TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 21. 1933. FOUR THE DAILY NERRASKAN CAMPilSOCIETy) "T"-' ' 1 WHAT WITH INTEREST CENTERED jirimurly on 1 he Kosuu-t Kliil morning twin- iut Saturtliiy ami skit lvhi'iii-sals takinur uitc 11 lit of tinic, tlinv isn't niiu-li doing during the week. Kvrruiiu- coiiiu-ctc'd av it li the show is madly dashing around making 'last, niinuto pivparations, and it appears that the thcahr will le rruwdcd with sic1;itors, anxious to see who will he revealed as eln-aska Sweetheart. NOVEMBER SEEMS TO BE one of the most popular months for both weddings and engage ments of former university stu dents. Two marriages took place last Saturday in Lincoln, one in the afternoon and one in the eve ning. THE AFTERNOON ceremony was that of Miss Julia Snyder, of College View, to Vinton C. Cheuv ront of Lincoln at St. Paul's Evangelical church in the presence of the families and intiniHte friends. Mrs. Cheront attended the university school of music. Fol lowing a short trip to Kansas City, the couple will live in Lincoln. THAT SAME EVENING. Miss Clara Marie Scott was married to Eugene Vanderpool at St. Paul's. Preceding the service Lucille Reillv sang and Milan Lambert. organist, played several selections. Miss Ruth ' Scott served as her sister's attendant, and Edward Wolfenbarger attended the groom as best man. Stephen Taylor. Ed ward Melker, and Frank Crabill were ushers. A reception in the church par lors followed the ceremony, which was attended by the hundred and fifty guests. Mr. and Mrs. Vander pool both of whom are former students at the university will make their home in Lincoln. AND A WEDDING WHICH will take place in Omaha on Dec. 16 is that of Miss Jean Kinman and Rowland Nelson. Miss Kinman was an Alpha Delta Pi at Ne braska, and Mr. Nelson is a gradu ate of the Creighton law school and is now connected with the federal land bank. The couple will reside in Omaha. AT THE LINCOLN hotel Satur day evening, about a hundred ac tive and alumni members of Chi Phi will attend their annual alumni round-up. Hugh Wallace of Omaha will act as toastmaster. and brief talks will be given by Dr. Harold W. Stoke and Mr. Leonard Flanv burg of Lincoln. Mr. John Laten ser. and Mr. Fred Naughtin of Omaha. Arrangements are in charge of Ray Strawn, Bill Crabill. and Jack Potter. A BARBEQUE SUPPER was given by the Kappa Delta alumnae in honor of the pledges at the Shrine club shelter house Monday at 6 o'clock. After the supper forty-five guests gathered for a fireside party. Alice Bookstrom was in charge of arrangements. A MUSICAL TEA wa3 the fea ture of the Sigma Alpha Iota, na tional professional musical soror ity, meeting at the home of Mrs. Clarence Emerson, Sunday, at 4 o'clock. The sixty members attend ing were greeted by the receiving line, consisting of Mrs. Clarence Emerson, 'Mrs. Vernon Forbes, president of the alumnae chapter, Lucille Reilly, president of the ac tive chapter, and Mrs. H. V. Rid nour, patron. Those appearing on the program were Lucille Reilly, soprano, Laura Kimball, contralto, and Ruth Hill, pianist. The Sigma Alpha Iota, vocal ensemble also took part. Mrs. Vernon Forbes and Mrs. C. A. Linch, assisted by Lois Rathburn, presided at the "tables decorated In blue and white. The committee in charge of arrange ments were Berniece Klein. Ruth Hill, Lois Rathburn. and Katherine Simpson, ushing chairman. A RECEPTION IN the drawing room followed the dinner at the Chi O house last Thursday evening which was given in honor of the Chi Omegas who had been married STA1TLEY JONES IS CONVOCATION SPEAKER TODAY Continued from Page 1.) of the team, though not expressly planned for the university stu dents, are open to them. One of these is the youth supper at the First Plymouth Congregational rhurch sponsored by the Lincoln Council of Religious Education. Fencer King, president of the council, will have charge of the meeting. Dr. Jones is not a new speaker to the Lincoln people as he was one of the lecturers at the Epworth assembly early last summer. Be sides being prominent as a mis sionary Dr. Jones is also a noted author and public speaker. He is known in missionary work as the man who refused to become a bishop because he would not be able to continue his misaiuuary activities. President of College. Dr. Yl-Fang Wru came to this country last summer as guest speaker at the International Con gress of Women held in Chicago. In August she was a delegate to the Institute of Pacific Relations in Bannff. Canada. Dr. Wu is one of the leading young feminists in China as besides being the presi dent of Ginling college she is also vice president of the National Christian Council of China. Last year during the meeting of CLASSIFIED ADVERTISEMENTS Cluslfieds Are Cash 10c PER LINE kllnlmum of 3 Line I HELP WANTED WANTED Girl to work for rrn'al. I to i l m. and 12 to 2 p. m. Phone L639 ) Lost and Found. IOPT JH! Ar.iri frat'rnitv pip. Ixixni! Ptrnn. Rwrl. Call R3907. Apartment for Rent rL'DLEY ST. Two rrmnm i o ; kit-hntte. furni."h1 partmnt.. rroun4 floor. h, srim. light, tele phone, garage. MH'n. 1 hill's I)oin; Tuesday. Chaperons club. Carrie Belle Raymond hall, 2:30. Meeting of Sigma Kappa Alumnae association and Moth er's club with Miss Gertrude Beers and Luvicy Hill in the evening. Thursday. Journalism dinner at 6:30 at the University club. Big Sister buftett supper in the Armory. Friday. Meeting of Phi Omega Pi Mother's club at the chapter house in the evening. Chi Phi house party. Saturday. Chi Phi alumni banquet at the Lincoln hotel at 6:30. Meeting of Mortar Board alumnae with Mrs. J. L. Sellers at 2:30. Delta Sigma Lambda house party. since last spring. Cardinal and straw, the sorority colors, '. ere used in the decoration, and cor sages were presented to each guest. The guests of honor were Mrs. Ernest Rausch, formerly Josephine Buol; Mrs. Ted Tinker, formerly Virginia Van Waning; Mrs. John Rennau. formerly Eleanor Rasse; and Mrs. Robert Cole, formerly Cornelia Gant. V NEWLY ELECTED AS presi dent of the Kappa Mother's club is Mrs. E. P. McLaughlin of Lin coln. She was chosen at a luncheon at the chapter house last Saturday noon which was attended by four teen Lincoln mothers and their daughters. "GEORGES CLEM ENC E A U" will be the subject of a talk by Prof. Michael Ginsberg of the romance languages department at a meeting of the Omaha I.'AUiance Francaise, Friday night at the Fontenelle hotel. A CHRISTMAS PARTY was planned by the Zeta Tau Alpha alumnae at a buffet luncheon Sat urday noon at the home of Miss Maude Rosseau. Mrs. Oz Black. Miss Merle Beattie, and Miss Anna Zeman assisted. Miss Floia Woods of Omaha was a guest. v A RECENT VISITOR of Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Faulkner was Jimmy Pickering, who stopped in Philadelphia to see them while on his way to Europe. Virginia Faulk ner, former Alpha Phi here, plans to spend the Christmas holidays with them, and Mrs. A. C. Faulk ner is hoping to be in Philadelphia shortly after that. THIS AFTERNOON THE Chap erone's club will be entertained at Raymond hall at 2:30 o'clock. The hostesses are Mrs. W. A. Brown, Mrs. Gertrude Adams. Mrs. Mel sana Daniels. Mrs. E. V. Marsh. Miss Scow, and Mrs. H. V. Minor, who is chairman of the group. A -COME TO COFFEE" party will entertain the members of the Sigma Kappa Alumnae association and the Mother's club this evening at the home of Miss Gertrude Eeers and Miss Luvicy Hill. Mrs. Clyde Yost will assist. The evening will be spent packing a Christmas box for the Maine Seacost Mission, which is sponsored by Sigma Kappa. Each member will take a toy and garment for the box. The Mortar Board alumnae will be entertained by Mrs. J. H. Sel lers Saturday at" her home. Students Desiring Teaching Positions May Register .ou Students desiring teaching positions for the second se mester of the current school year may register with the department of educational service, 305 Teachers Col lege, on any Monday or Thursday beginning Monday, November 20. R. O. Moritz. Director. the Institute of Pacific Relations in China last year. Dr. Wu ac quired the distinction of the "fly ing first lady." Dr. Wu, a delegate to the meeting, was marooned in Nanking because the boat and rail service had been discontinued by the activity in the Shanghai "inci- ucliu" Di:. Wu. iiuAeVef. flew tO the conference and earned for her- j self the title of the "flying first i lady." j Founded Church. Rev. Roos. bishop of Hankow, is one of the founders of the Chung Hua Sheng Kung Hui, the national Episcopal church of China, and is also honorary secretary of the Na tional Christian Council of China. He is widely known for his work in promoting church unity and a better understanding of China. Dr. Liu. president of the Uni versity of China, comes to Amer ica as a special representative of the Chinese government. He Is one of the founders of the Anti-Civilian War league of China. He it widely respected in China as being a man of great influence in guid ing the state and citizenship of China. Other members of the team who will not appear on programs pri marily for university students are Miss Lillian Picken of Setara. India; Rev. Walter Getty, secre tary of missionary education; Mrs. Lydia G. De Seo, director of re ligious drama: Dr. Charles R. Wat son, president of the American university at Cairo, Egypt, and Rev. H. F. LaFlarnme. honorary secretary of united foreign mis sionary conferences. The Marquette university foot ball squad includes twenty-one Milwaukee youths. UNITED FOREIGN ' . .J Ji'. I IZ ".- " mmmammmmtttllmBmmmmm , M t r The picture is a part of the foreign missionary-gospel team which is scheduled to be here Nov. 21 and 22. Seated, left to right, are Dr. E. Stanley Jones, India; Dr. Yi-Fang Wu, president of Gingling college, Nanking, China; Miss Lillian Picken, Satara India; Dr. Herman Chen-en Liu, presi dent Shanghai university, China. Standing left, to right, Bishop Logan H. Roots, Hankow, China; Rev. Walter Getty, secretary missionary education; Mrs. Lydia G. De Seo, director, religious drama; Dr. Charles R. Watson, presi dent American university, Cairo, Egypt; Rev. H. F. Laflamme, honorary secretary of united foreign znissionery conferences. New York City Institutes New School For Purpose of Teaching Bartending Is your college education a fail ure? Are you still trying to find a field for which you are, best fitted? Well, if the university doesn't offer you a wide enough scope for your ambitions perhaps a new school which has recently opened in New York city will really show you the line your tal ents "are directed along. This institution is known as the American Bartenders' institute and it is devoted to the teaching of how good drinks are made, and what distinguishes one from an other. Now that the eighteenth amendment is on the road to being repealed, schools of this type will probably be opened all over the countrv. for there is no reason wny us lype oi o. B..uu,u be made into a science, since even; raising children has become a . sc,ence- I Alcoholic Instruments Included, i The institution is comprised of a 1 number of class rooms, is supplied with all the instruments necessary J for a worthwhile education along i the alcoholic line; shakers, kegs, j glassware, steins, and textbook in formation, with everything in fact but the alcohol. Students may bring; in their own liquor. Contrary to the elementary courses offered in the engineering school, the medical, law, journal ism, and other schools on campus which present uninteresting dry facts polished by the thought that perhaps when one gets into the course itself more interesting things will turn up. the elementary courses in this school patriotically deal with the making of the Amer ican cocktail. Mixing Drinks Course. Ambitious beginners are shown the proper manner in which' to make a Tom Collins, gin fizz. Bronx, Manhattan, dry Martini. "I HUNTED all day a long . . . and just knocked Xjt- Tr. ,emcold- i ;'- ttr "I smoke Chesterfields all fJf '-X'J the cigarette that's MILDER MISSIONARY TEAM COMING TO LINCOLN and other favorite concoctions. Emphatically stated, however, is the fact that no courses will be given on the elements combined in Bowery Smoke or that favorite of the Broadway clip joint, Mickey Finn. After this course has been suffi ciently mastered the student may elect a semester's work in the fan cier wines and liquors, and in this course he will be taught the dis tinguishing characteristics between chablis and madeira, muscatelle and riesling, angelica and sau terns, claret and tokav. Bartender is Professor. I One of the members of the dis i tinguished faculty is Prof. Roland I D. Gervin, former head of the bar at th(? Hoffman House New york He wjl, aize cockta shaking. insisUnjr particu- larlv that thev be shaken horizon- tally rather than up and down. The regular course includes Uirty lectures with laboratory work and extends over a four week period, and there are also night school courses for those who are unable to attend in the day time. ramming Opposed. 'Cramming" on this subject Is strenuously opposed to. aitho a shorter period for learning what the college has to teach is per missable. A. H. Paine, a former advertis ing man, is dean of the school, and it is his personal opinion that the school will be successful inasmuch as there will be a greater demand for good cocktail mixers after the repeal. During the prohibition era people would drink anything so long as it had a kick, but now it is believed a more critical feeling will develop upon the part of the genera public. No Football Team. In spite of the fact that the the time and 1 11 tell the j f T ; r S world... they're milder!" C '",jA y' J) jfkt Sjz.. ' J "V ' - U " " " y ' A XTft v VV ..i,v - . V TTTTn 1 school has no football team to spur it on to collegiate heights, it has already developed such a genuine school spirit that there is every reason to believe that its members will even be willing to die for it. The school is co-educational, and as yet no extension courses are planned. STOKE REGRETS TREND TOWARD NATIONALISM (Continued from Page 1.) now so omnipresent and so om nipotent." He attributed the nationalistic views of the people also in part to the fact that international ma chinery having failed in its at tempt to find peace and safety from war is losing the confidence of the people and they are being thrown upon the resources of their own nations for efforts to restrain war. "I regret that such a spirit is rising," Stoke added, "for it can not help but bring with it the at tendant evils. Nationalism invari ably encourages a spirit of nar rowness and exclusiveness to grow up within a nation." He stated that if the new nationalism is like the old it will bring about the do- I mination of society by war and preparations for war. Origin of Sea Serpent Tales .i' Explained t Kr in Ire lai!y Cro;nal. Fantastic stories of huge sea serpents floating or squirming about at the surface of the ocean are not always the result of look ing through a bottle that contains strong liquor, nor are they always conjured up through pure imagina tion, according to Prof. E. R. Hall, curator of mammals in the Cali fornia museum of vertebrate zo ology. "Stories like this." he explained. 'get started and pyramid them j selves. If one person says that he j the cigarette that TASTES BETTER sees a serpent, the next man who thinks he sees a strange animal in the same region is more apt to be lieve his eyes, "Investigation almost always has proved the 'serpent' to be float ing trees, wreckage from ships, kelp or detached masses of sea weed that grows close to shore. Then, too, logs chained together, perhaps with a knot of roots on the end log resembling a head, may give rise to these stories. This might happen especially around the Pu'get Sound region, where the most recent rumors of this nature have arisen. Chains of logs used to surround other logs to make an island are seen rather frequently in this lumber country." Several other explanations have been suggested. Landlubbers and seafarers can see almost anything through a distorting layer of sur face water or a sight dimming fog. Schools of porpoises seen as coils of one huge animal, the back of a whale lying just awash, or a brok en length of hawser twisted and pulled by the waves may a-ssume strange shapes. E Laboratory Studies Made By Iowa State College Experimentors. FARM WASTE TO BE USED AMES, la. Ways and means of heating and lighting the farm stead from the waste products of the farm are now being exten sively studied by the Ames Field Station of the United States de partment of agriculture and the engineering experiment Station of Iowa State college. Laboratory studies have prog ressed to the erection of an ex perimental plant for the produc tion of gas on a farm adjoining the Iowa State campus, using corn stalks and cess pool sewage from house and barn as. the raw materi als of fermentation. The goal for which the engi neers are striving contemplates a farm plant capable of producing 200 cubic feet per day of gas suit able for burning as fuel, or light ing purposes, by utilization of 40 HATS . . . CAPS . . . SWEATERS . . . CORDUROYS . . . CLEANED CASH & CARRY PRICES lOc OFF Our Office Is Handy. Tsf ARSITY V CLEANERS 221 No. 14 Joe Tucker B3367 Roy Wythers to 50 pound.-i ot shredded corn stalks per day. It Is believed that tho construction cont of such a, farm unit would approximate anu to $500, exclupive of distribution equipment within the house. "It is hoped to aid rural sections In the west where coal is expen sive and illuminating gas cannot be obtained," states P. Burl Jacobs, chief ot the Ames Field Station. "Utilization of certain vegetable wastes for generation of gas, either on the farm or from n central plant located In a small community which is not served hy illuminating gas, would .simplify the 'farm waste' problem insofar as such districts are concerned. "An alternative method of pro ducing gas from wastes has been considered, ' continues Mr. Jacobs, "whereby the materials are placed in a suitable retort and distilled at high temperatures. A considerable; investment for apparatus for dis tilling and storing the gas is re quired, and some chemical engi neering knowledge is armost a pi e. requisite for successful operation of Such a unit. "Considerable study has been given by the Bureau of Chemistry and Soils of the department of ag riculture to the possibility of erect ing central distillation plants in small communities, whereby con tinuous operation might be main tained, on a sufficiently large scale to justify the employment of trained chemists to operate the process, and where sufficient ac cumulated by-products could be collected for marketing In quanti ties large enough to justify the operation." low a Students Enter Guile I AMES. la.. Nov. 20. Four Iowa State college students left here yesterday morning for Kansas City to compete in the intercollegiate meats judging contest at the American Royal Livestock show tomorrow. The four are Gleason Diser, Booneville; Roy M. Hun toon, Des Moines; Roy E. Olson, Terrill, and Thomas Scott. Petry. Prof. Fred J. Beard of the Animal Husbandry department is coacn. Don't let "recurring" ains ruin your day and deprive you of your lormil activity. Don't t'.kechancei otflurklni; xamt. Banish such pains ith kil.-ns uhlctv. Headaches, neuralgia, backache, cramps. jcJ other localized pains re promptly and elite tivel reed hy astnalldosaite. K.alm . devel oped byjohnjn & Johnson, are sale. I ho are not habii-iorminss. 'o not affect digestion or heart action. Your drumtist has Kalms in purse-size boxes ot 1 2 tablets. KALIYIS FOR RELIEF OF "RECURRING" PAINS FREE SAMPLE SIND COI POV (Icumcuufitnca () "- 0 Send roe a FREE sample of Kulm. Name Address. .Sl-J Tom Co. 19J3, Liggett - M