FRIDAY, JULY 24, 1931. THREE ALLOTMENT OF STATE SCHOOL FUNDS MADE (Continued from Page 1.) hand and added to the next regu lar apportionment in January. This apportionment falls about $32,000 below the one made a year ago, but is $20,000 more than the one made in January, 1931. Fol lowing are the amounts being re mitted to the treasurer of the re spective counties for the benefit of their schools: Adams $ 8,818.76 Antelope 6,874.51 Arthur 922.20 Banner 1,074.27 'Blaine 1,065.81 Boone 6.499.27 Box Butte 4,299.34 Boyd 3,817.10 Brown 3,054.79 Buffalo 9,043.52 Burt . . , 5,148.28 Butler 6,278.60 Cass 6,765.17 Cedar 7,434.58 Chase 2,677.44 Cherry 6,043.10 Cheyenne 4,515.51 Clay 5.596.81 Colfax 4,551.33 Cuming 5,568.14 Custer 12,452.10 Dakota 3,591.38 Dawes 4,512.79 Dawson 7,254.10 Deuel 1,866.40 Dixon 5,427.85 Dodge 8,691.00 Douglas 55,146.18 Dunday 2,609.66 Filmore 5,656.20 Franklin 3,266.22 Frontier 3,688.07 Furnas 4,091.79 Gage 9,946.68 Garden 2,692.81 Garfield 1,747.05 Gosper 1,320.27 Grant 512.16 Greeley 4,159.30 Hall 8,556.43 Hamilton 5,080.29 Harlan 3.651.78 Hayes 1,590.40 Hitchcock 3,066.74 Holt . 8,475.38 Hooker 401.86 Howard 4.731.49 Jefferson 6,542.37 Johnson 3,851.73 Kearney. 3,378.32 Keith 2,988.85 Keva Paha 1,684.12 Kimball 2.377.72 Knox 8,978.46 Lancaster 29,427.22 Lincoln 9,906.21 Logan 1,100.67 Loup 1,262.45 Madison 8,790.43 McPherson 1.063.03 Merrick 4,111 55 Morrill 4.829.39 Nance 4,266.86 Nemaha 4.245.49 Nuckolls 4.311.99 Otoe 7.829.39 Pawnee 3.902.03 Perkins 3,041.30 Phelps 2.451.53 Pierce 5,174.15 Platte 8.589.19 Polk 4,308.51 Red Willow 8,011.85 Richardson 7,480.31 Rock 2.094.S2 Saline 6,632.41 Sarpy 3.640.61 Saunders 8,134.74 Scottsbluff 10,943.68 Seward 6,623.82 Sheridan 5,193.92 Sherman 2,431.72 Sioux 2.431.72 Stanton 3.559 .81 Thayer 5,338.57 Thomas 680.41 Thurston 4.170.46 Valley 4.340.97 Wassington 4-572'A Wayne 4-J57 52 Webster 4,344.60 Wheeler 1.256.62 York 7,110.27 Total $515,974.70 Amount withheld for tui tion of children of nrmv nffieers 904.50 Grand total $516,879.20 Having completed bis classes in the six weeks session Friday, C. C. Minteer, associate professor of vocational agriculture instructors in Nebraska during August Learn to Dance In cool ballroom, eltcht window and three fans. Special rates to teachers. Can teach you to lead In one lepfton. Guarantee to teach you In bIjc private lessons. ClaHS every Monday and Wednpsduy. Private lessons morning, afternoon, and evening. Ball room and tap. Mrs. Luella Williams Sixty-Six Students From Gage County At Summer Session; Many Teachers Of the sixty-six students from Gage county who have been taking work at, the summer session, thirty-one are from Beatrice. Sixteen of the group from Beat rice have been studying in Teach ers college. Marjorie Esther Col lett, a sophomore who will teach at Kearney this year; Hilda L. Harder, freshman who will be at Beatrice; Bessie Carrithers Head ley, freshman; Dorothy Marie Hethering, freshman who will teach in Gage county; Gcacellyn Huber, junior; Lelia M. Jackson, sophomores, and Dorothy Norma Krousnick, sophomore who will teach at Beatrice, are of this num ber. Others are Ada Florence Kuhl, senior who will teach et Beatrice; Hazel Mae LePoidevin, sophomore who will be at North Platte; Lois Metcalf, junior who will be at Ruskin; Matilda Adelia Poverlin, junior; Lida Sanders, sophomore; Gertrude Wiebe, sophomore; Alice Winsor, sophomore, and Janet Younkin, junior. The last four named will return to teach at Be atrice. Lowell Franklin Heaney is a senior in the Teacher college. Six are taking graduate work toward advanced degrees. They are Mary Margaret Douthit, who will teach at Burchard; Olive Perl Fulton, which will be at Beatrice; Anne Charlotte Pagels, also a teacher at Beatrice; Ruth Hortense Sexton and Anna Marie Stunner, who will teach at Manhattan, Kas. Emil H.Suhr, who will teach at Beatrice, is among taking gradu ate work. Five in Arts and Sciences. The five registered in the college of arts and sciences are Anna Sanders, senior who will teach at Beatrice; Genevieve Grace Gil bert, sophomore; Ina Marguerite McClanahan, senior; Howard Leon ard Jackson, senior, and Clyde Howard Pfaff, also a senior who will teach at Beatrice. Zella Marie Whitmer is taking second year subjects at the univer sity. Abram W. Epp, also a sopho more, is enrolled in the college of agriculture. Willard Jerome Dahn, and William Clark Summers, jr., junior, are taking work in the col lege of engineering. Five From Adams. Five students are registered from Adams. Four are women and are in Teachers college. They are Mildred Genevieve Campbell, a sophomore who will teach at Ad ams; Ruth Ethel Hefti, freshman; Maude Mollins, a sophomore who will be at Douglas; Elsie Ann Mc Clun, junior and a teacher at Ad ams. Joseph Leroy Bowers, who will also return to Adams, is tak ing graduate work. Doris Katherine Clough, senior in Teachers college who will teach at Gothenburg, and L. Bryon Cherry, sophomore in arts and sci ences co'lege, are from Cortland. Of the seven from Wymore, six are women and enrolled in Teach ers college. They are Hope Irene Eamhart, freshman who will teach in Gage county; Neva Esther Eamhart, sophomore who will be at Barnston; Esther Hilder, fresh man and a teacher at Adams; Ma ble Clarice ' Mathews, sophomore who will teach at Wymore; Ber nice Elizabeth Miller, junior, and Emma D. Schwerin, junior who will be at Deshler. Houghton Francis Elias, the only men en rolled from Wymore, is a junior in the college of arts and sciences. Two men are from Virginia. They are Otto Laudimir, graduate student, and Donald L. McGaffey, junior in Teachers college. The three from Odell are Abbic Theodosia McGinley, sophomore in Teachers college; Josephine M. Mc Ginley, sophomore in the agricul tural college, and Arthur R. Majors, who will teach at Odell and is taking graduate work. Verneil Elizabeth Griffin, junior in Teachers college who will teach at Wymore, and Lee Ora Witzen burg, senior in college of engi neering, are from Blue Springs. Liberty Has Three. The three wyomen from Liberty are Mildred Oline Rhine, fresh man; Eva Marie Rhine, sophomore and a teacher at Liberty, and Mary Isabel Hart, also a sopho more and a teacher at Pawnee City. Lulu Belle Day is the only stu dent from Barnston. She is taking graduate work and will teach in Nebraska City. Three of the four women from Clatonia are in Teachers college. They are Helen Grace Deardorff, senior who will be at Hallam; Al ice Louise Hereth, freshman who will teach at Elk Creek, and La Setta Schachenmeyer, freshman who will be at Pickrell. Martha Anne Pregge is a senior in the col lege of arts and sciences and will teach at Clark. Jen Elizabeth Jenkins, a gradu ate student who will teach at Mead, and Marie Mabel Noble, senior in Teachers college, are from Holmesville. Three women who live near Dil ler are also included in the Gage county totals. All are freshmen in Teachers college. Miss Gladys Hays will teach at Clatonia. Erma Evelyn Sible and Sylvia Irene Si ble will teach in Odell. GREELEY COUNTY HAS THIRTEEN. Of the thirteen students from Greeley county who have been at tending the summer session, two are from Greeley. They are Sister Rose de Lima Lohmeier, who is taking post graduate work and will teach at Greeley this year, and Ellen Isabelle Weeks, who is a junior in the college of arts and sciences. Call Lincoln Box Lunch for your Special Picnic Lunches. We Deliver B-4102 f39 STUDENTS!! Get Your Picnic Supplies at HAGERTY'S MARKET Everything for the Picnic, Party, or Dutch Lunch Hageriy's RIarket 238 So. 12th Open 'Til 10:30 and Sundays B2490 BH6I MODERN CLEANING Will Keep Your Garments Fresh and New Looking One Day Service MODERN CLEANERS Soukup & Westover Call F2377 K SIDNEY GROUPENTEUED Dorothy Abbot Entertains Sidney Teachers At Whist Party. Monte Carlo Whist was the en tertainment offered by Miss Doro thy Abbot to a group of summer school students who gathered at her home last Thursday evening. The majority of her guests were present or former teachers at Sid ney. Those who attended the card party were: G. F. Lebendorfer, superintendent of schools at Sid ney; M. Ross, principal of junior high at Sidney, and Mrs. Ross; Minnie Schlichting, Lincoln Teach ers training high school; Ivan Wil son, teacher in North Platte; Leona Wunderlick, teaching in Denver; Mrs. Ethel Lyngbolm, teacher in the schools at Eureka, Nev. Miss Abbot and Miss Rey nolds, both of Lincoln. High scores of the evening were received by Mis. Wunderlick and Miss Reynolds. Mr. Ross and Mr. Wilson received the low scores. ANNUAL SOCIAL WORK INSTITUTE' MEETINGS WILL RE HELD HERE (Continued from Page 1.) graduate of the University of Min nesota and received her case work training in the family welfare society in Minneapolis. At the time of her appointment by Gover nor Weaver as director of the bureau of child welfare work for the State, of Nebraska she was do ing graduate work at the Uni versity of Chicago. Study this year will deal prim arily with the new county unit plan for public welfare as authorized by the legislature this year under S. F. 46 which becomes effective July 1. The law will be explained in de tail, with special emphasis on the way in which it can be made to function in the various counties in order to take care of the delinqu ent, defective and dependent peo ple. Dr. Williams Comments. "In order that each county may avail itself of the opportunities re cently made possible by the new measure, organizations interested in the new plan for social welfare should see that they are repre- Dancing Keeps You Young LEARN TO DANCE Special Rates in Ballroom Dancing Borner Sisters Studio B4819SS History Films To Be Shawn Thursday Special showing of the Yale Chronicles of America Photo dramas will be made next Thursday evening In room 105 of Former Museum building, according to Mr. A. A. Reed, director of the extension divis ion. There Is no charge for this demonstration. Three films are prepared by Yale university and they illu strate the method of visual ed ucation in teaching history. They have been used by many high schools in the state and will again be available next fall. Teachers and superintendents are partcularly urged to attend. sented by at least one member at the institute," declared Dr. Will iams. "Such persons should be selected who would, if appointed, be able to act on the county welfare board when oiganized." In addition to the county unit plan, the various phases of social work will be studied during the two week period. The special course, which was attended by twenty-five persons last summer, may be taken with or without college credit. About twenty registrations have been received to date with several more expected before the first class meets at 10 o'clock Monday morning in room 111 of social sciences building. Classes will meet from 10 to 12 o'clock each morn ing and from 8 to 9 in the evening. B B !.!B:!':H H Until Wednesday July 29 60 Sheets SO Envelopes New Patterns Whitings High (Jrade Stationery Regularly $1.30, now v. fI To Summer Students only & George Bros. 1213 N St. J( fit , fi; Im1! "Wedding Stationers" Bf T ...........-..""""t"'' m -it O UNIVERSITY PICNIC TONIGHT DON'T MISS THIS FUN DANCE TO Eddie Jungbluth and His Pleasing Melodies ENJOY THE RIDES COOL OFF IN THE SALT WATER POOL CAPITOL BEACH Lib : I I Something to wear in the evening: "Pyjamas" or CS when it's too hot to dress up and too hot to go to bed when you want something cool for studying yet suitable for gath erings in the living room then we suggest either our new silk pyjamas in Paisley Prints or our gay rayon "Coolie" Negli gees in new exotic patterns. Both of these lounging gar ments are special purchases and are extraordinary values for G75 ea. ft C3 You will find them on Second Floor. i Miller S' Paine Private Studio. Phone B4258 1220 D St. .art-cry" a Da cjuc II 3C