The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, September 28, 1909, Image 3
v if? ' 'f y t ' t OMYEK THEATRE Tonlaht, Wednesday and Matinee Matinee $1.00 to 25c; Evening $1.50 to BOc THE GOLDEN GIRL Tuesday Night, September 30, BERT A. WILLIAMS j In "MR. LODE OF KOAL." SUBS sViSZsLMi kvnsSBBsHRjfi L. J. Herzog Thi University Man's Tailor Tho Finest Work Dono and Pricos Right Call lit Our Now Storo 1230 O St. Lincoln TYPEWRITERS All mnlcos rented with stand $3 per Month. Bargains in Robuilt Machines Lincoln Typewriter Exchange Auto 11C5. Boll 1181. 122 No. 11th SEE OUR WOOLENS Elliott Bros. TAILORS 142 SOUTH TWELFTH UNIVERSITY JEWELER & OPTICIAN C. A. Tucker JEWELER S, S. Shean OPTICIAN 1123 0 STREET, . YELLOW FRONT Your Patronage Solicited B RING your next Job of Printing to VAN TINE PKINTINU CU. and get satisfactory results? You want everything else good why not have your Printing good? 128-130 N 14th St. Auto 3477 Underwood Typewriter Go. TYPEWRITERS SOLD AND RENTED 1H7 No. lath. Boll 848. Auto 25i)5 ALUMNI WEDDINGS OF WEEK. Two Recent University Graduates Wed One Ceremony Kept Secret for Year Just Announced. Announcements of two weddings. df university graduates were received Jn 'Lincoln this week. The marriage on August 25, 1908, of Dr. Edward Christy and Miss Cora Scharfonberg has been kept a Becret by tho parties' concerned until tho past week. Dur ing the Internal Dr. ChriBty has been on the staff of tlje institution for the InsanTo at Glenwood, la., and his bride has been teaching school. Dr. Christy graduated with an . A. B. degree in 1905, taking ttn M. D. In 1907, He Is a member of Phi Kappa Psi and Phi . Rho Sigma fraternities, The couple will' make their home at Hastings after November 15. 'Tho wedding of Ferdinand Menofee, , 1908, of South Omaha, and Miss Lu cille Cull, ex-1911, of Oakland,, was consummated at tho homp of the . bride. Mr. Menefeo graduated in en gineering and Is now laklng post graduate work at, Cornell university, He was a member of Kappa Sigma, of the 'Innocents, and was senior class president. Miss Cull was a member of Clil Omega sorority. (THE CAMPUS GLEANINGS. . . Frey & Frey. Carl J. Wangerlen, igerlen 1909, is r. y J now in New York City, Dr. J. R. Davis, Dentist. 1234 O St. Miss Camilla O. Evans, 1909, is at David City. E. A. Froyd, 1909, is located at Ther mopolis, Wyoming. Georgo L. Sullivan, 1909, is located at Boulder, Colorado. G. W. Peters, 1909, is located at Sprlngfledl, Nebraska. 'Try a lunch at the Y. M. C. A. Spa. 13th and P Sts. E. ' M. Buol, 1909. is surveying In the forests of Washington Btate. "Delce" Drake, Delta Tau Delta, Ib in the land business at Bentricc, Neb. Have your clothes pressed at Weber's Sultorlum, 12th and O. o Elmer W. Hills, 1909, Is on the teaching force at Pawnee City, this winter. o George Bros., 218 So. 13th, Printers. Calling CardB, Invites and Programs. A. E. Beattie, 1908, is working for the Union Pacific railroad at Greeley, Colorado.' Frey & Frey. choice flowers. 1338 O St., north side. . D. E. Winchester, 1907, 1b out with the United States Geological survey at Hudson, Wyoming. o Chancellor Avery will deliver an nd-. dresa Friday at the dedication of the Boaetrico high school. Green's Sanitary Barber Shop. 120 N. 11th. Miss Elma Mllliken, 1909, Delta Gamma, is one of the grade teachers in the Fremont, Neb., schools, o I have a number of cadet uniforms, for sale. Call at once and insure a good fit. Old uniforms rebrnided. John Uhl, Armory. 4t Beckman Bros., High Grade Foot wear. 1107 O. .Miss Eva L. Arnold, 1909, will re main at her home in Fremont the com ing winter. -, Emery W. Learner, 1909, is head of the science department in the Ottawa, Kansas, High School. Students should not fail to call at the Lincoln Dancing Academy and see what tnstV remodeling can do. Dance tonight. J-4t Miss Zella Wentz, Delta Detla Del ta, formerly Instructor in mathematics, will not return to the university this semester. She will remain at home at Aurora. Miss Anna L. Hinterlong, 1909, of Minden, Nebraska, will not return to the university this year. R. Earl Gerspacher, 1912, will not return to Nebraska this year. He ex pects to remain with his father, who is in business in Grand Island. A. I. Myers, 19Q4, who took his LL. B. at Harvard In 1908, is now located at Caldwell, Idaho. He has taken up the real estate business, , - Miss Vesta Gray, 1893, will teach the coming year in the Hatifprd, Col., high school. Miss Gray has been at Lemoore and, Hanford for the past four years. Fred Laird, 1905, Alpha Aau Omega, Is .police judge at Fremont, Neb., where he has been practicing law for the past three year, Mr. Laird Is also chairman of' the 'democratic county committee for Dodge county. AJOLY NEBRASEAN sHBBBaeBsaaeaaMWMMMHMi t TIES SKIRTS COLLARS PAJAMAS UNDERWEAR I In making our selection of Men's Dress Accessories we were particularly mindful of the demands of Colleao Men. A purchase from our now completed stock of Men's Ties and Shirts assures the purchaser of a style that Is absolutely correct and up to the minute, every item being from n stock that Is In every respect new and not carried over from last season. Our window displays clearly. Illustrate the attractiveness of our New Fall Line. Unu'nunl IntcrcHt has boon created In our now CoIIcro Strlpo String Tic, In both plain knit and crochotod. lo, In both plain knit and crochotod fiffectB. Made of all puro Bilk In ono Inch, and ono Inch and a half widths! all leading colore being represented. Sold everywhere at $1.00, our price, onch fi5 contii. ''FURNISHERS TO MEN WHO KNOW" L STUDENTS WANT WORK GOOD PLAGES SCARCE Y. M. C. A. BUREA.U TURN8 AWAY NUMBER OF APPLICANTS. ASSOCIATION CAN'T SUPPLY ALL D. C. Mitchell In Charge of Employ ment Bureau Much Work Is Found for Students. "Got a Job?" That, or something else to the same effect has been the qon tinual query at the Y. M. C. A. rooms in the temple for tho past few days. Everyone seems to want to do some thing to defray all or at least part of their school expenses. Some want ono kind of a Job, some another, and in many cases the jobs wanted arc of an Impossible and impracticable sort, duch as neither the Y. M. C. A. nor any employment agency has over heard of. The association established a desk in its roomB Tuesday where, be sides securing employment for students they also help the new men to find rooms and check their baggage. Tho employment bureau, which is In effect a student employment agency, conduct ed Bolely for the benefit of tho stu dents, keeps a list of positions open to students to which they refer when ever a request is made for employ ment. This list Is filled by various res taurants, private housos, and' firms about the city who desire student help and who have notified the Y. M. C. A.! of the fact, together with the terms upon which they desiro to work. Not Enough Places. But the-list of. places has been de cidedly small compared with the num ber of applicants. In fact, according to a rough esti mate made last ovoning, ovor four tlmeB as many students applied for positions as there were (situations. Notices of positions open to students are coming in every day, however, and in this manner many of the, ap plicants who have so far failed to '"se cure work will be able to do so In the near future. The bureau of employ ment will be maintained throughout the year in charge of D. C. Mitchell. Many of the applicants Inquire for work out of mere curiosity. They are not looking for work, but If a snap should offer Itself they might take it. This, however, cannot bo said of tho greater part of those Inquiring for work as they are usually tglad .to take any kind of employment that will not lake too much time' away from school work. , Many Wiit Tables. , While It is estimated that over two hundred dollars worth of work has already been liven out, "a great I amount of employment -was secured by individual anidepts who cajhe to EXCLUSIVE STYLES FOR COLLEGE It's a fact that College Men demand exclusive styles of dress Radge teffaenzel Gx Lincoln n week or two boforc regis tration fof that purpose. A largo portion of tho work dono by students consists in waiting tables at many of tho rcstaurantB about tho city. In return for this work tho student us ually receives his" board and, in somo cases, additional salary. 'Many res tPuruntB say that they may need moro help of this sort later on if tho stu dent business is largo enough to warrant it. - .Othor positions which ore open to students are caring for furnaces, clork Ing In stores and doing various odd Jobs for private families. Caring for furnaces seemB to be very popular em ployment among tho students, it be? Ing a comparatively easy manner of securing n room free of rent. Tho University Itself also employes a num ber of BtudentB as assistants In var ious departments, and assistant gard eners and Janitors. In nearly every case the work dono by tho student is comparatively light yet heavy enough to necessitate his cutting .down hjs university work somewhat, in order to earn part of his college oxpoiiBOB. NEW RECORD SET FOR FRAHIRL PLEDGING OVER SEVENTY NEW 8TUDENT8 DON MEMBERSHIP RIBB0N8. KAPPA AlflllA TIIETA WELL IN LEAD Thirteen Is Largest Number Pledged, With Both Delta Gamma and Trl Delts Gaining Ten as Sec ond Best. Seventy-flvo freshmen girls donned pledgo ribbons Saturday in response to invitations extended them by tho nine sororities of tho university. This is by far the largest number of girls ever pledged at one time. Kappa Alpha Thota secured the largest number of now. members, they totaling thirteen. Delta Gamma and Delta Delta Delta camo second with ten pledges each. Alpha Chi Omega and PI Beta Phi each had nono who donned tho. ribbons. Alpha Omnlcon Pi pledged six, Alpha Phi and Chi Omega Ave each, Kappa Kappa Gam ma eight. Tho unusually large number of pledges Is said to bo tho result of a lack of members and of tho -presence of a larger quantity of good sorority "material'' than usual among the now students. Numbers of the fraternity gilrs havo not returned to school this year, and this left many vacant places to fill. Others of tho girls' socloties have , taken larger houses this year than last and fee) tho need of a larger membership to take care of tho additional burden. List o fPledg.es. - Following is the list of pledges; Kappa Aloha Thota Anna McCaeuo. Omaha; Ruth Llndloy, Omaha; Louise Northrup, Omaha; Marie Hodge, Om aha; Helen Klngsley, York; Margue rite Lloyd, York; Geraldine Gray, Co lumbus; Kathorlno Windahm, Platts mouth; Florence Dutton, Hastings; -Julia palmer, Lincoln; Helen Wallace, "V r &. MEN BEITS GLOVES HOSIERY IMBRELLAS HAtiDKER-, CHIEFS ,wM "FURNISHERS : TO MEN WHO KNOW" Lincoln; Marion Swozy, Lincoln, and Holeno Pock, Minneapolis. Delta Dolta Delta Hnzol Rowland, Holdrego Gladys Waddlo, Aurora; Lola Lorimor, Poru; Mary Howard Co lumbus; Maudo Flock, Blair; Mario HormanBon, Koarnoy May Paddock, Lincoln; Valorla Bonnol, Lincoln; Kathorlno Yates, Lincoln; Emma Volgt. Nelson. Delia Gamma Mnrurnnritn nm.a..t York; Helen Sttwyor, Lincoln; Nell uruiiB, i.uiuiuuub; minute J'Jucicer Co lumbuBc; Dorothy Watkins, Lincoln; Helen Butler, Lincoln; Cecil Cobb, Harlan, la,; Elvn Honnor, Harlon, la.; Josalo Rold, Wyoncoto, Wyo.; Lola Berry, Palrbury. Kappa Kanna Gamma Ruth Mcnnn. aid, Omaha; Maudo Blrkby, Nebraska nty; ueii i.add, Albion; Mary Trtybr, Lincoln; Payo Doylo, Lincoln; Hnzel Poland, Palrbury; Nan Stewart, Ax toll; Corliss Whito, Ashalnd. , Pi Beta Phi Holon Hollow Lin coln; Rose Pongcs, Lend, SoTDnk.; Doss Alexander, Lincoln; Nona Clear man, Minden: Vlrirlnla linen. Mln. don; Floronco Schwako, Lincoln; Ada Darman, Lincoln; Floronco Hostetler, Kearney; Luclllo Bell, York. Alpha Clll OliiOfifa Mnrv Kmltli. York; Helon Carnes, Lincoln; Poullne .Manoy, .Mason city, Nob.; Eflle Sloan, Geneva: Delia Robinson. Wnferlnn; Kathorlno Morgnh, -Lincoln; Inez Tiiomas, Lyons; Kathorlno Baehr, Sf. i'nui; uouinn Bell, St. FauL , . Alpha Phi Boss' Drake. Beatrice! Helon Drake. Beatrice: Holen Lnw. ronce, Fremont; Kathorlno Doyle, Lin coln; Hoien Fair, Hardy. Alpha Omrlcon PI Helen Flske, Lincoln; Nina Troyor, Lincoln; Edith Hall, Lincoln; Elolso and Helen Harper, Wallace; Nellie Waters, Lin coln. Chi Omega Ella Wells, Lincoln'; Nell Bloduett. Rnymond: Ruth Cull. Oakland; Edith Forrest, Delta, Cold.; Jean Campbell, Broken Bow, Y. W. C. A. HOLDS FIRST VESPER. Girls Carry ,0'ut Successful Program ' Sunday Afternoon. Tho first vesper serylco of the uni versity Y. W. C A, ,was held In the Tern plo theater Sunday' afternoon.' ;A program of especial interest and ben efit to frcshment girls was rendered, and they seemed much InterpstQd. Dr. W. W. Laurence was the principal speaker. Tho .musical program was rendered ,by Miss Berenice Chambers, violinist; Miss Vorna Holmes, soloist, and Miss Louise Zumwlnkol, accompa nist. ; CADET UNIFORMS NOW ON SALE. ft 'Pershing Rifles to Handle Uniforms galn This .Year. , The order was Issued ast evenjng to tho cadet battalion that the cadets were to be in full uniform this. year on November 1st' The regulation uni .form. is to bo the ollyo drab 'blouses and trousers with cap and legglns to correspond, and tan shoes. This" Is the' same as tho cadets wore last year, with bno exception. The unlfdrms for this year arc to bo trimmed with red cord Instead of thp brown braid' which was in vogue last year, Those uniforms may be purchased of tho Pershing Rifles, at the lowest possible cost, and are the only regu1 latlon uniform on sale. The Pershlngs have handled tho uniforms for the past two years . and their uniforms have given excellent satisfaction. Or ders to the Pershlngs for uniforms may be given thiatweek In tho armory, and measurements will be taken by an army tailor. This tytter fact should Insure a perfect fit and complete' sat CH' yt s T vV- 1 itO , MTgjiia.'"