The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, November 16, 1934, Page FOUR, Image 4

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    FOUR
FRIDAY, NOVKMHKK 16, 1931,
THE DA TIT NERRASKAN
ft
. i
i
CAMtPHJSOOETY
w
ITH ONLY ONE PARTY ON THE
campus this weekend it looks lis if
everyone- will have to no to Lawrence to
enjoy themselves in fact it. looks as if
nearly everyone is. The team is u'oinj to
leave on a train Friday evening and the
Tassels, Corn Colts, hand, and spectators
that aren't driving will (tro to Kansas on
a special train leaving Lincoln at 7
o'clock Saturday morning. The pep or
ganizations will hold a huge rally upon
reaching the town nlMhe Jayhawks to cn
couraire their team on to victory tho
K. U. pep organization will entertain the Tassels at a tea follow
ing the game; and a good time will he had ly all. The excursion
train won't return to Lincoln until six o'clock Sunday morning
80 if in your Monday morning class you're still seeing some
rather sleepy eyes, maybe you'll understand.
DELTS going to Kansas are
Harold Brill, Paul Amen, John
Howe, Stanley Grant, Henry
Amen, Don Eberly. Orville Enten
man, Bill Gray, Berle Sampson,
Emmett Morava, Elmer Hubka,
and Jim Burke.
THE PHI GAMS are really do
ing right for themselves for the
house is being closed and the whole
chapter is going. The Phi Psi's are
running a close .second with about
three-fourths of its members at
tending the game.
FROM THE Chi Phi house, La
Verne Strough, Bill and Jim Cra
bill, George Pipal. Tom Naughtin,
Bob Burow, Clayton Sehwenk, Bob J
Funk, and Frank Crabill are going.
!
T. K. E's. will be represented in
Lawrence by Clarence Gerner, Ed
Simon, Royal King, Russell Gil
man. C. Boyd Krewson, Dale Car
stenson, Earl Carstenson, John
Phelan, Harold Hellerich, Harold
Paisley, Milo Smith, Dean Thorpe,
Jerry Pi ochazke. Lenord Kreuger,
and Leonard Rail.
AND THE D. Us. going are
Beverly Finkle, Louis Cass, George
Grey, Robert Long, Fred Guggen
moss, Dick and Hugh Schmidt,
Hank Kosman, Gene Pester, Gene
Stone, Hugh Grey, Herbert Meyers,
and Truman Obendorf.
SORORITY members are not to
be outdone by the fellows on the
campus just about as many of
them as fraternity members are
planning to see the Cornhuskers
take the Jayhawks.
NINETEEN Alpha Chi's will be
there. They are: Wilma Lyons,
Mary Edith Hendricks, Ruth
Hardy, Fern Steinbaugh, Barbara
Jeary, Ethel Roher, Martha Mar
tin, Elizabeth Bushee, Ruth John
son, Ruth Brown, Flora Kay
Ewart, Loretta Kunce, Eloise Dil
ler. Maydee Taylor, Arlene Bors, j
Betty Rowland, Janet Mathewson,
Henrietta York, and Ruth Minor.
Janice Campbell, Alpha Delta j
Theta, is also going. j
the Chi O's., who will be there are
Polly Pollard, Ruth Haggman,
Ruth Rider, Jean Russell, Alice
Peterson, Mary Esther YVidner,
Lucille Wiggins, Emile Gray, Yleen
Riesland, and Alaire Barkes.
KAPPA'S who will spend the
week end in Kansas are: Helen
Jane Johnson, Lois White, Vir
ginia Selleck, Elizabeth Kelly,
Margaret Slraub, Marjorie Sau
ders, Margaret Moore, Jane Stein,
Ruth Mallory, Virginia Neville,
Mary Jane Hunt, Mary Jane Mit
chell, Louise Thygeson, Dorothy
Husted, Dorothy Clark, and Jane
Walcott.
BAPTIST students will hold an
open house and a tea at the Bap
tist student house Sunday after
noon from 3 until 5 o'clock. In the
receiving line will be the presi
dents of the Young People's groups
of four Baptist churches. Those
who will assist are Mrs. A. R.
Congdon, Mrs. C. H. Walcott, Mrs.
R. E. Stuermer, and Mrs. H. J.
Theobald. The entertainment for
the afternoon will consist of a
short musical program.
I Movie Directory -
LINCOLN THEATRE CORP.
STUART (Mat. 25c; Nlte 40e)
"THE BARRETTS OP WIM
POLl!J STREET." with Norma
Shearer, Fredrie, March and
Charles LauKliton.
LINCOLN (Mat, 15c; Nile 25c)
'HAPPINESS AHEAD" with
Dirk Powell and Josephtns
Hutchinson.
ORPHEUM (Mat. 15c; Nlte 25c)
"DESIRABLE'' with Jeuu
Muir and George Brent. Plus
a De Luxe Slave Show.
COLONIAL (Mat. 10c: Nit 15c)
Buck Jones In "WHEN A
MAN SEES RED."
LIBERTY (Mat. 15c; Eve. 20c)
WILL ROGERS In "DAVID
IIARUM."
SUN ( Mat. 10c; Nlte 15c)
"HE WAS HER MAN," with
.lames Cagney nnd Joan Blon
dell. Also "THE BIG EXEC
UTIVE," with Ricardo Cortez.
WESTLAND THEATRE CORP.
VARSITY (25c Any Time)
"LADY BY CHOICE." with
May Robson. Carole Lombard
and Roger Pryor.
KIVA (Mat. 10c; Nlte 15c)
NEBR. -IOWA FOOTBALL,
CAME films, plus Reb Russell
in "THE MAN FROM HELL."
Exhibits Showing Development of
English Alphabet Are Condensed in
Show-Case Entrance Main Library
Hy DOROTHY BEXTZ.
Condensed in a single show-ense at the entrance of the main
library building are a group of exhibits which show the develop
ment of the English alphabet from its earliest stages, the result
of many years of gc ieological study. Students, many hundred
of w horn pass by the case every day, who very seldom stop to
examine its contents, mltrht well
Suspension of Five Students
Leads Officials to
Make Move.
IN THt STUDENT Activities
building on the Ag campus the
Home Economics association and
the Ag club will entertain at a
mixer Friday evening from 8:30
until 11:30 o'clock. Chaperones
will be Professor and Mrs. H. C.
Filley, Professor and Mrs. F. E.
Mussehl. and Ruth Eloise Sperry.
Arline Stoltenberg has made the
arrangements for the affair.
THE PI PHI house was the
scene of a miscellaneous shower
Wednesday evening at 10:30
o'clock when its members enter
tained Mrs. Dee Griffith. Mrs.
Griffith was Bobby May before
her marriage last Sunday.
SIG EPS GOING to the game
are Keith Vogt. Punnan Renche,
Lloyd Pflum, Leonard Fleisher,
Milo Jensen, Gene Zuspann, Claire
Watson, Harmon Rider, Richard
Rider, Bob Fecton, Harry McKee,
Chuck Song, Elmer Brackett and
Fred Hunt.
I
ALPHA O's. who will make the'
trip are: Betty Temple, Muriel j
Hook, Pauline Reynolds, Allene !
Mumau, Inez Heaney, Lucille Ber
ger. Clover Beckman, Margaret
Kerl, Helen Humphrey, Marian
Craig, and Catherine Carver, and
WHAT'S DOING
FRIDAY.
Acacia mother's club, bridge
party, chapter house, 8 p. m.
Social Sciences Graduate
Students tea, Ellen Smith
hall, 3 to 4:30 p. m.
Mixer, Student Activities
building, Ag campus, 8:30
o'clock.
SATURDAY.
Marriage of Miss Helen Le
Rossignol and Linco'n Frost,
jr. , home of Mr. and Mrs.
J. E. LeRossignol, 4 p. m.
Nebraska-K. U. gam e,
Lawrence, Kansas.
It's a Townsend Photograph that
satisfies. Adv.
NORFOLK Y. M. MEET
University Deputation Has
Charge Young Peoples
Program Sunday.
''Menaces to the World's Peace
Today" is the theme of the pro
gram that the university Y. M.
C. A. deputation will present at a
joint meeting of the Norfolk young
people's group and the boys' Hi-Y
club, at the Norfolk Congrega
tional church Sunday morning. The
men who plan to make the trip are
Lee Inouyc. Hugh Wyland, and
Charles Hulac.
Wyland will talk on the activi
ties of munition manufacturers and
explain their part in instigating
future wars. Inouye. who is a
Japanese, will outline the effects of
war propaganda on the minds of
the masses of both Japan and this
country.
In his introductory remarks,
Chuck Hulac. who will preside over
the meeting, plans to recount 3ome
Of the horrors of the last war.
According to Hulac who is in
charge of the deputation, this
group will also conduct a meeting
of the Norfolk Y. M. in the Y build
ing on Saturday evening.
UMVERSITY HAS
STUDE1STS FROM
ALL OVER WORLD
DR. PATTERSO Gil ES
SECOD TALK SllDtY
Discussion to Be on Truth
And Meaning of
Religion.
Dr. Charles H. Patterson, as
sistant professor of philosophy at
the university, gives his second of
a series of talks on "The Meaning
and Truth of Religion" for the
Westminster Fellowship discussion
hour at the Westminster Presby
terian church, Sunday evening,
at 7:15.
The young peoples' "Sing." un
der the leadership of Dee Dirks,
starts at 6:00. From 6:45 to 7:15
a light lunch is served. Imme
diately after the lunch. Doctor
Patterson addresses the group.
CLASSIFIED
ADVERTISEMENTS
Classifieds An Cull
lOfl ITR LINE
Minimum rf 1 Lines
FURNISHED apartment for two peo
ple on the ground floor Kit hen
with rink. nrg rlnsrt. good beat.
L4739. 434 No. 17th lU
In the course of any day's ac
tivities in the university, one has
opportunity to rub shoulders with
students from all parts of the
United States as well as from
many different parts of the world.
Statistics compiled by the uni
versity news and feature office re
veal that there are representatives
from thirty-six states in all, with
in the ranks of the student body.
Iowa leads the procession exclusive
of Nebraska with the most stu
dents, and Kansas holds second
place. The neighboring states of
Missouri, Wyoming, and South Da
kota have about the same number
of representatives, and Colorado
completes the list of the six most
prominent states supplying stu
dents to the university. The others
are scattered from Vermont and
New York to Texas. California,
and Washington. Oregon is an
other contributor from the Pacific
northwest, while Louisiana is one
of the southern states represented.
Ten countries and territories
other than the United States have
student delegates. In the order of
remoteness. thy are Persia, Ger
many, Maui, Philippines, Hawaii,
Ireland, Canal Zone. Dutch West
Indies, Porto Rico, and Canada.
The last dominion mentioned, due
to its nearness, holds the honor of
matriculating more students than
any of the other forpign territories
mentioned.
With the exception of four, all
counties of Nebraska have stu
dents in the university, and Lin
coln leads the cities of the state
with Omaha in second place.
By CoHese News Service.
LOS ANGELES. A widespread
movement to supress alleged radi
cal and communistic activities in
American colleges and universities
was under way this week as a di
rect result of the recent suspension
of four student officers and a coed
at the University of California at
Los Angeles.
The movement began on the
Los Angeles campus when an esti
mated 1.200 students banded to
gether to form the "U. C. L. A.
Americans" in an "organized ef
fort to further Americanism and
rid the University of California at
Los Aneeles of communistic or
radical activities."
Impetus was given the student
"crusade" when Provost Ernest C.
Moore charged that the campus
was "a hotbed of radicalism" after
suspending the five students
John Burnside, student body presi
dent: Thomas Lambert, Mendel
Lieberman, Sidney Zaagri and
Celeste Strack. The allegation,
however, brought a reply in the
form of a "round robin" letter
signed by approximately 100 U. C.
L. A. faculty members, who ad
dressed their communication to
Dr. Robert Gordon Sproul, presi
dent of the university. The latter
arrived on the campus from his
regular office in Berkeley to con
duct an investigation.
The letter, made public by Presi
dent Sproul, declared:
"Our experience does not lead
us to believe that there is suffici
ent radical agitation on our cam
pus materially to effect either the
student body or the university as
a whole. We deplore the impres- I
sion should be corrected.
"We wish especially to express
our full confidence in the common
sense, high character and patri
otism of our student body and our
conviction that it stands among
the highest in these qualities in
the country."
Meanwhile, requests that the
student antiradical movement be
made national in scope came to
U. C. L. A. from student leaders at
the University of Southern Cali
fornia, Stanford university. Colum
bia university, the University of
Minnesota, the University of Ne
vada, the University of Washing
ton and other institutions.
Formation of a national organ
ization built around the U. C. L. A.
group was discussed in many quar
ters. Explaining the aims of the
movement, John McElheney, chair
man of the U. C. L. A. organiza
tion, stated:
"We recognize that all young
people are idealistic and impres
sionable. In view of this, the U.
C. L. A. Americans dedicates itself
to the task of opposing any and all
effects to divert the thoughts and
ideals of the University of Cali
fornia at Los Angeles students
from constructive, sound and
American channels."
SAN MATEO. Calif Efforts of
four University of California stu
dents to promote a statewide col
lege "strike" in protest against
the recent suspension of five stu
dents at the University of Cali-
fornia at Los Angeles last week
was frustrated here when the stu-
take advantage of the opportunity
to learn something interesting and
here-to-fore unknown about the
language which they speak.
Displayed first is a picture of
tne most ancient written record in
the world, the Send inscription,
dated about 4,000 B. C. The origi
nal is preserved in the Ashmolean
museum at Oxford, and the picture
ana illustration given are from
McMurtcie's Golden Book.
Picture writing preceded writing
with symbols," stated Clara Louise
Craig, reference librarian who is
responsible for the exhibit, "and
examples of carvings on stone or
bone dated back to the Paleolithic
age." Animals were pictured most
frequently and as letters were der
ived from hieroglyphics so were
hieroglyphics copied from animal
and vegitable forms familiar to
our remote ancestors.
Cuneiform writing, which was
the next development, made use of
an imperishable material, baked
clay upon which their records and
thoughts are expressed. These
tablets were usually quadrangular
In form, varied in thickness, and
varied from nine by fifteen inches
to one by one and one-half inches.
One of these original clay tab
lets from a Babylonian temple
record dating back 2.000 years is
in possession of the library. It is,
according to Miss Craig, the most
outstading of the exhibits. It was
obtained for the library by Edgar
J. Banks, field director of a recent
Babylonian expedition sent out
from the University of Chicago.
"A reproduction in facsimile of
the finest book extant in the Brit
ish museum is another outstanding
display," Misa Craig said. It is a
funeral papyrus containing a series
of chapters from the passage of
souls of Ani and his wife to the
abodes of bliss. The papyrus,
which was found in Egypt in 1888
has been edited by E. A. T. Wallis
Budge.
Examples of skillfully drawn
Maya inscriptions dated from the
Christian era and written on deer
skin parchment show the next
step in language development. The
finding of these enables Egyptolo
gists to recover history and much
of the literature of the ancient
Egyptians which for centuries has
been unknown.
Our alphabet has also derived
much from the Phoenicians. Hence
its genealogy may be said to be as
follows: Egyptian hieroglyphics,
Sinai script, Old Semitic, South
Semitic, Phoenician, Greek, and
Latin. Runic, the oldest of the Ger
manic writings, is also shown in
sample display. It too had an in
fluence on the development of our
alphabet.
CONTINUE
FIGHTS!
1NG CONIES!
Competition to Remain Open
Indefinitely, Society
Announces.
Entries in the Innocents fight
srtnir font put lire still nomine- in
and the contest will probably be
left open for some considerable
time, according to Jack Fischer,
chairman of the song committee.
Scheduled to close on two different
occasions, the deadline has twice
been extended to accommodate
those wishing additionar time to
work on compositions.
"Although the contest has been
open for more than a monin,
Fischer said, "we are still receiv
ing new entries and additional re
quests for information almost
daily. The Innocents society now
feels that it originally failed to al
lot enough time for people to pre
pare thpir entries. We will now
hold the contest open until we arc
sure that we have the greatest
possible number of songs from
which to select Nebraska's new
song.
"What we want," Fischer con
tinued, "is a song like Notre
Dame's Victoty March, Southern
California's "Fight On," or "On
Wisconsin." Anyone is thrilled
when they hear one of those good
songs. We are too late to send a
new song off to a flying start in
this year's grid campaign, but we
intend to have it ready for a great
Cornhusker team next year.
A $20 prize has been offered by
the society for the winning tune in
the contest.
Galsnorthy First
Among Authors for
College Students
dent speakers were greeted by a
barrage of over-ripe tomatoes.
It was their second such shower
in a week, having met with similar
circumstances on their home cam
pus at Berkeley when they at
tempted to make an appeal to the
U. C. students for support of the
suspended Los Angeles undergrad
uates. One of the agitators was a
girl. Miss Ruth Moore, graduate
student.
STANFORD UNIVERSITY.
College men that "throw eggs at
women" were ridiculed last week
by Will Rogers, jr., student at
Stanford university, when he caus
tically criticized the recent egg
throwing incident at the Univer
sity of California at Berkeley.
in a letter to the Stanford Daily,
student newspaper, he said:
"What kind of men do they have
at California, where they throw
eggs at women? And with the
football players looking on too.
With such manhood, it is no won
der their team has been beaten so
much."
Rogers referred to the melee
which occured when several stu
dents staged a protest meeting on
the Berkeley campus flaying U. C.
Li. a. officials for suspending the
five students accused of radical
activity.
SAN JOSE, Calif. "Take com
munists to the edge of the campus
and drop them off" was the invi
tation extended students of San
Jose State college this week by
President T. W. MacOuarrie.
The offer followed on the heels
of the expulsion of Ed Horton,
editor of the student newspaper,
wno was assertedly removed be
cause of insubordination and
cause he refused to print what the
lacuity wanted him to."
the summer surveying camp at
Ashland this summer proved to be
very interesting, a special fan
dance act given by Franklin Meyer
creating much laughter. Many un
suspecting engineers were snapped
by the camera.
The society also held a short
business meeting at which plans
were outlined to begin a member
ship drive.
Margaret Chase
Captures Lead in
Gage Style Race
. L. UASTLGS, '23
W RITES PAMPHLET
AMES, la., Nov. 15 In the col
lege student's favorite rending the
"Iliad," "Piide and Prejudice," or
"Jim, ,1am, G'ms?"
None of those, says Prof, a
Starbuck, of the English depnrU
ment, Iowa State College.
The favorite book and Dr. star,
buck bases his statement on a mn-.
vey conducted by Atwood H. Town
send of New York University f
1,003 students in forty-four col.
leges was John Galsworthy's "For.
syte Saga."
The ten books leading in ptipu.
larity among the undergraduates,
according to the survey, are tho
"Forsyte Saga," "The Return nf
the Natice," Thomas Hardy; "The
Good Earth," Pearl Buck; "Arrow
smith" Sinclair Lewis; "The Mag
nificent Obsession," Lloyd Doug,
las; "Main Street," Sinclair Lewis;
"Green Mansions," W. H. Hudson;
"Of Human Bondage," Somerset
Maughnn; "Anthony Adverse,"
Hervey Allen; and "The Bridge of
the San Luis Roy," Thornton Wil
dcr. English teachers who were al.so
surveyed for their reading prefer
ences do not agree with their stu
dents. Their favorite book, the mi.'.
vey showed, is Jane Austin's
"Pride and Prejudice."
FORESTER COFERS 0
STATE SHELTER BELT
Unlock Receives Booklet
Entitled 'Inflation
vs. Investor
Prof. T. T. Bullock of the college
of business administration has re
ceived a pamphlet published bv
Nelson Douglass and Co., of Los
Angeles, written by J. Loren Has- i
the i
Dr. Raphael Zon, St. Paul,
University Faculty
Discuss Project.
Dr. Raphael Zon, director of the
Lake States Forest experiment
station at St. Paul, Minn., has brou
conferring with members of th
university faculty concerning th,-
shelter belt project planned for
western Nebraska.
Dr. Zon has been a member of
the United States Forest Service
for many years, and is intimately
acquainted with many graduate.-)
of Nebraska who have gone into
research work in Botany and For
estry. Dr. Zon is a graduate of Cornell
university and has attended Ka
gan university in Russia.
With only three more days left
in which to vote, Margaret Chase
is leading in the Gage Style con- ment and estate management de-
tings who graduated from
Bizad college here in 1923.
The title of the booklet by Mi
Hastings, who is in the invest
test, closely followed by Jean
Tucker. Muriel Hook, Frances Ire
land and Virginia Selleck are in
third, fourth and fifth places re
spectively. Each of the five winners of this
contest will receive a Gage hat, the
first prize being a $20 hat: second,
a $15 hat: third, a $12.50 hat;
fourth, a $10 hat; and fifth, a $7.50
hat. The successful candidates will
send their photographs, aloiig with
their head measurements, to Mad
am Shrader, designer for the Gage
company. Each hat will be indiv
ually designed for the girl who is
to wear it.
Competition has become mu'.h
keener in the last days of the con
test. Voters are continuously com
ing in and out of the Daily Nehras
kan office where the ballot box in
located.
Officials of the contest urge stu
dents to cast their votes for their
be- i favorite candidate; it may be the
' J l : m i ... '
ut?-iuing one. ine voting coupon
may be found elsewhere in the
Daily Nebraskan.
partment of the Nelson Douglass
Co., investment bankers, is "Inlla-:
tion vs. The Investor."
Mr. Bullock states that the .
pamphlet has received quite a bit
of favorable comment from busi
ness men in southern California.
Added to the University of Kan
sas curriculum is a course in weaving.
Why Walk Your Date
Per. Ml.
Per. Mi.
Rent Car Rates
Cut In Two
U-Drive It Co.
1918 0 St.
I
F.
Engineering Students Study
Subject at Meeting !
Wednesday.
General principles involved in
photography were explained to a
good-sized group of engineering j
siucems Dy not. k. A. Grone of
the applied mechanics department
at a meeting of the American So
ciety of Civil Engineers, Wednes
day evening in M. A. hall.
Discussing his topic "Amateur
Photography for Engineers." Pro
fessor Grone stated that every en
gineer should have and use a cam
era of his own in order that he
might take pictures for future use.
An engineer should develop his
own pictures, he said. The speaker
also outlined the approximate cost
of a photographer's equipment.
Showing of the pictures taken at
The present rating of the
girls entered in the Gage Style
contest:
(Votes in thousands)
Margaret Chase
Jean Tucker 571
Muriel Hook . . . , 555
Frances Ireland 463
Virginia Selleck 432
Mary Gerlock 401
Jean Cleary 388
Sancha Kilborn 34b
Helen E. Lawrence 339
Mary Yoder 3b
Jean Arnold 201
Marilyn Miller 74
Marilyn Spohn b2
Inirehord Oe-.lerlin to Be
Honor Guot at Reception .
Miss Igeborg Oesterlin will be
guests of honor at a reception
given by Iota Sigma Pi. women's
honorary chemistry rociety. in El
len Smith hall Friday night at 8
o'clock.
Miss Oesterlin. who is an ex
change student from Germany, is
a graduate student in chemistry at
the university.
THE SUCCESSOR TO
"LADY FOR A DAY"!
IfccrtrnUiul: "It rrltp
rs 'iJdr foe !
. . . an I THAT mm
achievrmrnt?"
-TP
Seat Time
NOW PLAYING
I Praise! Praise! Praise!
From .ill Lincoln! ! !
Club Room or Strert
Coiner .... over th
bridge table or back yard
fence .... the whole
lown'i talking about
Thr Mont I mpnrtanl
Picture of 1931.
IVimpde Sheet
noRmp SWEPRER
FREDRIC mPRCH
CHARLES LOUGHTOn
EXTRA
NEWSBEEL SCOOP
PITTSBURGH
NEBRASKA
Football Pictures
and
The Streamline
ZEPHYR'S First Run
Lincoln to Kansas City
SEE IT TODAY I
Call B-1465 fcr
Feature Starting Timet!
25c till 6 Eve. 40c
STUART
0
Dance
Tonite
DANNY iiaURPHY
"IN PERSON"
AND HIS MUSICAL SKIPPERS
You All Remember This Band
4
Admission Jic Per Person
No Cover Charge Dancing Free
arigo
1001 M Street
. .
Mail Orrl.r Filled rmniptls I.Jnialu'n liuny Mure We Oive K V II. Mumps
AGAIN
Suits 8s, O'Coats
50
well laiioivtl . .
mii art lodUiiiff styles
at a sensationally
juice.
The Suits
All wnol or-'-'t'Mn . vr
tailored . . . tli new ..
s'.vIps . . . rinuble ani
."inelfl brefcstr-d . . . an I
.sport lmxlcu ..in Oxford
(jray.". IiIup. I.rown an'l
Cambriae prays. Sizes
34 to 48 in regular.",
chorts. long and stouU.
The O'Coats
Tli"i come in all
fabrics. . in blues
trays .handsomely
ored -oats. You'll not
want to mis this extra
ordinary selling of Suits
and Overcoats.
Both Suit and
Overcoat for
A Small Charge Will Be
Made for Alterations.
GOLD'S Men' Stnre
lltli 1.
51
7 m i --4.wy
Wool
and rt2T
tan-
Men's CHARTER
This is our regular Charter Shirt . . . the one
so many like . . . sold reg. at X9i: . . . espo
rially priced for this event. Hosts of good look
ing patterns In hlues. grays, tang, preens, solid
white and blue. Sizes 11 to 171-.. ... a marvelous
aut .
4 PAIRS USUAL 35c FANCY SOX
Tri-lones ... a new combination . . . fint
quality . . . double soles . . . lone wear, hipn
spliced heels ... a ood assortment of rolt,r.
All EUta . . . for this great event - . 4 PAIRa
GOLDS Men s Store 11th St.
Shirts
Men's 4.00 and 5.00
Calfskin Oxfords
Wing: Tips French Tips
Round Tips
Gold Days at
AH new fall pat
terns In black
calfskins.
v
.-io.i ni infill Have in-nuui st-i
arch-support . . . noine with fth
r l.eels .otlir-rs with rubber heen
..solid leather ioles . comtiinatb'tl
lasts. All -!. in lot
28 8
GOLD'S-Mr ji
lire 11th .St.