y HE DA I LY NEBRASKA N Boyd wants to see you about your printing. Lost Schaefer fountain per with out cap. Return to Student Activities Office. fVLLER'S Prescription ill HARM AC Y LUNCHEONETTE Arrow Collars 1 fir' 55 3 fir 50 CLurrr-resoDY t- co dcc-juakek TEACHERS WANTED To fill vacancies in all depart ments. Have calls for teachers daily. Only Ss per cent commis sion. TEACHERS' EMPLOYMENT BUREAU 208-209 C. R. S. Bank Bids Cedar Rapids, Iowa Special Attention to Student Trade Orpheum Shoe Repairing Co. 211 North 12th Street Have your EYES examined and glasses fitted by W. H. MARS IN, O. D. Thore. Up-to-dtae Methods 1234 "O" St. Opp. Miller & Paine KODAKS We do developing and finishing. PEASE DRUG CO., 1321 O ST. Earnest Schaufelberger, '16, Manager We are in position to take care of -our wants ee usl Remington Typewriter Co. lOl BankenLife PhoneB-2S52 "SPA" Get your Lunches at the City Y. M. C. A, Cafeteria Plan 13TH AND P Dean Luckey to Address Graduate Teachers' Club The Graduate Teachers club will meet Friday. October U. at " o'clock in the faculty room at the Temple. Dean G. W. A. Luckey will iddress the meeting upon "The Fundamen tals of Graduate Study." The elec tion of omcers will be part of the business of the meeting. MENORAH SOCIETY MEETS TO DISCUSS PLANS FOR COMING YEAR The Menorah society of the Univer sity mvi Sunday afternoon la the vestry rooms of the Temple a: 12th and D streets. Flans for the ccmisg year, such as lectures, musical pro grams, essay cortests were disccssed. The Menorah society is the Uaiversi:? organization for the study of Ketraic life and culture. Memirsiip is cpea to all students and members cf the faculty who are i.:ere:ed. without regard to race or creed. is $15. Last year and in previous vears it was S25. The decrease this vear is thought to be due to the fall ing off in the number of law students. Harvard and Northwestern this year reacted in the opposite direction. Both universities raised their tuition $i0. Tuition at Harvard is now $200 and at Northwestern $170. Daily lllini. ' KAN. UNIVEESITY OFFERS COUBSE IN WIRELESS United States Signal Corps Will Es tablish a School There Similar to That at Nebraska SAYS CAVP TRUMV3 j STRENGTHENS MEN! iCoitir-e-i ccei GOOD CLOTHES CARE Is vita! to the life of your gar ments. We clear:, press and repair them in a most painstaking manner Thi WayYouUkt It LINCOLN Cleaning & Dye Work 326 to 336 So. 11th LEO SOUKUP, Mgr. .1. .i ihi.X. 1 .M A. n an J U U U L RLATTSBURG - MADE WITH THE OVAL BUTTON-HOLE AND NEW REINFORCED EDGE. ioh (pilars 160 EACH 6FOR0O0 UMTCO SHHT A COU.AM CO.. TROY. M. V. The basis cf selection fjr the army 1 is physical itress. ia-i the faoada-j lion cf the triiaiag Jor the ea in; the ci.p here is the physical w-:ri. The whole course of pre?antk for the soldier is to mike him ready for j that stpreiiie moment when he 1 meets face to face an 3 Land to hiad. the single enemy, with the bayeaet. Shock. or the fear for shock, de cides battles today Tally as much as in the days of Alexander the Great. Every soldier knows that not once, but many times, he is to be called upon to clash with the foe. and he knows that only perfect physical con dition and the confidence born of the knowledge of his own powers, is going to save his life. He knows, too, that the cleanest living and free dom from all excesses is necessary to keep in good condition, for his instructors and his military text books tell him so. and can prove it. This knowledge keeps him alive to the necessity of caring for himself. Big Task Is Incentive Another and greater Incentive to right living is found in the whole some respect one soon learns to have for the task that is ahead. No one. unfamiliar with the organization of the military units in today's warfare, and the very great responsibility of the officers in command, can realize what a man-sized job it is to hold a commission in the army. -Young men who started for the training camps with dreams of silver bars upon their shoulders, have come to feel that if they can only qualify for the lowest commission, a very great honor will be theirs. For a lieu tenant in charge of a platoon has in his keeping the lives of fifty men. and to them he must be guide, coun sellor and friend. He could not hold this place without their respect, and he could not hope to win their re spect unless he respected himself. The surest means of keeping the soldier out of the blind pig and worse. Is of course, the home ties. For the men in the training camp, this war has come to be a very personal fight for the protection of those they care for most. They seek to honor the uniform that has come to mbolize this protection. Exceptions there are. of course, to the things set down here. But the normal, healthy college man. with the right view of life, will find In the army training camps no hotbed of immorality, no constant pull to ward things that are coarse. He can. on the other hand, be assured that be will find friends and asso ciates who respond to all the better things of life. There are men who have come to the training camp with the other kind of IdeaL. and they may not be made better, but they J are no more common, nor any more attractive, than they are in any other community where they can also be found. Work of Soldiers This all may be beside the point to Nebraska readers who want to know what the Hnskers are doing at camp. The hoplng-to-be-officers have finished a week on the rifle and pistol range, where they learned the fell of the kick of the high calibre rifle, and where not a few of them learned how to shoot They have been studying and prac tising daily formations for the as sault as developed by the French and English armies in the attacks on the teuton trench systems. And they are preparing for freex in. sleetless nights la the trenches again next week, when the first half will be spent under the stars, or lesa agreeably, nnder the "pop" tents. ILLINOIS LOWERS TUITION Th College of Law of the Uni versity of Illinois appears to be the nrir mil in the country wnicn has reduced the amount of its tuition this year. The tuition here this year Because of the lack of men skilled ia the u.se of wireless apparatus and other signal devices, the Signal Corps of the United States Array ha pro vided for the training jf men at the University of Kansas. A flve hour course of instruction aa.3 been sciiedaled in connection with the physics and electrical engineering departments, to consist of two lec tures and three periods of three hoars euch for practice in the international wireiess code, each week. The lec tures will cover the elements of elec tricity ami miwnetimn. followed bv wont on standard oommeiia' wireiess and telegraph apparatus. Nn prev ious training is required tor the course, and riu will be charged, the necessary anpuratus for code practice and I'uauratury instruction being; furnished by the physics de partment. Although no credit to wards a University degree i.i offered for the coarse, it is open to everyone who wishes to learn wireiess. whether reg-zlariy enroled in. the University or not. The instruction, in code and op eratioa of apparatus will be given by V. H Belli. Chief Raiio Operator, U. S. M. S.. Philadelphia Those who complete the full course will be able to obtain licenses as radio operators, which fit the holder for either signal corps, navy or mer chant marine service. The course should appeal especially to men who are subject to service in the National army, as it prepares for a preferred branch of the service University Daily Kansan. skirt of native barks, Toots looks like the brushwood suburbs of an Hawaiian village until she begins to cavort. Then she appears to be Kilauea in action. Sale Lake Tribune. Is "Kisses" a Silly, Brainless Thing or a Graceful Little Comedy? See it at the Orpheum and Judge for Yourself. I "Kisses" attracts more attention than any other act on the new bill at the Orpheum. "Kisses" is a one act playlet and it is well named. Just whether it Is a silly, brainless thine or a graceful little comedy, ust too dear for words, is largely a matter of opinion. William Gaxton and a company of five others plays "Kisses." S. Jay Kaufman a New York newspaperman, wrote it. The first thing that happens is a very careful defining of the noun cad and the adjective "conceited. ith these words conveniently explained, it is possible to let the play go on without placing the hero in the role of a conceited cad. Then comes a wager that the hero can make four women kiss him within an hour after he meets them. Then "Kisses reallv starts. One after another the women place their caresses on Th- well moulded face of Mr. Gaxton. Th- are made more or less ridicu W. but there Is no doubt about it ta.it the ladies of the audience enjoy rh- joke on their sisters much more ban the men do. "Kisses" has a sood snrinkling of laughs. Is well pHv-d and neatly presented, 'kisses" will start many arguments and who can say but they rather it will end many. F. E. V. in Den ver Post. The Corset Is the Foundation Your college outfit stare with a TOOTS PAKA AT THE ORPHEUM One might imagine that Toots stands for little, petite or even cute, but that were a grievous error. Toots is of Amazonian proportions, compar ing favorably in magnitude, both as a star and as a person, with the volcano of Kilauea. Attired in a ORPHEUM "LAST HALF" Ralph Dunbar's Maryland Singers are always welcome, with their mi;ii-it wavs and costumes and their charming southern songs of the six ties. Each of their six numbers is a gem. Dorothy Brenner, in exclu sive songs by Herbert Moore, is a" dainty little actress with appealing eyes, a roguish smile, and a keen sense of the humorous. She starts out by singing about the value of "atmosphere." and then she pro ceeds successfully to create a va riety of it in which her auditors are delighted to bask. Sale Lake Desert News. ORPHEUM "LAST HALF" Charles Olcott got many a laugh with his travesty, "A Comic Opera in Ten Minutes." Mr. Olcott is keen ly humorous and his act is one of the hits of the bill. Mcintosh and his musical maids, three of them, of fer a very pleasing musical act, which is a novelty. The opening number. Fred and Lydia Weber, as the "Butterfly and Archer." present a daring acrobatic act. A. S. W. in Salt Lake Herald-Republican AdT. Your figure will be graceful and you will have distinct style, irrespective of simplicity in dress, and your health as sured. Moreover, a Redfern Model is so ideally cortv fortable, fitting so naiur ally that its wearer may do any athletic stunt as easily as she dances, rides or walks, in her corset. Be sure to have your Redfern Corset properly fitted before you choose your suits and frocks then their correct appearance is assured. f $3.50 up AT Her & Paine TO Ljtn & Htaly "iFaskhurn" Uiuleltst SIS.OOi Lttnardt Kitnts intuitu Hawaiian ma If, $7.50; A fauna La hrand, $4. May ht had c" 12,000 UaJinZ music dtaltrt. li riu fir namt if tht ntartst dealer. THE 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 U eiiy to learn. Its price include an Instruction Book. Hawaiian Steel Guitar Every chord 1 truck upon thii typically rep retenutive Hawaiian instrument is marked by a weird, plaintive harmony and strangely beautiful qualities of tone. It bring, to any music, qualities full of vivid color and va ried charm. Fife SMS m4 . hcMie Vrd mU it l Tkm aa4 bmoaa Book. 51-67 JACKSON BOULEVARD 1 :: CHICAGO