The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, February 18, 1931, Page THREE, Image 3

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    WEDNESDAY. FEBRUARY 18. 1931
THE DAILY NKHRASKAN
THREE
SOCIETY
The final nomination of candidates for l'miu jrisl in lie
elections Tuesday only increased interest in the event mi tlx
campus; Successful candidates are Doiothv ' Silvis, Wamicr
i D. S., Kappa Alpha Thela; Mai'Kaiei HVKaj, In., Kapp.t KnVr-
-Gamma; (Jeorpia Wilcox. Noottsbluff, Clii Omega, mid Alice
Connel, Fairbury, Gamma Phi Beta. At the Junior-Senior I'roin
on Feb. 27 each ticket will represent a vote, and near the clos..
of the evening the newly elected Prom girl will be presented.
paxton Orchestra to Play
I For Kappa Sigma Formal.
Members or Kappa. Sigma will
be boats at a formal party Friday
evening at the Cornhusker hotel.
Many alumni who will be In towtf
for the Pounder's day banquet will
attend the party for which Harold
Stokes and his Paxton hotel or
chestra will play. Chaperones will
be Miss Pauline Gellatley. Herbert
Yenne, Mr. and Mrs. Howard P.
Doole,, Mrs. Bertha Finn and Mrs.
C P. Smith.
Pi Phi Formal
To Be Saturday.
j Two hundred and fifty bids have
I, been issued for the Pi Beta Phi
formal to be held Saturday eve
ning in the Cornhusker ballroom.
Leo Beck's orchestra will furnish
the music. Mr. and Mrs. A. M.
Bunting, Professor and Mrs. H. G.
j Deming, Professor and Mrs. H. E.
I Bradford. J. P. Weller and Miss
Beinice Miller will chaperone the
pai ty.
Forty Couples To Attend
' Delta Theta Phi Fete.
t
' About forty couples ate to be
entertained at a house party at
the Delta Theta Phi house Satur
day evening. The fraternity colors
of green and white will be used in
the decorating scheme. Chaper
ones for the party will be Profes-
or and Mrs. C. O. Swayzee, Prof.
i G. F. Price, and Dr. John Brauer.
Ed Hoy and his orchestra will fur
nish the music.
Betty Hairisnn Elected
To Fill Vacancy in Officers.
E?t(y Harrison, Delta Gamma,
has been elected vice president of
that chapter to replace Charlotte
Joyce OL-on. Other elections in the
c hapter will take place in March.
Atp':a Xi Delta Elects
Officers for Next Year.
A'rha XI Delia elected officers
for the ensuing' year tt their meet
ing Monday night. Lorraine Lall-
man. Aspahot-. w as chosen presi
, dent: Ruth Schill. Alliance, vice
president: Margaret Sow!s. Lin
coln, recoidir.ji secretary: and
Elaine Hadseil, Wyinorc, treas
urer. Valentine Pariy Given
By Alpha Chi Pledges
Th Alpha Chj Omega pledges
entertained Saturday evening at a
Valentine party st which the Val
entir tb'rne was carried out In
the decorations and favors. Harry
Heibze and his orchestra played
for dancing while a quartette from
Da i,. rQttsr-
ill wv : , . 1
A
j viih
Cliff (Ukelele Ike) Edwards
-flair
The Talk cf Lineal
DON GALVAN
ir
"A KNIGHT IN FAIN"
wi'.h
"While and Manning"
Ti'e Eernie Crot.
Arthur Psrr-nl
Suizrt Stag Band
Harriet Cruibc
4 ;"v
fry,.
l-i c-''r
Fill MWHHIUIIMM whim llllll K
W fy "-"y,
Y 1? r'(
" f ' .
f i . A
-. " . , " , . ' y 'A-
THE DEATH OF PASSION
THE BIRTH OF-LOVE
AnJ lor wkt? 5 that Motkcr w.
man.t.a 500J vma...mt5hr lave
tlx only irko tlx Yl cvr Uvj!
Robert Montgomery
Lewis Sion
Now Uivwing
HOIIN Bt MiU
Social Calendar
Monday.
A. W. S. board luncheon at the
Cornhusker hotel honoring Miss
Helen A. Tufts.
Friday.
Kappa Sigma formal dance at
the Cornhusker hotel.
Saturday.
PI Beta Phi formal dance at the
Cornhusker hotel.
Sigma Alpha Mu house party.
Methodist Student council din
ner, 6 o'clock, Wesley Foundation.
Cotner college sang several songs.
The party was chaperoned by
Mrs. Bishop, house mother. Mrs.
Stevens, and Dr. and Mis. Griese.
Marian Hudquist. Crete, and Lu
cile Wright, of Stromsburg. were
out of town guests.
Tau Kappa Epsilon
Announces Pledges.
Tau Kappa Epsilon announces
the pledging of Lee Haywood, of
Hooper, and Ely Skinner, Ruskin.
Mrs. Walter Whitten. state of
ficer of the D. A. R. and Mrs. H.
B. Marshall, radio chairman of the
same organization, were recent
dinner guests at the chapter house
of the D. S. L. fraternity,
lota Sigma Pi
i Elect Officers.
Iota Sigma Pi. honorary ihcmi
; cal sorority, elected Lucile Hacas,
j president, and Dorothea Mason, as
I vice president. The other officers
,were reained'from last semester.
The next meeting of the sorority
will be Wednesday at 7 o'clock.
Coeds, Tired of
ailing or .Wen,
Stage Otrn Prom
IOWA state lantern.
Coeds assert their independence
once a year at Iowa State. It's at
the annual prom for ladies only.
Coeds, it seems, get tired of
waiting patienilv for bids to Jun
ior Proms, et al. So every year they
stage this af fair, where they go by
themselves, all tricked out in wild, the disparity of opinions ex
wiH costumes. j pressed, by its unity suggests an
The ladies in the charge of the ! underlying truth of inherent right-
airair tnis year nave planned wnat ,
they call a "color clash." The idea
is to wear purple sweater and a
' red skin, with a yellow hat thrown
in 1 nr trruvi lurlr
I The girls have an orchsf! a, and , of the most notable examples of
they dance with each other. The j w hat is doing in te Texas-Okla-only
men let on on this affair are noma region. It is now in its aec-
I the orchestra, players. The Makio 1 ond year and its success is already
j is interested in the affair to . beyond question. This second vol
the extent that its editors are go- ume is even richer in content than
j ing to send their photographer , the first, m J. aside from its in-
i around and take a picture ot tne j
girls with the winning outfits.
me v. s. ij a. council, wmcn
sponsors the affair, plans to ap-
pear, down to its most feminine
member, in white ducks, presum
ably borrowered from their tennis
playing friends.
According to the publicity agent
of the affair, one of the sororities
n the campus plans to appear in
maFks. thus adding mystery and j
more fun to the whole party. j
Student publications offices are
housed in the student union build
ing at the University of Kansas.
TODAY'S SPECIAL WED.
Vegetable Soup
.30c
Orange &ho-t Cake
Any 5c Orn
And 5 OtKer Specials
RECTOR'S
n A P
THC
FORD
STERLING
"Crn to Papa'
CARTOON
Newt
(E ;
' S.i
l.v
1 1 1
I ; ,
II
u rn
PRINTS 'FOLK-SAY'
Reviewers Give Botkinj
Work Enthusiastic !
KeccDtion. i
AUTHOR ASSISTS HERE
The University of Oklahoma
press has recently released the
1930 edition of "Folk-Say." a re
gional miscellany, edited by B. A.
Botkin that has been greeted with
enthusiasm bv critics and review-
,v,..,k.'. , u ..j 0,,
ers throughout the United States,
. ,
Mr. Dtkih, on leave from the Uni-
versity of Oklahoma where he Is
Instructor in English, is now com
pleting work for his Ph. D. and
assisting in the English depart
ment at the University ot Ne
braska.
"Folk-Say," which was first
printed in lt)29. marks a departure
from thut type of journalistic en
deavor comuioaly known as legen
dary folklore, in an introduction
to his initial volume Botkin made
plain his opinion as to what did
and what did not constitute folk-
lore, and when choosing a title for I ability and accomplishments as re
his publication, possibly chose j vealed by recitations and examin-Folk-Say."
in order to broaden ations. These four groups are
the term folklore which, one gath- called the upper group, the middle
ers, ne regards as limiting ana also
! as having become too strictly sci
j rntiiic. By so doing, Mr. Botkin
r.as oeen aoie to welcome to ma
assemblage many pieces which
would perhaps be rejected by the
stricter and more academic folk
lorist. First Edition Rare.
The first volume of "Folk-Say"
already has become a collector's
item and is obtainable today only
at a much higher price than the
original cost at the time of its re
lease. The 1930 edition Is even
richer than the first in content,
having such contributors as Mary
Austin. Percy MacKaye. Carl
Sandburg, Louise Pound. Barret
H. Clark. Stanley Vestal, J. Frank
Doric, Philip Stevens on and
Charles Morrow Wilson. The opin
ion of the critics in the consider
able portion of the book devoted to
Folk Backgrounds are as sharply
divided and diverse as they are in
teresting Lon Tinkle, reviewing the publi
cation or a Dallas. Tex., dailv.
hails "Folk-Say" as one of the i
outstanding literary achievements
of past years and writes. "Mr.
Eotkin has assembled his contribu
tions intelligently and has given
mem an orderly and complemen
Jtary progression which, despite
ness.
Neihardt Writes.
Another reviewer. John G. Nei
hardt of the St. Louis Post-Dispatch,
writes. "Folk-Say'' is one
dubitable value as a contribution
jto American folklore, it is one of
the most entertaining books this
reviewer has held in his hands for
a long while. So much material is
presented and of such widely
ranking character that it would be
difficult to decide just where to
be&in a "review" of it. but the
l prospective reader mav be assured
that he Deed no UjLT o
dorn."
-Folk-Say" appeared lat vear
! as a raper bound rK-riodjcal but
tne second volume is clothed in
sandy brown cloth binding and is
illustrated with linoleum cuts
made by Ina Annette. It is re
gards as one of the most hand
some b'xks issued by a publishing
concern, commercial or otherwise,
in the southwest region. J'r. Bot
kin announced recently that he
had decided to issue the book each
year and is now preDaring mate
rial for his 1931 tdit'ion. It is his
desire to include in his next vol
ume "Folk-Say" from the mid
western and northwestern sec
tions. lOlWMllRL
Says She Is 'Old Fashioned
Girl With Modern Ideas;'
Thinks Smoking O.K.
MAOLSO.V. Wiss. The "ideal
girl" of the University of Iowa, se
lected by vote of al! fraternity
men. saio recently that she could
not account for ber popularity, but
admitted that rhe was 'a n old
fvhioned girl with modern Ideas."
Anne Bta.dfic-;d. blonde and
blup-yed Ideal of the college men
at Iowa, ranks high schoiaMiralJy,
and is a popular with coeds as
hfoe is with the men. 8h! expressed
some "random thoughts" about
the "old-Jashioned girl with mod
ern Weas."
"We may smoke," she said, "and
wc may wear shorter skirts than
our mothers, but fundamentally
we modern girls have the same be
lief about life, the same ideals and
the same desire for a family of our
own."
A gill goes to school primarily
to study, but there is no harm in
h?r looking for a good man.
During her first two years of
college a girl should not confine
her attentions to one man; it's best
to bhop around a bit.
IU' all right for men to drink if
they don't show it. but girls should
keep away from alcboholic bever-
ages. This does not apply to smok- j
ing. however. '
Uiu Eradfield. who is a senior,
admitted ibat she is now "confin
ing ber attentions to one man" and
that she is not a least bit inter
ested In the many offers of "dates"
she has received since she won
campus acclaim. Then she turned
to the subject of clothes.
"Clothes don't make the girl."
the smartly dreswed coed said,
"but they surely help. Being well
Group Should Make
Picture Arrangements
Group organizations wishing
representation in the 1931 Corn
husker are urged to make con
tracts anal picture dates im
mediately, according to Ken
neth Gammill, editor. Picture
dates should be arranged at the
campus studio, while the con
tracts are to bs made at the
Cornhusker office.
dressed is going to help me in my
chosen career, that of being a i
radio announcer. And at the same j
time I am going to be a house- J
wife.
Miss BraUfield docs not expect
to experience any trouble in com
bining her career as a housewife
with that of radio announcing. She
a taking an extensive course in
domestic science so that she will
. . . . . .
have time to do both jobs. In re-
iv , nr,intA niit(nn Kh re-
plied:
.' i - "j -
"Of course, I'm
Why shouldnt 1 be?
a good cook.
DEMING DECRIES
MODERN METHOD
OF RECITATION
(Continued from Page l.i
istry department of the university
is cited by Professor Deming as
an example of how this system can
be improved. The students are (It
vided into four groups according to
croup, the lower group, ami
the
probation group. The work is gov
erned in all tie groups to meet
the mental requirements of the dif-
ferent students. In this manner
the best students are not held
back by poor students and the
poor students kre not made to
drag along with the better ones.
Holding the student strictly to
the text book assignments is an
other fault found in our education
al system by Professor Deming.
In the chemistry department this
fault is eradicated by assigning
students to do outside work in
chemistry that has some connec
tion with the course in which they
"ir.LV. ".""I,
much as sible in chemistry
course, and nis metnoos or stuay
are improved
Can Overcame Cramming.
Cramming for examinations has
also been overcome by tnis metnou
says Mr. Deming in his article. No
student knows when the next ex
amination will come or whether he
will be compelled to take it. This
leaves to the student just how
much work he will do and how
rapidly he shall rise. Prof. Deming
concludes his article with the
statement that this is the state of
affairs the world at large will of
fer the student after graduation
day. With each, then, according to
his measure of ability and the in
spiration that can be lent him, it
Is full steam ahead.
SENIOR WOMEN
WILL NOMINATE
MORTAR BOARDS
(Continued from Page l.l
In tnie soninr hrinnr
arA.
A change of one in number has
been made from last vear. in that
previously not less than six were
able to be voted upon. No ballots
which contain less or more than
the specified numbers will be ac
cepted. The present chapter of Mortar
Board will select its successors
from the thirty girls polling the
highest number 01 votes in this
election. The list will be checked
for scholarship, and anyone who
is ineligible will be taken from the
original thirty names.
Scholarship Is Basts.
Scholarship is the basic require
ment for membership, the stan
dard set for the Nebraska chap
ter being an average of eighty for
all previous semesters, and a rec
ord devoid of failures, condition,
or incompletes. The second con
sideration upon whi'h the selec
tion of future members of Mortar
Board is based iw on a gill's par
ticipation in campus activities, not
simply the number with whi h she
has identified herself, but the qual
ity of service she has rendered to
those in which be has engaged.
The membership in Mortar
Board is unlike Innocents for a
definite number is not fixed. The
chapter nay have as few as six
girls, and as many as twenty. It
is only wilhin these limits that the
number of girls in this chapter is
specified.
Cards Necessary.
Kveryone voting must present
ber identification card t'j receive
ballots. The cards will bc clx-cked
with lit? from th" registrar's of
fice. The polls will te in charge
of the present members of the
Mortar Board, and the voles cast
for May Qwn will be counted by
Mi- Elfcie Piper, acting dean of
women, and Mis Florence McGa
hey, registrar. No announcement
of the results will be mad-i until
Ivy day. April 30, when the May
queen will be crowned at a formal
ceremony, and the girl who polled
the second highest number f
votes will appear as her maid of
honor. Future Mortar Boards will
be masked at the afternoon service
on Ivy day.
COMMITTEES WILL
SELECT .NOMINEES
TO Y. M. OFFICES
Two nominating committees
have been appointed to s-I"ct can
didates for election of officers to
thf two branches of the V. M. C.
A. The election will be held
April I, and the nominations will
be known early in March. The
committees lollow:
City campus: Prof. C. H. Pat
terson; Lewis Swingler, '31; Wil
lard Spence. '21. Ag campus:
Prof. Carl Rosenquist; Claude Roe,
'30: Joe Eishoo. '31. General Sec.
retary C. D. Hayes is ex officio
member of both committees.
LEARN TO DANCE
Will leach you to dance in ix ls
aotii. Correct any fault in .ne
lesxn. Prirt liyE daily by ap
pointment. Retulu gunrantwd.
LEE A. THORNBERRY
Private Studio
Phooa L 825! G0 V St.
PRAISE FOR COLLEGE
Film Star Spends Active
Four Years at U. of
Wisconsin.
I. X. S. In an exclusive state
ment to the Intercollegiate News
Service. Fredric March, noted film
star, had nothing but highest
praise for his college education.
While at Wisconsin university,
from which institution he gradu
ated in 1920, March not only made
an enviable athletic record, win
ning his letter in football as var
sity manager, also track, but was
president of the senior class and
a member of several honorary fra
ternities. v
"There la never any regret in
my mind for having attended col
loge." March said. "Not because
it has done so much to promote
i me in the film ranks certainly a
minor consideration but because
it gave me fouf unforgettable
years, a period filled with a genial
ity of. living that I shall find ex
ceedingly difficulty to match."
Certainly the night when my
roommate and I, at a moments no
tice were called to the stage of
the nearby theatre to fill a vacated
act. will always remain in my Miss Anne Cornell. '19. M.A. '26.
memory. Our temerity before the dean of women and professor of
student body that filled the the-1 Latin and Greek at Franklin col
atre. and the fear of a shower of j jege. Franklin. Ind.
vegetables which never came, j jijjm Cornell received her pilot's
made an indelible impression on
my mind."
March found Lhe maioritv ot
wiln wnom he worked at the
J Nr.v OTir paramount studio to bc-
university men, some having de
grees from European colleges,
In closirg. March remarked.
that "the standard of pictures is
so much on the intellectual incline
that I would prescribe a college
degree as the starting point for
the neophyte actor. A whig and
mask are not nearly enough."
nvnnn ttbp a tc
Y ALL O KliSULlo
(Continued irom rage i.i
sophomore Presidency. Don East
hine 5? c
pus ballot.
i More votes were turned in for
junior clas presidency candidates
; than for any other ot tne oitices,
In this class a total of 419 votes
was cast. The seniors, with a total
of 374 balloU turned in. ranked
second in numbers while the soph
omore and freshmen classes were
third and fourth with 375 and 320
ballots respectively.
Blues Lead by 200.
On the downtown campus the
Blue Shirts polled two hundred
votes more than the Yellow Jack
ets faction group. The former had
a total of 728 as against 578 bal
lots for the latter faction. Agricul
tural rniWp the Blue Shirts easily '
rnntmllwi thP ballot DOX With 135
' t-niM as fim rn rtt with a mere 26 1
(counters which were cast for the
i Yellow Jacket candidates.
Fred Grau, the winning Blue
Shirt candidate in the senior presi-
I dency contest is a member of Del
!u Phi Gamma, (Acacia) social
fraternity. He is vice president of
the Innocents society, formerly
served lor two years an ine oiu-
nent council, and is chairman of
the Ag executive board. He led
Seldon Davey. Yellow Jacket, by
the margin of 225 votes to 149.
Rhea Wins.
Hugh Rhea, Blue Shirt, victor in
the junior presidency race by a
lead of 245 votes as against a
total of 174 which was collected
bv George Koster, Yellow Jacket,
belongs to Alpha Sigma Phi fra
ternity. He was Grantland Rice's
choice for All American football
honors, is on the track team, and
Ferved on the publication board
during his sophomore year.
Linnus Carroll, Blue Shirt took
first honors in the sophomore pres
idency match. Although his lead
when the city campus vote was to
taled was only 109 to 156 his to
tal waa boosted to 194 bo 163 after
agricultural college total came in.
He defeated Don Easterday. the
Yellow Jacket aspirant. Carroll's
fraternity is Phi Kappa, and in ad
dition be is in the R. O. T. C. band,
belongs to the Corn Cobs, and is
on the track squad.
Johnson Leads.
Lyman Johnson. Blue Shirt
member of Delta Tau Delta, led
Dick Moran by eighty votes in the
ballot tussle for freshman presi- ,
dent. Johnson is the leader of one j
of the town's larger dance bands, j
bands. j
RIph Slocura easily outdi-1
tanced the field in the marathon !
for Ivy Day orator. Hi vote to-j
taled 736 while John McKnight, :
Yellow Jacket had 533, and Alan '
Williams, Independent, had 178. !
Slocurn, supported by the Blue
Shirts, is a member of Delta Theta
fraternity, is freshman law advisor (
and i on the staff of the Nebraska j
Law "EulL"
Little is to be said concerning
the activities of winning Prom girl
candidates. Margaret McK ay.
Kappa Kappa Gamma, if from Dei
Moines. Ia. ; Dorothy Silvis, Kappa
Alpha Theta, cornea from Wagner,
S. V.; Alice Connel, Gamma Phi
Beta, ha uer home in . Fairbury,
and Georgia Wilcox, Chi Omega,
U a Scottsbluff girl.
Convenient lounges, with reading
rooms and study facilities, and
with access to a soda fountain and
buffet are features of the student
union building recently completed
at Iowa.
For those
spring parties
AFTER ALL . . .
It's the orchestra
that makes- the
affair.
Eddie Jtmgbluth
and bis
Hotel Cornhtuker
Orchestra
TELEPHONES
B 1014 8 6971
Y. M. COMMITTEE
WIL LNOMINATE
MEN FOR OFFICES
Tw nominating committees
have been appointed to select can
dldates for election of officers to
the two branches of the V. M. C. A.
The nominations will be known in
the last week of February, and the
elections will be held sometime
during the first week of March, a
definite date not having been de
cided upon. The committees fol
low: City campus, Prof. C. H. Pat
erson: Lewis Swingler. '31; Wil
lard Spence, '31; ag campus, Prof.
Carl Kosenquist; Claude Roe. "30;
Joe Bishop. "31. Gen. ec. C. D.
Hayes is ex-offlcio member of both
committees.
FRANKLIN'S DEAN OF
Received Pilot's License in
1930; Has Flown With
Army Photographer.
Ohio State Lantern : The only
flvine- dean of women in America
! is the curious distinction held by i
license in October of 1930. Her
license, the first to be presented to '
any woman in Indiana and the
iounn to an unio woman, was
awarded only after the usual ex
amination, both written and prac
tical, had been passed. Miss Cor
nell was not content to rest on her
laure'3 but added to her flying his-
tory last spring by doing some pil
I oting for an ex-army photogra-
pher who took pictures from the
air of Franklin college.
The name of Cornell is written
' hi ine nisiory oi unio state, not i
t Cornell, but also through the f.
throueh the ef-
torts
forts of her equally famous broth -
ers. Fred Cornell "06. was the
author of "Carmen Ohio." while
Charles B. Cornell '02, outstanding
sanitary engineer, has recently un-
j dertaken an engineering project in
Baltimore.
IS
Pprmanpnt SHff Will Do!
Picked Soon; No More
Applications Taken.
! PHPY flPAni IMP PFR 95
Work has begun for the March
issue of the Akgwan, Edgar Back
us, acting business manager an
nounced yesterday. A permanent
staff will be chosen by the repub
cations board sometime soon, and
contributors are urged to have
their material completed and
ready to submit by the deadline.
Feb. 25.
Applications for the positions of
the humor sheet's permanent staff
closed at noon yesterday. The pub
lications board which authorized
the magazines reinstatement in
December will choose the staff at
a meeting in the near future. An
editor-in-chief .ind business man
ager will be chosen with perhaps
one assistant for each.
Color Plates Made.
Advertising solicitors have al
ready begun work for the March
issue. Color plates for the cover
design which will be printed in
New York are being made up to
day. The entire first issue was sold
the first day of the prodigals re
appearance on the campus la.st
week. Nineteen hundred copies
were printed. Of this number 1.300
when to the permanent subscrib
ers secured in a drive in January.
$1
not a chic ensemble
It's
without
A Smart Bag
Mais jour selection
from our large
showing
- - at
SHOE CALF AND MOROCCO BAGS AND PUESES
of fine leathers and fashion-right modes. Black and
brown are outstanding colors in spring arrivals; but there
are wauy lighter accents for effecting a contrast with
hoiubre' costumes. Novel ornaments lend an additional
note of interest to these new batrs.
Just hundreds from which to
make your choice!
First Floor. '.
Members of Sigma Upsllon. na
tlonal honorary literary fraternity,
will meet Sunday evening at 7 p.
m. in the Engle apartments for
a brief business session, officers
of the organization reported.
A social meeting will follow, at
8:15 p. m.
(jtacon.ti . u.u;; u rc.'c
"Tht Parker Pen is suptrlstivtly good"
COMPOSER Of
iBOHEME, IATOSCA
and MADAMA IUTTERFIY
Wrote his
greatest Operas
with a
Parker Pen
CUAIANTIIO rOR UM
You, too. can caprure your precious
ideas on the fly, if you have this
Pressureless v rmng Parker Duo-
I toKI Pfn fvrr hanHv nn vftnr rrnn
, , ' 1 r
, -"a oeStv-
rarker Pressureless mine as
subconscious zs breathing avoids
all interference with thought.
Go and sec the new streamlined
Parkers that rest low and unexposed
in pocket or hand bag, without
bulge; yet hold more ink
than average. The same pen is con
vertible for Pocket or Desk Base.
THE PARKER PEN COMPANY
Jincsvilk, Wisconsin
1 mmtch.
SI JO to SS
VuqfoM
PEN GUARANTEED 'OI
$5 7 I0
LIFE
Tucker-Shean
Stationers
1123 "0" St.
Latsch Bros.
1118 "0" St.
IS l lS
J
WP7
2.95 ea.
I