4 ' i i- A Most Attractive Figure A corset is so personal so much a part of one's very self that it should be most thought fully selected and fitted by a skillful fitter. redfern Models enhance figure beauty and correct figure defects. You will appreciate the value of a Redfern Corset, and you will like the beauty of form and exquisite dain tiness of the latest models. $3 up For Sale by MILLER & PAINE Inc. 0 & 13th Streets Keep Carbon Copies of lectures, thpses, etc. This can only be done by buying or renting a typewriter. Special rates to students. Phone or call at L. C. Smith & Bro. Typewriter Co. LINCOLN, NEBR. PLATTSBURG MADE WITH THE OVAL BUTTON-HOLE - AND NEW REINFORCED EDGE.. twh Collars 15 0 EACH 6 FOR 900 UNITED SHIRT A COLLAR CO.. TKOV. N. Y. Sold Exclusively by My I"'!tT?M' .fWITA' REGISTRAR SENDING VARSITY CREDIT CARDS TO HIGH SCHOOL GRAPS The registrar's office is busy send ing: to high school graduates their credit cards for university or college All state accredited schools send in a list of their graduates with the transcript of their records. These are evaluated by the inspector of state high schools and a personal card Is then sent to local school authorities for every graduate in the state. These cards are then presented for admission to any university or col lege. Each graduate, by comparing his crd with the entrance require ments of the college which he wishes to enter, can easily determine his standing. USING SPITBALL AGAIN 8PITBALL REFORMERS FAIL IN ATTEMPTS TO CUT OUT 8PITTER. IN DAYS GONE BY (Continued from page 2) elected president of the board of con president; F. W. Norrls, secretary, and H. F. Nelson, treasurer. One Year Aqo Today Statements in favor of the student council by Prof. H. W. Caldwell. Dean ; O. V. P. Stout, Prof. F. M. Fling, Dean Chas. Fordyce and Prof. J. E. LeRos signol were printed in The Dally Ne-braskan. The strike of workmen on the new buildings continued and 600 workmen rere asking for an increase in wages from 25 cents to 30 cents and 35 cents an hour. THE COLLEGE WORLD I . : Mine Students on Strike All the students of the Colorado School of Mines have gone on a strike and left school, except the seniors. j The strike is unsettled, and concilia J tion seems to be hopeless between the students and faculty. Many of the Mine men have gone to Tucson, Ariz., to complete their work in the Arizona School -of Mines. Many of the others have entered the officers' training camp, have gone to work, at summer jobs, or have tried to get admitted into the University of Colorado. The University of Colorado will not admit any of the strikers. This action on the part of the Mine students may mean the end of a separate School of Mines. Ex. Joys of Army Life I Ttio I'nivprcttv nf Wnshlnrlnn cadets had an encampment lasting one week and ending May 5. From the re ports of the cadets who went on the encampment, they will take military training as seriously as they can from now on. The men especially enjoyed the ankle-deep mud on the training grounds, and at night the rain made tents very comfortable. The scores on the range shooting were very erratic, varying from eight to sixty seven out of a possible seventy-five hit Ex. Rock Hunters Come Home One hundred embryo geologists volunteers of the University of Okla homa, limping and dragging their weary feet, after three ways of fol lowing cow paths and wading through the briars on the rocky hills and mountains, returned to the university last Wednesday. Another party under the same professor left for another three days search for mere rocks. Ex Bennie Owen Bennie Owen, the Sooner coach, has caused the athletic schedule for the year to be abandoned at the Univer sity of Iklahoma. The Sooners have taken to military training like ducks to water. Bvnnle Owen has been made a lieutenant colonel of the stu dent regiments. Ex. Ambulance Fund The college of fine arts at Syra cuse university raised S410 In less than a week for the purpose of purchasing an ambulance for tho American Red Cross. Ex. TEACHERS WANTED Boards are electing teachers every day for next year. It you are not yet located register at once. We cover all the Central and Western states. Only 3 commission, 11.00 regis tration fee. Commission payable In fall of year. Write today for blanks. TEACHERS' EMPLOYMENT BUREAU 228 Cedar Rapids Sav. Bk. BldQ. Cedar Rapids, Iowa Jimmy Callahan of Pirates Declares It Would Be Unfair to Legislate Againit Moist Delivery at This Late Date. The spitball will be hurled at the batters again this season by pitchers all over the country. It will continue on Ita moist and foggy way despite the efforts of some baseball reformers to legislate It out of the pastime, for the spltter htt be come Just as much a part of the pitch er's art as the curve. During the hot-stove season, which came to a close with the departure for the South, the spltter came In for Its annual panning. Baseball men In vari ous parts of the country talked agalust It. Chief among the pnnsters was Percy D. Haughtou of the Boston Bruves. who believes the elimination of the spltter would be a long stop toward Increasing hitting. Hn ugh toil put the spltter on tin pan every time he got a chttnce, and Is henest In his convictions against It. But the members of the rules committee did not even discuss the spltter lu a casual way. The rules committee found practically nothing to do, for the rules as they stand today are Just about as solid as they can be made. In discussing the spltbnll at one of the National league sessions last winter, Jimmy Calluhan of the Pi rates, advanced the opinion that It would be unfair to legislate against it now. Callahan believes that the moist delivery has been In vogue too long. He pointed out that It has been In use ot least ten years, and that If it had been particularly un desirable it should have been eiimi- I J : i A . . J, Percy D. Haughton. nated before hundreds of pitchers had studied it and mastered its use. The emery ball was short-lived in the major leagues. Action against It was quick and when It was made Illegal there was no great hardship worked on the pitchers. With the spltter It Is different. Hun dreds of younger pitchers who are coming' up have adopted the spltter for use In the tight places. It Is used by nt least 40 per cent of the pitchers of the country today and It has be come an Institution. So the spltter will live for some time to come and may never be barred. The fact that many baseball men do not champion the moist ball will make no difference, and, as Jimmy Calluhan declares. It would be un in justice because Its use has been per mitted for too many years. BASEBALL IN SOUTH AMERICA Many Promising Players Found Among Expert Workmen Secured for Cul tivation of Sugar. The Europenn war may be responsi ble for Introducing baseball Into South America. The centuries of South America whone soil is adapted to the cultivation of sugar are sending to Cuba for expert workmen In that branch of Industry, and aa a result baseball promises to be as well known In Latin-America as It Is In the West Indies. The Cubans have taken to the game like a duck to water, and there are numberless teams scattered all over the Island. It Is not improbable that In the future the championship of America will not be settled until the northern and southern hemispheres have battlf d on the diamond. The South Americans are a sport loving people, and one the fascinating game of baseball fastens Itself on them there should be a wave of en thusiasm all over that continent Am soon aa the South Americans under stand the sport the turnstiles at the hull fishta will not be very busy. THE LINCOLN GAUDY KITCHEN re tsx but L ofc , KM Mad Candy mtlCrm Cor. 14th aM O St. Venus lO PENCIL No matter what course you're taking you need this famous pencil! . BECAUSE of the k D superlative qual i itv nf material and workmanship, VENUS Is admittedly the finest pencil It Is possible to make. If you like a thick ? I soft lead that marks so that you can read the writing half way across the room, choose the soft de grees 6B 5B 4B. For short-hand notes or easy writing 8B 2B B (medium soft) are popular. For sketching, gen eral writing purposes, etc.. HB F H 2H (medium) will prove desirable. For drafting, a me dium hard pencil gives the best results and you'll like 3H 4H 5H 6H. For very thin, narrow lines for extremely accurate graphical charts, maps, details, etc., 7H 8H 9H are available. Look for the distinctive water mark finish on each of the 17 black degrees and hard and medium copying. Your professors will confirm these statements aa to the merits of VENUS pencils. For sale at . . , THE COLLEGE BOOK STORE This box of VENUS sam ples free. State the course you are taking FREE AMERICAN LEAD PENCIL CO. 215 Fifth Ave. Dept H H, New York Wi,mifiMmil''WiW'MiwiiiiiiMiiw'iii'ii!!iiiii'l "l'll"lllllTTTllll''TrW'r ( $2.50 Untrimmed Hats . 9Sc !' A tremendous special purchase brings to you this big saving opportun ' ity. Hundreds ot new Hat Shapes Just the wanted models for present N and Bummer wear including the favored large, medium and small II sailors, smart turbans, etc.. in the popular effects In black. whi .11 N burnt, are Included in the great sale assortment. They come in fins i I! hemps and Panamas and are values Which would ordinarily snii o 1 Ff I lltK lift, II A Ik., Ian rmi J.t.ln. at ' " ftl 13 fcj aZ.VV BUU f vv. vv uii7 iuq i.di, vut tuuivn m I . ..I...,.,, Jjj i gold a CO, The Store That 8ells the Best For Just a Little Less" iiit'iii!miniin'!(ti!!W!ii"r'!'n"mit!',mifflmii iiUiJiiiiuniiiuiMUiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiuwiwiwiwuiuiiu minimi lllllllllmmiiiuim.,.. THC Em Telephene MS 11 31 North lit frl Cleaners, Pressors, Dyers For tm "Work and fiorvloa that Pleal." Call fcllll. Tk B otulppei Dry Cleaning Plant a. tat West One aaj service If ndi lUasonable Price, good work, proaat service. Repair; to ansa's garments oarefully mad. IN OLUS tlie outside shirt and underd rawer A T-U. . . V . .! -V ? Am are one nnacni, i mi means nwi mc iimii can't work out of the trousers, that there are no shirt tails to bunch in seat, that the drawers "stay put," to say nothing of the comfort and economy of saving a garment. OLUS iscoat cut opens all the way down closed crotch, closed bark. See illustration. For golf, tennis and field wear, we recommend the special attached collar OLUS with regular or snort sleeves, extra sires tor very tan or stout snen. AH shirt fabrics, in smart designs, including silks $1.50 to $10.00. OLUS one-piece PAJAMAS for lounging', resting and comfortable sleep. Made on the same principle as ULUb blurts coat cut, closed rnrk, closed crotch. No strings to Ugh ten or coma loose. JliU to au. Ask 0W for OLUS. Booklet om HqMt Pkfflit-JoM Casspuy, Hibn. DtH 1199 BroJwy.N.T. TOE OTOL Lyon W Htal, "Washburn" Ukultlts, $15.00 1 Lttnardt Nunes genuin Hawaiian mah, $7.50 1 Matma Loa brand, $4. May b had if 12,000 Itading music dealtrt. IVritt for namt if thi neanst dialer. TH languorous charm of the Hawaiian native instruments so moving in appeal, so observably in vogue is strikingly characteristic of the Ukulele. Its tone possesses that curiously beautiful timbre, that exotic charm of tonal quality which has made these instruments so sensation ally popular. The Ukulele has a pleasing grace of form. The finer models are made of genuine Hawaiian Koa wood. It is much in request today among the smarter college and other musical organizations. It is easy to learn. Its price includes aa Instruction Book. Hawaiian Steel Guitar Every chord struck upon this typically rep resentative Hawaiian instrument is marked by a weird, plaintive harmony and strangely beautiful qualities of tone. It brings, to any music, qualities full of vivid color and va ried charm, ho tt.M mod mm, ladwbiit feed u4 Sal i TVm ThlaUas for , a' In-owtioa look. Catalogs M applicaht. vim 3 mm 51-67 JACKSON BOULEVARD CHICAGO ' 1