The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, October 17, 1933, Page FOUR, Image 4

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    FOUR
il'i. I'll:.' il.il, .'."ill i, il-..;
THE NEWLY CROWNED king ami qiiffii of AU Sar-Hon
will Preside as hosts at the sixth annual conibiiir.l Ak-Snr-Hon
I ive Stock Show, Kodeo and Horse Show exposition)! winch will
.men on Annistieo Day, Saturday. Nov. 11, and will continue
fir a full week, through Friday, Nov. 17. Formal invitations
;ire now
' beini: issued to trieiuis
Sar-Ben Live Stock Show- RooO
u..u ehnw pxnosition wnicni
onri unrse Show exposition
will open on Armistice day, Satur
day. Nov. 11. and will continue for
a full week, thru Friday, Nov. 17.
Formal invitations are now being
issued to friends and neighbors of
the entire Ak-Sar-Ben realm.
A brilliant parade is scheduled
for Saturday, Armistice day, as a
grand opening to Ak-Sar-Ben
week. The world's largest 4-H club
baby beef show and an entirely
new group of rodeo contestants
will be featured at the seven eve
ning performances and afternoon
shows at 2 o'clock on Sunday,
Wednesday and Friday.
The new Ak-Sar-Ben king is
Eugene Eppley, nationally known
hotel operator and for many years
one of the important figures in
k-Sar-Ben circles. His queen is
vouthful Peggy Doony, aaugiaei
of the business manager of the
World-Herald. Henry Doorly. and
granddaughter of former Senator
Gilbert M. Hiicncocn.
The entire Ak-Sar-Ben empire is
expected to attend tne Dig sunn
how, horse show and rodeo.
HALLOWEEN COLORS WILL
decorate the table at the Chaper
nne's club tea this afternoon at the
Sigma Nu house. Mrs. Clara Skiles
Prouty win act as humcw
ed by the officers of the club: Mrs.
v w. Nelson. Mrs. H. C. Burgess,
Mrs. Lola B. Hood, Mrs. Chauncy
Smith. Mrs. Cora tsenuey, .
Fannie Schell and Mrs. Zella
Wolfe.
Mrs. E. A. Burnett and Dean
Amanda Heppner will pour, and
three vocal selections will be pre
sented bv Ronald Thompson, Sig
Ep. About forty-five are expected
to attend.
A BUFFET SUPPER will be
given by the alumnae of Alpha
Delta Pi in honor of the active
chapter and pledges at 7 o'clock to
night at the home of Mrs. Albert
.lohnston, when forty-two guests
will be present. Assisting host
esses are Miss Jane Rundstrom.
Mrs. D. J. Brown. Miss Clarisso
Delano, Mrs. Roy True, Mrs. Wil
liam Johnson, Mrs. Hubert Capek,
and Mrs. A. J. Hummel. An infor
mal evening has been planned.
ALPHA DELTA THETA alum
nae will be entertained tonight by
iss Zona Wilcox at her home. Miss
lean Bobbitt and Miss Virginia
Roberts will assist. Plans for a
bridge benefit Friday evening at
Ihc house will be made.
NEBRASKA UNIVERSITY pro
fessors discussed plans to organize
a new club at a dinner held last
night at the Lindell hotel. A ten
tative arrangement rails for a
meeting of the group once or twice
a month to talk over various prob
lems of the day. About twenty at
tended the first meeting, which
LEARN TO DANCE
Guaranteed in 6 Lessons!
Alia S Letaon Course
Private Instruction Only
LEE A. THORNBERRY
S!W 5th Ve jr 2300 VI
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climbed
the ladder
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Wiong by
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and neiwuuors oi me mine nr.-
Dr wmiam Van
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Royen, instructor in the geography
department.
OCTOBER MARRIAGES persist
in holding the center of the stage
In university social circles. Mr.
and Mrs. L. W. Howard of Ray
mond have announced the mar
riage of their daughter, Virginia,
to Lawrence Jones. Both Mr. and
Mrs. Jones are former Nebraska
students. The couple will live in
Raymond.
MISS GR ETCH EN KIRK of At
lantic, la., daughter of S. H. Kirk,
was married to J. H. Imig of
Omaha at 5 o'clock Sunday after
noon at the home of the bride's
sister in Atlantic. The bride wore
a fall ensemble in tones of brown
and corsage of yellow roses. After
the couple returned from their
wedding trip, the couple will re
side in Omaha. Mr. Imig was a
Sig Alpha at Nebraska.
THE WEDDING OF Miss
Thelma McPherson and Fielding
Woods was solemnized Saturday
morning at 9 o'clock at the home
of the bride's parents. Mr. and Mrs.
Arthur McPherson. Alter a short
wedding trip the couple will make
their home in Lincoln Mrs. Woods
attended the university where she
is a member of Kappa Alpha Theta
sororitv and he is an alumnus of
Phi Sigma Kappa.
r
LAST SATURDAY AFTER
NOON Miss Mabel Heyne, daugh
ter of Mr. and Mis. H. A. Heyne
of Wisner was married to Noble
Buell of Murdock in the Congrega
tional church of Wisner. Both Mr
and Mrs. Buell are graduates of
the university where she was a
member of Sigma Kappa and he
was a Sig Alf.
THE ENGAGMENT OF Miss
Marjorie Parr of Mason City, la..
to Joe T. Carroll of Lincoln was
announced Sunday by Mr. and Mrs.
A. J. Parr. The marriage will take
place at 9:30 in the morning of
Nov. 4 at the St. Joseph Catholic
church in Mason Citv. Miss Parr
is a graduate of Nebraska and a
member of Theta Phi Alpha. Mr.
Carroll also attended the univer
sity. The couple will take a trip
to St. Paul and Chicago, and upon
their return will reside in Lincoln.
THE SUMMER MARRIAGE of
Miss Garnett Wertz of Chappell to
Dr. Harold Miller of Phoenix, Ariz..
formerly of Lincoln, which took
place July 28. was announced Sun
day by Mr. and Mrs. W. F. Wertz.
Dr. Miller is a graduate of the uni
versity where he is affiliated with
Sigma Chi and Delta Sigma Delta
fraternities.
TWO FORMER STUDENTS
were married Sunday afternoon in
Des Moines, la. They are Miss
Eva Piairs and Robert Finn. Mrs.
Finn is an alumnae of Kappa Al-
ntio Thpta nnH Afr Finn is n T) 17
Mr. and Mrs. Finn will make their;
home in Lincoln.
ALUMNAE OF Mu Phi Epsilon
utiro anturfQinoH at a lunrhnnn ftt
the Harmony tea room yesterday j
when Mrs. Bernard Gribble, Miss I
Ruth Haberly. Miss Marjorie Miller)
1
iSt ORPHEUM 3N&
VAUDEVILLE
Debell and Byton
"Topica of the Day"
Wheeler and Wheeler
"Spina and Twirli"
Miss Lee English
The Happy Singer
of Bluet"
Ruby Kahoe
"Hula-Hula and Hot"
Tracy Brown's Orch.
ON THESCREEIM
June Clyde 'A Study in Scarlet'
ALL STATE WK
Thr.y-r ti,t ht It taken to Uke
and ran they I, IV K
JUNE KNIGHT
NEIL HAMILTON
SALLY O'NEILL
DOROTHY BURGESS
LADIES
MUST
LOVE"
A t.reat MmWI f omll-Drm
Mat.
10C
R1ALT0
Nit
150
FIRST TIME IN LINCOLN!
A man of anion In a battle of a and
h'artu' He fought fire with fire bul
&j afraid of love!
State
UITrooper
Regis Toomey
Evalyn Knapp
LIBERTY
Time
DOROTHY BURGESS
ALAN HALE
"WHAT PRICE
DECENCY"
Alae
"Fightina With Kit Canon"
with Johnny Mack Brown
Glenn Frank, President of Wisconsin
Universitu. Conducts Open F orum for
Discussion of National Recovery Act
America's National Recovery
Act must be accompanied by a
program of reduction in farm
mortgages, by an extensive pro
gram of credit for industry, and
bv a far more world-minded eco-
nomic and political policy than we i tempt, which should have been
now have to pull us entirely out of made a decade ago, to bring about
the economic depression, Glenn ! a sympathetic and active collab
Frank. oresident of the University oration between industrial states-
of Wisconsin, told more than 1,500
students in the first open forum of
the year at the State University
recently.
The meetinrr was held in the
Great Hall of the Memorial Unicn
building, and the huge room was I
packed to the draped doorways;
with the hundreds of students and I
townspeople. Pres. Frank spoke!
for more than an hour, and then
students asked him questions con
cerning America s new economic
policies for more than a half-hour
longer.
"The NRA alone is not enough,"
Pres. Frank told the students. "If
reductions in farm mortgages, ex
tensive public works, more credit j
for industry, and a more far-sight- "Hie .ka is, jranuiy, a coin
ed foreign policv can be driven ageous gamble," Pres. Frank de
abreast of the NRA, the criticism flared. The Roosevelt adminis
of it as a good social policy but a
bad economic policv would' not be
merited." ; hours, and more employment on
Political statesmanship has the belief that this will restore na
stepped into the breach with no tion-wide consumption to the point
other purpose than to stimulate
American business, industry, and
finance to live tip to its most en
lightened leadership instead of
down to its least enlightened lead
ership. Pres. Frank said, adding
that the NRA program is the re
sult
"With some of the program I do
not agree," he asserted, "but Mr. I
Roosevelt will doubtless be the
first to concur in readjustment of
its details in the light of experi
ence. Upon the achievement of
its major objective of stabilizing
employment and spreadng the na
tional income widely enough
through higher wages and shorter
hours to create a dependable mar
ket for our industrial system
and Miss Jean Malowney were
hostesses. Thirty members attend
ed and Halloween decorations were
used on the table.
A COVERED DISH dinner was
arranged by alumnae of Alpha
Delta Theta Saturday evening at
the chapter house for active mem
bers, pledges and their mothers.
The annual fall fruit shower was
received by the house. Forty guests
were seated at one large table
which was centered with a large
cornucopia and fresh fruit. Mrs.
J. C. Jensen made the arrange
ments. THE MONTHLY LUNCHEON
of Alpha Chi Omega alums were
given Saturday at the home of Mrs.
F. J. Patz with Mrs. R, O. Johnson,
Mrs. Max Roper, Mrs. John Hilder,
Mrs Blanehard Anderson and Mrs.
Frank Dice as assistant hostesses.
Thirty members were present.
FROM THE NATIONAL Pan-
hellenic congress, held recently in
Chicago, Isabel Wolfe Hemenway,
national president of Alpha Delia
Theta. has returned to Lincoln for
,"clnl
for her home in Cortaro, Ariz.
Active and alumnae members of
Alpha Delta Theta are planning a
dinner to be given in her honor at
e miversuy ciuo.
CHICAGO SCENE
OF JOURNALISTIC
j FRATERNITY MEET
! (Continued from Page l.i
; nalism, spoke on the work of
Sigrma Delta Chi in the research
; field, and his subject was con
i tinued by Ralph D. Casey, chair
i man of the department of journal
ism at Minnesota University.
Later E. Ross Bartley, alumnus
of the fraternity and director of
promotion for A Century of Prog
ress, spoke on "Ballyhooing the
Big: Show." He explained the pub
licity procedure behind the project
and discussed at some length the J
field of publicity.
A talk on "Press Time for Op
porunity" was given by Eugene C.
Pulliam, one of the founders of
Sigma Delta Chi and now owner
of a chain of Indiana newspapers.
Frederick S. Siebert, instructor in
the school of journalism at Illinosi
university and a former practic
ing attorney, spoke on "Confi
dence Violation Under the Law,"
recommending that Sigma Delta
Chi sponsor legislation to protect
press confidences. The concluding
talk of the afternoon was given
by Frank Luther Mott, director of
the school of journalism at the
University of Iowa, who spoke on
the possibility of rating college
daily newspapers.
Part of the Saturday morning
KiCKOFF
MANHATTAN
"Battle of Bands"
EDDIE JUNGBLUTH
And His Orchestra
VS.
JOYCE AYRES
Ami His Orchestra
FRIDAY EVENING
October 20th
Admission
IN T
B-A-W L -
at
if I
r
Hotel jORNHUSKER
THE DAILY NKKKASKAN
the very fate of American civiliza
tion hangs
"This program is not Socialism
It is not Fascism. It is not Com
munism. It is not the death wffr
rant of private initiative. It is
simply the crisis-compelled at
manship and political statesman
j ship to the end that this machine
economy of ours shall emancipate
insieau or enslave us.
I The business man's major con
cern is with tne two fundamental
objectives of the Roosevelt drive
for nat.onul recovery, he said. One
of these he labeled as an attempt
"to raise the general pi ice level
to a point at which business and
ndustrv can again make profit
and the farmer realize something
from his toil," and the other "to
spread buying power through
higher wages and shoiter hours to
a point at which business, inaus
try, and agriculture can realize an
adequate volume of sales."
tration asks economic America to
gamble higher wages, shorter
where it will again be profitable
to do business. We are gambling
for high stakes the destiny ot
our children, as well as our own
bread and butter. No one. whether
banker or blacksmith, has the
moral right to pull out of the
game. The promem is to piay our
cards expertly."
Nothing must -tee permitted to
stand in the way of the successful
massing ot consumer-opinion in
support of the businesses that are
backing the national recovery pro
gram, he said, at the same time
adding that the brow-beating and
billingsgate that so often accom
pany boycotting crusades are un
necessary and indefensible in the
prosecution of this campaign.
session was taken up with com
mittee reports. Moran, Nebraska
delegate and chairman of the
membership committee, presented
the report of his committee at the
final session Sunday morning.
Discussions Saturday morning
included talks on editorial unity,
typography of modern publica
tions, editorial criticism as a con
structive influence In public af
fairs, and a review of the frater
nity's history. Principal speakers
we're Frank Parker Stockridge,
editor of the New York American
Press, and Marlen E. Pew, editor
of Editor and Publisher.
Saturday afternoon delegates
witnessed a model initiation in
which two undergraduate students
and an associate member were in
ducted into the organization.
Most of the representatives left
Chicago Sunday afternoon and
evening to return to their univer
sities. Gentlemen may prefer blondes
but freshmen at Ball State Teach
ers college in Indiana prefer bru
nettes, according to the results of
questionnaires circulated recently
on the campus. The ideal coed in
the eyes of the first-year nv!n
possesses the following qualities:
Brunette, bobbed hair, average
size, talkative with a good line,
good student and meek. The college
hero in the opinion of the freshman
coeds should have curly dark hair,
brown eyes, averaee looks, and be
tall, athletic, talkative with a good
line and meek in spirit, besides
wearing smart clothes. The most
overwhPlming vote enst was in
favor of the athlf te. In a choice be
tween the athletes, non-athletes
and social butterflies, the social
butterflies went entirely scoreless
with non-athletes polling but a few
votes. The talkative boys did not
have such a great majority since
the strong and silent type was
held in favor by a great many
girls.
At the University of California
at Berkeley there are three to-operative
boarding houses for wom
en. Students unable to pay for
room and board in cash terms are
allowed to bring farm supplies,
canned goods, etc. in payment. The
latest adventure has been the re
furnishing of an old Nursery
home into a boarding house.
MothT Goose pictures grinned at
the would-be dwellers at their
every turn and pictures of bright
littlp toy walls. But now they are
all buried artistically beneath lay
ers of pastel tints of paint, and
the girls have carried suitcases
and boxes into their new home.
Eleven girls are now living in this
latest home and there is room for
five more.
y five Cents Per Couple
EAUTIFUL NEW
R - O - O - M
DUPLICATED NAMES
(MUSE REGISTRAR
Sage Favors Law Preventing
Students From Having
Identical Titles.
AMES, la., Oct. 16. There
ought to be a law, or something,
to prevent students from having
duplicate names, in the opinion of
J. R. Sage, registrar at Iowa State
College, and his staff.
Ttvn Marv L. Williamses and
two Robert J. Browns are listed
among this years students, and
Mr. Sage is seeking to avoid con
fnoinn hv mnkine- sure that their
entire middle names, rather than
initials only, are included in the
new college directory. The problem
ia rnmnlirntprf hv the oresence of
two additional Robert Browns, but
they have thoughtfully provided
themselves with different middle
initials.
Last vpnr thi eollepe enrolled
two Charles Frederick Clarks, and
both of them were electrical en
gineering students.
FURY ANNOUNCES
COMMITTEES FOR
MILITARY EVENT
(Continued from Page 1.)
stitute at Indianapolis; Miss Nellie
Lee Holt, head of the department
of religious education of Stevens
Anderson, Clayton F. Kunze,
Frank E. Prawl, Neil V. Hall and
all Juniors in Military Science.
Mai. John W. Crissv is the ad
visor for the publicity and invita
tions committee of which Cadet
Maj. L. G. Zinnecker is chairman.
Other members of the committee
are Cadet Capt. Walker M. Cord-
ner, Cadet First Lieut. Richard A.
Moran, James D. Eraser, Edward
L. Witte, William L. von Seggern,
G. W. A. Penico, and Cadet Sec
ond Lieut. George H. Murphy.
Members of the Refreshments
and music committee of which
Maj. Carl A. Bishop is advisor are:
Cadet Maj. Norman E. Prucka,
chairman; Cadet Capt. Clair R.
Bishop, Dan C. Easterday, Cadet
First Lieut. John G. Aldrich, Fran
cis H. Ayres, Allen W. Berkman,
Victor Chab, Robert V. Chase,
Dean M. Cole, Karl R. Halter, Wil-
iam A. Letson, and Charles J.
Owen.
Cadet Maj. Maurice L. Loomis
is chairman of the check room and
parking committee of which Capt.
W. Spoerry is advisor. Other
members of the committee are Ca
det First Lieut. Eldon E. Farris,
Don M. Ferguson, Clarence A.
Green, Floyd D. Herman, James
H. Howard, Laurence E. Humph
rey, Tabor W. Kelley, Carlyle A.
Soienson, Leonard A. Tangney.
and Dale E. Taylor.
Capt, E. H. Connor is the ad
visor of the program and purchas
ing invitations committee. Cadet
Maj. Byron W. Goulding is chair
man of the committee. Other mem
bers are Cadet Capt. Gordon A.
Void, Cadet First Lieut. Harold W.
Butler, Charles V. Dukeslow, Miles
B. Hauck, Richard Joy, Kenneth E.
Martin and Stafford C. Nelson.
TEACHERS WILL HEAR
PROMINENT SPEAKERS
(Continued from Page I.)
college: Dr. J. V. Breitwieser, dean
of the School of Education at the
University of North Dakota; Dr.
Edgar W. Knight, professor of ed
ucation at the University of North
Carolina; Dr. B. E. Schmitt, pro
fessor of modern history at the
University of Chicago; Dr. Clyde
M. Hill, head of the department of
education of Yale university: Miss
Kate Wooford, who holds a fellow
ship at Columbia university: and
Branch Rickey, vice president and
business manager of the St. Louis
Cardinals and former athletic
coach and director at several uni
versities. The topics in general will deal
with teaching technique, the rela
tion of the NRA to education, and
the future of education. Demon
strations of teaching methods will
form part of the program. Gen
eral meetings will be held for all
of the teachers .division meetings,
for the different fields of teaching,
elementary, high school, rural
school, and college, and section
meeting's for discussion concerning
the various academic subjects.
THREE FACULTY
MEN BACK FROM
MINNESOTA MEET
(Continued from Page 1.1
clal position ot past president.
William C. Knoelk. assistant su
president of the institute during
the past year, now holds the offi
perintendent of the Milwaukee
schools was elected president, and
the new vice president is Roy H.
Brown, Journalist from Rockford.
111.
At the Friday evening banquet,
which was held in honor of the
president. Professor Cochran, Dr.
Laurence M. Gould, who was sec
ond in command of Commander
Byrd's expedition to the south pole,
was the speaker. His subject con
cerned geological discoveries dur
ing this exploration of the Antarc
tic regions. Dr. Gould is now a
professor of geology at Carleton
college, Northfield, Minn.
At the University of Kansas one
of the most important scrambles
each year is the seeking of park
ing space in the designated cam
pus zone. Each student with a car
is required to obtain a tag which
entitles him to a "stall." There are
so mmy cars that a large numhri
fail t' receive such permits. What
a situation! Here the student has
plenty of parking space, nut noth
ing to paik.
At the University 'if Noith
Carolina, hoarding houses and res
taurants offer free meals each fall
as advertising. On one occasion
this year an entire fraternity
which owned its own dining room,
walked into a restaurant armed
with dinner invitations aDd pro
ceeded to hold a chapter meeting.
YOUR DRUG STORE
Jut th pla' fr 1ho inaj.py
lunch uni quirk Drug
THE OWL PHARMACY
US No 14th t p St.. Phone B10
WE DELIVER
Wisconsin University (
Offers 14 Libraries
For Reference Worh
University of Wisconsin students
have the opportunity of using
fourteen libraries in their work of
obtaining an education at the state
university, a survey of campus li
brary facilities has revealed.
In addition to the local city li
brary, there are six main libraries
and seven branches which stu
dents may use These libraries con
tain more than a million volumes
on every imaginable subject, in ad
dition to approximately half a
million pamphlets of various kinds.
The main libraries are those of
the University of Wisconsin, the
State Historical society, the Wis
consin Academy of Science, Arts
and Letters, the state law library,
the legislative reference library,
and the Madison Free library. Du
plicate copies of books and pamph
lets are kept by these libraries
only in case of exceptional demand
by the students and public gen
erally. The library of the University ot
Wisconsin, located in the main li
brary building on the campus, con
tains about 447.000 volumes and
298,000 pamphlets, covering a wide
variety or suujetis. me His
torical library, in the same bund
ing runs a close second with 279,
000' books and 298.000 pamphlets.
State law and legislative refer
ence libraries are housed in the
state capitol building. The law li
brary contains more than 100.000
volumes, while the reference li-
u ,. v,oc rvmro than fiO.OOO books
besides innumerable pamphlets and
clippings. The Madison Free li
brary has nearly 100.000 volumes.
The list of university branch li
braries includes those in the bio
logical, geological, agricultural,
English, law, medical, and astron
omy departments. Each of these
libraries are located in the respec
tive department buildings, to make
them easily available to the stu
dents who are taking courses in
those fields of study.
In order to instill spirit into the
team of the University of Minne
sota an Indian peace drum is used
which produces a throbbing per
cussion which can be heard for
miles.
WHY BORROW A CAR?
We have not raised Rent-a-Car
prices. They are still at the low
est ever offered In Lincoln. Flat
rate for evenings and specials for
lone; trips. Good cars, insurance,
always open. NRA.
MOTOR OUT COMPANY
1120 P St. B6819
"WHEN A
NEEDS A
THE PIPE TOBACCO THAT SPEAKS FOR ITSELF
Named in honor of Clare Brigjjs, Amer
ica's most lovable cartoonist, BRIGGS
Pipe Mixture appeared quietly on the
market a few months ago.
It seemed to inherit the qualities of the
man himself! Kindly, gentle and extra
winning.
Without ballyhoo, without blare of
trumpets . . . BRIGGS began to sell like
sixty ! Each smoker told another smoker,
and he told still another.
BRIGGS will need no selling talk to sell
you. Just try a tin and let it speak for itself!
XirrT FACTORY FRESH Y" I" XSV'
RRIGG Pip Mixture,
la-pound lint . . . and
TUKM)AY. OCTOBER 17. Um
OWANS WILL CONDUC
LitTie international is t0
.ill- 1! it
Be Patterned Prom Annual
Chicago Show.
AMES. la., Oct. 16.-StiuJonu
at Iowa State college will try their
hand at conducting a HvesWb
l n4! U..JH . ... -I... .... "
HUUW UL llll.-ll iwu uti, U.
jn iiiHL ume iuu iweniieth 'Lit.
tie International," patterened ai'toi
the annual Chicago exposition, win
be sponsored by the Block arm
Eridle club, student organization
About 200 students are expected
lo compete
siuneni .superinieniiems ot u
various divisions follow: Sheen
Dwight Booth, Washington: beet
cattle, Irvin Edwards, Wintr-rsct
dairv cattle. Marshall Dearclon
Britton, Okla.; horses, Lewis lW
stra, Monroe; poultry, Rioharo
Heeren, Platte, S. D.; and Hors
Wilbur Latham, Alexander.
Among the freshman command
ments published in the Utah
Chronicle is: "Thou shalt not ken
thyself in the presence of one
woman tor it is not good.
HAIRCUTS
3SC
LeRoy L. Leger
340 So. 10th St.
Hours 8 to 6:30
Coat
Time
is YOURS
CLEAN?
QIVE it the spic and span,
well tailored look it had
when new... by sending it to
US to clean.
af ARSiTY
V CLEANERS
B3367 221 A. H
Jce Tucker Roy Wythert
FELLER
FRIEND"
ii alio sold in l-ro" ni
ia 1-pound Humidor Kejt.