COAL is COAL Hut if you will buv it at th' WHITEBREAST you will j;et the best pnulc Hinl service. TRY KOMO or EUREKA Whitebreast Coal &Lbr. Co. 107 No. 11th St. COUNCIL TALKS ON HOUSE-MOVING THE CHICAO CLEANERS & DYERS Phone B-3018 HARRY LYONS, Mgr. We Ktean Klothes Klean 315 So. 11th Street PARKER PENS FILLERS' RESCRIPTION HARMACY LINCOLN, NEBR. H E FFLEY'S TAILORS OF QUALITY 138 No. 11th St. Phone B-1422 Commissioners Oppose Free Rein Given Transporting of Large Structures Hint usslon wllunu action on the question ol" limine nun inn over the Lincoln streets occupied almost all die lime of the city commissioners at their council meeting Monday aft ernoon. The ordinance read for the third thn under the signature of Commissioner Ilcnsloy. doing away with nil house moving of buildings over 25 feet high, and an amendment allowing leeway for short distance moving of bis buildings, presented by the same commissioner, were laid over for further consideration and de bate by the council. Acting Mayor Dayton and Commis sioner Schroeder are particularly op posed to the moving of heavy houses over the pavement and under the wires. The city Is now the defendant in a heavy damage suit following In juries sustained by linemen working on raising wires over a moving house some months ago. The present bonds of the house movers are by no means suflicient to cover costs of such ac tions, commissioners aeree and the ordinance first proposed to Increase the bond to $15.00. This was am ended by Commissioner Hensley to be $10,000 but both propositions were left for future action. While even these amounts are not enough to pay the city for damage done in some cases, it is said, it will have the ef fect of making the bonding company very particular when and where and how houses are moved and may in vent much future trouble. Steel is given resistance to rusting to an important degree by copper in amounts usually reported as only traces. In an investigation reported by D. M. Buck to the American society for testing materials, increasing the proportion of copper from 0.01 to 0.03 per cent decreased the corrosion oy 30 to 40 per cent; and with 0.15 per cent of copper protection was given even to steel having a considerable eexcess of sulphur. osoooooooooooDOOOoooeeoooooooooosooseoBcccooooooooooo ij ON THE j I QUALITY WORK 8 comes from knowing how to produce QUALITY b Why take unnecessary risk in cleaning, dyeing, pressing, re o pairing and alteration of all description. 8 We do a elas of dyeing that others try to imitate There's a reason. B2304 "ABLE" 139 No. ,.14 CLEANERS AND DYERS "As Good as Any" "Better Than Many" :lr- tJ ....... yto all-yoar-round scat ariiK mm :?( m W " ft m ;t if i IF Fellowship in college or out of it flourishes best with good food and whole some drink. Ice-cohi Bevo unexcelled among beverages in purity and healthfulness is most satisfying as a drink by itself or a relish with' food that makes a hap pier repast. ANHEUSER-BUSCH, ST. LOUIS It must be Ice eo(d THE CREATOR OF "ANNE OF GREEN GABLES" L. M. Montgoniery became fired with a great ambition to write when bhe was about sixteen. Her early ef forts failed to satisfy her and she be ci'iue a proofreader and general "handy-man" on a Halifax newspaper. She tells an amuselng incident which happened at this time. "All the JobB that went a-begging In the office were handed over to me. On one occasion the compositors were setting up for the weekly edition a Ptory called 'A Royal Itetrothal,' taken from an Eng lish paper, and when about half through they lost the copy. Where upon the news-editor requested me to so to and write an 'end' for the story. At first 1 did not think I could. What was set up of the story was not enough to give me any insight into the solution of the plot. Moreover, my knowledge of royal love affairs was limited and I had not been accus tomed to write with flippant levity of kings and queens. However, I fell to work and somehow got it done. More than ten years afterward I came across a copy of the original story In an old serapbook and was much amused to discover that the author's development of the plot was about as different from mine as anything could possibly be." With the publication of her first book Miss Montgomery's struggle for literary recognition was over, once and for all. Her well-loved creation, "Anne of Green Gables," won many thousands of fiction lovers" to her. In her new novel, RAINBOW VALLEY, Miss Montgomery continues the tale of the married life of Anne Shirley at Four Winds Harbour. The story deals largely with Anne's six children and is cramful of romance and humor. The apparatus recently supplied United States grain inspectors for measuring moisture is a simple distil lation flask, with condensing tube and graduated receiver. The definite quantity of grain being placed in the quantity of grain being placed in the flask, and covered with mineral oil, electric heat is applied for 25 or 30 minutes and the percentage of moist ure distiled over Is indicated by the graduations. About 39 per cent of our share of liie sun heat is reflected from clouds back into space, without ever reach ing the earth's land or water surface, if L. B. Aldrich, of the S.-.thsonian astrophysical observatory is correct in his conclusions. Observations from a military balloon were made over the San Gabriel valley, Cal., with an in strument recording the heat radiating from the whole sky or from the sun or sky separately,- and were under taken above a layer of fog or low cloud. Repeated measurements were made from 7 to 10 a. m., with expos ures both to the sun and sky com bined and to the layer of cloud below. The results agreed fairly well in bhow ing that 78 per cent of the radiation reaching the upper surface of the cloud sheet was reflected and It seemed evident that only about 22 per cent of the sun's rays could reach the body of a planet completely en cased in a sheath of smooth cloud. The mean cloudiness of the earth be ing about 50 per cent, it appears that about 39 per cent of the sun's heat is rejected or thrown back without op portunity to render useful service The latest extension of the power of the telescope is achieved by a novel use of color screens. As rescribci by F. G. Brown, a British astronomer, a disk consisting of two semicircular pieces of glass in contact is mounted in a short tube, and this is placed in the telescope between the eeyepiece and the objective. The glasses, which are of orange and blue or other con trasting colors are so adjusted that their plane surfaces are not quite par allel. When any object Is viewed thru the telescope, two Image- are seen, one rich in orange rays and the other in blue, and the intensity of either is increased by shifting it to ward the center of the field by a slight change in the telescope's position. Striking differences in the detail of planet surfaces are brought out. The blue Image of Jupiter, for instance, is stated to be marked by an extreme prominence of the north equatorial belt, where the south equatorial belt is more conspicuous in the orange im age, and the monoschromatic light re veals features not otherwise seen A farmer, noted for his absentmind edness, went to the market town and transacted his business. He stalled on his way home, however, with be unpleasant conviction that he had for gotten something, but what it was he could not recall. As he neared home the conviction strengthened and three times he stopped his horse and went careful? thru ,1118 pocket-book in a vain endeavor to discover what he had forgotten. In' due course he reached home and was met by his daughter, who looked 'at him In surprise nd then exclaimed: "Why. father, where have you left mother?" San Francis co Argonau 0d8C(WclCb THE STORE FOR MEN Qud0c Gverzcl Co A World's Championship Is Being Played For kr-w. J I &Sf VV$yijS Jy and whether it's Morans' Cincinnatti Reds or Gleason's Chicago White Sox who win the flag, each will have it's own individual following of fans. The championship of Lincoln' in the Men's Clothing League has, however, long since been decided the public itself has decid ed that, and as usual team-work and solid merit has been victori ous, for this store. . The addition of "Kirschbaum Clothes" to this strong organiza tion together with the other splendid values that can be secured at this department, has won for us the patronage and confidence of the discriminating public. "KIRSCHBAUM SUITS Featuring Prices at $30, $35, $40, up to $65 OVERCOATS, all new models. Priced at $30, and upward. mi - 4 1 1 " 1 HALLETT UNI JEWELER Established 1871 Look him up for College Pins and Emblems Society, Class, Sorority and Fraternity Jewelry 1143 0 Lazy Lorenzo and Dog-tired Dick were discussing something they knew little about work. "I think," said Lazy Lorenzo, "that if they did away with work altogether it'd put an end to these 'ere strikes." "Yirsi," said Dog-tired Dick. "That'll be the time when everything's done by electricity. Only got to press a buton and the Job's done. " A slow horror dawned In Lazy Lorenzo's eyes. "That won't do..." he said emphatically. "Who's a-goln' to press the button?" Ofc3 iy SANITARY LUNCH Good Food Good Service Moderate Prices Students! Eat Here 1236 O St.