The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, September 13, 1916, Image 5

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    THE DAILY KEBRASKAN
SOCIETY
Co lie
Lute
i
CUPID BUSY
Reports have reached the engineer
ing department of the recent marriage
of the following graduates and former
students of the college of engineer
ing: C. M. Delano, ex-'12; T. B. Wood,
ex-15; G. A. Graham, ex-13; W. J.
Krug, 12; O. C. Montgomery, '11; H.
C. Slater, '12; H. P. Wallace, '11; L.
C. Wicks, ex-'14; E. R. Wiggins, '13;
V. C. George, '16; E. O. Walker; H. S.
Kinney, '13; J. R. R. Martin, 12; C. D.
Kinsman, '12; W. B. Coale, ex-'ll;
W. F. Chauner, '12; D. P. Weeks, jr.,
'15, and Henry Schlachter, ex-'17.
campaign for county attorney of Clay
county.
Lamar Folda spent most of his va
cation ; on a geological trip through
the Bad Lands.
Jean Sorensou, '13, is living in Cam
bridge, Mass. v
Max Baehr, '13, spent the summer in
Cienfuegos, Cuba,
Frances Caldwell spent the summer
at Long Beach, Calif.
Agnes Anderson, '19, will teach in
Grand Island this year.
Mable Sterne, '15, will teach at Su
perior again this winter.
Paul Martin, '15, is private secretary
to Congressman Kincaid.
Burke Taylor, '17, is secretary of the
commercial club at Gering.
A. E. Bryson remained in Lincoln
the greater part of the summer.
Silas Bryan, '15, spent the summer
on his father's farm near Lincoln.
Edna Coffee, 18, spent her vacation
with her mother at San Diego, Cal.
Clark Dickinson, '14, returns to Har
vard to get his doctor degree, this
fall.
Herbert Reese, '16, will be coach at
the Lincoln high School the coming
year.
C. H. Epperson, '16, is busy in his
Reed Dawson, NebrasVa, '14, Har
vard law, '17, returns to Cambridge
next Saturday.
Lloyd Hagerman and Herschel Nix
on spent their vacation on farms near
Mound City, Mo.
C. A. Sorenson,
pointed secretary
Municipal league.
'15, has been ap
of the Nebraska
B. J. Novotny spent the major por
tion of his vacation on his father's
farm near Clarkson.
John A. Cejnar was in the sage
brush and, sandhill country selling
aluminum, last summer.
Rawson White, '18, and Maurice Loo-
mis, '18, spent the summer camping
and fishing on the eastern coast.
H. J. Schwab, '16, was with the New
England Mutual Life Insurance Co.,
selling life insurance this summer.
Otho Doyle, '13, who is practicing
law in Plainview, spent last week at
the home of his parents in Lincoln.
Charles E. Peterson was In Lin
coln the latter part of the summer
soliciting advertising for The Star.
Edward F. Steck was substitute ru
ral mail carrier at Milligan. The lat
ter part of the summer he worked in
a garage.
Walter Metzgar worked the whole
summer on his father's farm near
Mound City, Mo. He returned to Lin
coln Monday.
Wayne L. Townsend, junior Corn-
husker managing editor, was doing
Is Not All Books
You want to Cut a Good Figure
Let not the thousand eyes that see you
find cause for criticism
The Modern Figure with the high waist line, the
snug fitting collaclose sleeves and general air of body
conforming lines. We'll help you do it with
Harvard and Collegian Suits
English Sacks cut from the nobbiest fabrics the season
offers. High waisted models for young men. Plain
and plaited backs. Patch pockets. Soft rolling lapels.
Novelty goods, serges and flannels in plain colors and
stripes.
The very fabric and style that give you the modern
figure and sold at the price they ought to be sold for
and $20
Special showing in window this week
Daylight OlolhinS Store
Jyf
SWftMfc-MMkC. 111
reportorial work in Lincoln the great- j sistant in the rhetoric department,
er part of the summer. j left Saturday for New York City,
I where she will study interior decorat-
Miss Helen Mitchell, a former as-ling at the New York school of fine
and applied arts and also do some lit-1 ers, worked during vacation with a
erary work.
Ben F. Dale, of the 1915 Cornhusk-
j carpenters' crew in his home town of
Hartington. He returned to Lincoln
Tuesday from Beatrice, where h6 had
WELCOME NEBRASKA STUDENT
Because we're going to do better by you this year than ever before. We want
you to come in and see what we have, whether you buy or not.
(Or
1
Botany Supplies
Fountain Pens $1.00 and up
Engineering Sets
Second Hand Books
Pennants and Posters
Padlocks 10c to $1.00
History Paper
History Maps
Notebooks all kinds
5c History Covers
Leather notebooks
Pocket Loose-Leaf Notebooks
A complete line of Class Room Supplies and Laboratory Outfits.
NOT RAISED PRICE OF HISTORY PAPER.
WE HAVE
lri
MM1F
Have Yom FAends Come and Meet You Heze
1