaching, and
extension has paved the way for a
poultry industry, the products of
which are valued at $30,000,000
annually. Nebraska ranks tenth.
Testing of the nation's tractors
at the college of agriculture is
recognized as being outstanding in
the entire world, the booklet de
clares. All tractors tested are
certified by manufacturers as be
ing stock model machines, and
every tractor sold in Nebraska
must be tested at the experiment
station.
Research In home economics in
cludes lighting of farm homes, ar
rangement of kitchens, and water
supply. The special poultry, dairy,
wheat and pork trains that tour
the state are also discussed in
short fc
general as in his collegiate life.
The moral weight of the average
university students is among the
things that have most impressed
me in my experience west.
"Native ability, enthusiasm for
knowledge, coupled with the power
for study that their strong phy
siques impart, and their readier
submissiveness to discipline, all at
tested by the goodly number of
fellowships, which western men
and women hold in eastern grad
uate schools, assure the coming
generation of western scholars a
prominent place in American men
tal life.
"These are some of the reasons
why, as a New England professor
(not a professor of rhetoric) has
put it, to continue as our chief
purveyor of highest education
products 'the east has got to get
onto her job.' "
FINE ARTS QUINTET
PLANS PERFOR31ANCE
will play Schumann's "Quintet in , I
K Flat'' at the Temple theater , ?
Tuesday, February 3, at 11 a. m.
The quintet will be composed of
Lura Scbuler Smith, piano; Carl
Frederic Steckelberg, first violin;
Earnest Harrison, second violin,
William Quick, viola, and Herbert
Gray, violin cello.
White pepper is made from the
same plant as black pepper. The
black coats of the pepper berries
are removed in making white
pepper.
SUBSCRIPTION EXPIRATION
NOTICE
With the issue of Feb. 3, paid sub
scriptions for the present semester
will expire. All those who wish the
paper next semester must renew their
subscriptions soon. Why not now?
Where to Get Your Subscription
DOWNTOWN CAMPUS
At Long6 College Book Store
Co-op .Book Store (
Office, U Hall
AG CAMPUS
At Tillman? Lunch
Finauce Office
kny ru-ruetors on the Ac campus ho
wish tu ll.e advantage of mailed sub
scriptions tu T.'ie Nebrkn rr.tr call at
ihe Finance ollia and subscribe.
PRICE 1-25
lis
Daily
3 K
CRIME LABORATORIES
Contention Is Science Can
Prevent New Misdeed
By Solving Old.
Favorable action of the legisla
ture upon the recent proposal to
repel crime by means of science,
made by Dr. J. H. Mathews, direc
tor of chemistry at the University
of Wisconsin and widely known ,r.s
a scientific crime investigator, is
foreseen in state scientific circles.
Declaring that many otherwise
unsolvable crimes could be solved
by proper scientific application,
Dr. Mathews affirms, in essence,
that a state scientific laboratory
should be established at the Uni
versity of Wisconsin. The fact
that it would be an effective
means of deterring the criminal
would alone make the laboratory
a good investment, he believes.
"The proposed laboratory, which
would be called the Wisconsin In
stitute of Criminal Identification
or the Scientific Crime Detection
Laboratory, would serve to deter
criminal acts and thus justify the
expenditure." Dr. Mathews ex
plains. "If a criminal knew his
chances for escape were poor, he
would hesitate. Kven if the bureau
served only to prevent two mur
ders a year because of its effi
ciency in solving crimes prevented
persons from committing them, I
am certain everyone will agree the
investment would be a good one."
Like Northwestern.
Dr. Matthews' proposal would be
modeled on the plan of the North
western university crime labora
tory. He says, while the cost would
depend on the institute's scope, a
good laboratory could be started
for $40,000 to $50,000 a year. To
have it function at maximum ef
ficiency, Professor Mathews esti
mates that up to $60,000 a year
should be available after it is es
tablished. "This would be a small invest
ment in view of the good that
could be done" he reiterates. "I
believe many crimes are going un
solved through failure to use
scientific methods and technique,
well known only to certain ex
perts, who would be on the labora- j I
tory staff. A number of murders
in Wisconsin that were unsolved, t
could, in all probability, have been
explained if someone familiar with
the scientific technique bad been
employed. That is what the insti
tute proposes to do.
Would Be at U. W.
"I do not mean to belittle the
work of the ordinary detective. He
frequently is a clever and intelli
gent man, but he has not had the
training to apply the scientific
techniques nor could he be so
trained."
The scientific institute, as for
mulated by the Wisconsin profes
sor, would be located at the state
ATTENTION
CO-EDS
Formal Shoes of Brocade Satin
$3.98
We Dve Them to Match Your Gown FREE
W
untmi
1021
STx'.ii m: iTii Stii ul
$1.25
Mail your eubtcription in
Now if you live off the
campue. Mailed rate: $1.75.
Nebraskan
At the Campus Studio
Cornhusker pictures scheduled
for organized groupt ai follows:
Thursday, Jan. 22.
Tassels, 1Z:00, noon.
Football team, 12:lfS p m.
university here. Dr. Mathews fa
vors this location because it would
offer, In addition to the trained
personnel the bureau would main
tain, faculty experts in all phases
of scientific research at band as
consulting experts. The institute
would have an adequately
equipped laboratory at its dis
posal, and it personnel would in
clude expert In ballistics, finger
prints, microscopy, and kindred
lines which are necessary for the
complete criminal investigation.
METHODIST CROUP
INITIATES SIXTEEN
PLEDGES TUESDAY
Sixteen Phi Tau Theta pledges
were taken into active member-
ship of that organization at a spe-'"
cial service held at the Emmanuel
Methodist church on Tuesday eve
ning. Those who were initiated are:
James R. Allan, Joe F. Barton,
Harlan S. Bollman, Floyd J. Bun
ger, Paul B. Christensen. Arthur' '
Clcavland, John W. Constable,
T , t - Tr" .-w, 1 . . . . Tm,.Ih TT T7.l
lUflUC V. CI ILASUU, AIVV1U 4. ICI-
berg. James H. Howard, Arnold
Johannes, Lester Larson, Howard
E. Miller, Donald Sigler, Byran A.
Tharp, and Marion S. White.
Henry Rinker, Phi Tau Theta,,,
president, was assisted by the Rev.
W. C. Fawell, local sponsor, and
by Lloyd Watt, Bernard Malcolm,
and Norman O. Peters, other chap
ter officers, in holding the initia
tion service.
All of the pledges of the organ
ization were not taken into mem
ber?hip at this time, although a
number of them will be admitted
soon after the second semester.
The Art classes of 1902 were
300 percent larger than the previ
ous year. Four students were en
rolled compared to one in 1901.
Big Sale
Now On
"I'our Credit Is GooJ With
Just the Dress for School
I and Sunday Night
Group I $10.00. Regu-t
lars $15.00 - $16.75
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$19.75
Group II $7.00
Real Bargains. Burnett j
Style Shoppe. 139 So. 12 1
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