THE DAILY NEBRASKAN CHAPIN BROS. 127 So. I3ih Si. Flowers ALL the Time ! "SPA" Get your Lunches at the City Y. M. C. A., Cafeteria Plan 13TH AND P Kokeschs Supreme JAZZ BAND The Incomcarable For Bookings Call F-3653 Have your EYES examined and glasses fitted by W. H. -MARTIN. O. D. Thoro, Up-to-dtae Methods 1234 "O" St. Opp. Miller &. Paine TEACHERS WANTED To fill vacancies in all depart ments. Have calls for teachers daily. Only 3l2 per cent commis sion. TEACHERS' EMPLOYMENT BUREAU 208-209 C. R. S. Bank Bldg. Cedar Rapids, Iowa I v """" v s . t mm r"---"- '? "" it?: Si' is Am. The Corset Is the Foundation Your college outfit s carts with a 3. 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 com fortable, fitting so natuT' 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. $3.50 up AT Miller & Paine UNIVERSITY NOTICES Red Cross Lessons The Red Cross lessons for Univer sity girls will begin Tuesday evening at 7 o'clock, in room 202, of Ne braska hall. PERSONALS Jessie Hotchkiss, ex-'19, was in Lin coln Saturday. Ruth Jorgenson spent Saturday with her parents in Omaha. Lieu Marion A. Shaw was in Lin coln Saturday and Sunday. Olive Lehmer of Omaha visited in Lincoln the end of the week. Bernice Whitford of Arlington was with friends in Lincoln Sunday. Mary Alice Davey spent the end of the week at her home at Davey. Edith Brown of Fremont was in Lincoln for the end of the week. Marie Hixenbaugh was in Lincoln to see the Nebraska-Missouri game. Eunice Fike and Florence Wilcox spent Thursday and Friday in Omaha. Dean Burnett left Friday noon for Washington, I). C, to be absent one week. Margretta Rouse. '21, spent Satur day and Sunday with relatives in York. Ruth Horrum was called to her home in Auburn by the death of her mother. Henrietta Hawkins fo St. Paul, Xeb., visited friends in Lincoln Saturday and Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. C. W. Kibler and daughter. Alda. visited Ada and Augusta Kibler, at the Alpha Xi Delta house the latter part of the week. Gay Arnold of Excelsior Springs, Mo., who is attending the University of Missouri, spent Saturday and Sun day with his sister, Doris Arnold, '19. Mary Cunningham of Columbus visited Marian Reeder at the Delta Delta Delta house the end of the week. Doris Scroggins of Oak. and Carrie Marshall of Weeping Water visited at the Alpha Omicron Pi house Sat urday. Ruth Whitmore. '16, of Valley spent Saturday and Sunday with her sister, Frances, at the Alpha Chi Omega house. FINAL APPEAL MADE FOR MEN IN HUSKING CRISIS (Continued from page onei food. Already thousands ol bushels of potatoes have frozen in the fields of western Nebraska on arcount of shortage of help to harvest and cars to deliver them to market. Mu3t we see our corn left in the field to destruction too? Soon we shal!,-, hear another call and more of the larm boys ol Ne braska will answer and the problem will be greater than ever. Can we depend on you? The waiting fields say "Come," the anxious farmers say "Come," your country says "Come," the call of de mocracy says "Come." Will your answer be silence or will you tell us you are unaccustomed to the work? Today millions of men of peace, men who love home, business, the school, the .church and the farm, have taken up the unaccustomed work of war. Our schools today are teaching helpfulness, they have seen the in efficiency of the past and realize that world problems need strong, ener getic men, men of adaptability and of determined purpose, this crisis of the cornfield presents an opportunity to show the metal of the men of edu cation and opportunity. It would be a splendid lesson to the world if it might be told that at our country's call for food, not alone for our own homes, our own soldiers, but for the starving mil lions of Europe, men of every occu pation, laid down the labors of the hour and gladly responded to the call of the field and garnered the corn of our great state. Many a time in days gone by, the pioneer mothers of Nebraska have gone out into the fields and helped gather the corn that they might save the home and pay off the mortgage. Today the mortgage of imperialism is about to be foreclosed. Today not only the homes of Nebraska, but the homes of the forty millions of fight ing men are facing starvation and sorrow. Shall the soldier in the fields of France be told that you prefer the heaUd school room, that you care not that his crops go to waste? Let us tell him that the young men of Nebraska have laid aside their books, have put on the husking mitt and that his corn is being taken care of, that his father has some as sistance in bearing the burden. The farmer is willing to pay Vie price, he will feed you well, he will thank you heartily 'and a grateful message will be sent to the boys In France, telling them that you can be depended upon when the crisis comes. Can we depend on you? J. O. SHROYER, Secy. Exec. Legislative Com., Farm ers Cooperative Union of Nebraska. Every Weight of Underwear for Men is found in the LEWIS Union f Suit for Fall and Winter ; cotton, cashmere, cotton and worsted, silk and worsted and Sea Island cotton mercerized. You can pet f light, medium or heavy weight LEV UNION SUITS Priced, S1.50 to $6.00 and Higher We display and sell these famous LEWIS Union Suits and want you to examine the differ ent weights and materials, and the generously pood construc tion and then note the big consumer-value. GOOD , CLOTHES CARE i( Is vital to the life of your gar- g ments. m We clean, press and repair 1 them in a most painstaking j manner Th Way You Liki It J LINCOLN Cleaning & Dye Works 326 to 336 So. 11th LEO SOUKUP, Mgr. The EQ.n CLEANERS-PRESSERS-DYERS HAVE THE EVANS DO YOUR CLEANING TELEPHONES B2311 end B3355 He used a pebble in his day, to keep his mouth moist - gives us a wholesome, antiseptic, refreshing confection to take the place of the cave man's pebble. We help teeth, breath, appetite, digestion and deliciously soothe mouth and throat with this welcome sweetmeat. The Wrigley Spearmen want to send you their Book of Gum-ption. Send postal for it today, Win. Wrigley Jr. Co., 1732 Keaner Building, Chicago. The Flavor Lasts! 732 TO Lyon fcf Heaty "Washburn" Ukuleles t $15.00; Leonard) Nunes genuine Hawaiian maie, $7.50; A fauna Loa brand, $4. May be had of 12,000 leading music dealers. JF n'te for name ef the nearest 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 fcnd other musical organizations. It ii easy to learn. It price include! an Instruction Book. Hawaiian Steel Guitar Every chord struck upon this typically rep resentative Hawaiian instrument it 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. Price 00 and upward, ladudint Strrl and Set o Tale. Tbiablc lof phjriaf , and lutrocuoa Book. Catalogs n appluail. . L TO 51-67 JACKSON BOULEVARD CHICAGO 'WRAPPED IN 3