Tuesday. February 28. 1922. THE D A I L Y N E B R A S K A N COMMERCIAL CLUB WILL DINE AT GRAND HOTE Tlie first university com.ucrcUl rlnh dinner of the semester will be held Wednesday evening at the Grand hotel at t o'clock. Good speakers have been secured for the evening and all club members and prosrec tlve members are urged to attend UNIVERSITY SENDS SLIDES TO COMMUNITY SHOW The university has just sent p b? of slides to Honomble Georse Wil liams of Fairmont Those slides ai to be shown by Mr. Williams at community meeting and are in subject "Nebraska Beautiful." PIANO DEMONSTRATION FOR ALL UNIVERSITY CO-EDS I. Mrs. A. Klein, manager of Scnmol ler & Mueller Fiano store, will &pea: at the meeting of the women's com mercial club. Wednesday. 5 o'clock S. S. 107. Mrs. Klein has been man acer of this store for severcl yea" and l as had a great deal of expert ence in the music business. Alumni Notes. T. J. Killian. ex-'02, writes from Hollywood, Calif., where he is presi dent of the Big Tegunga Rock add Gravel Co., concerning th? alum.ii journal, "It seems good to see some of the familiar names in print I had the good fortune of visiting my oM home twice in the past thre years and being in Lincoln on homecoming day in 1920. We hare quit? a few NebrasVans living in California and it always seems good to run acro3s cny of them. I am never too busy to see any of the home friends." " Fred X. Hiliner, '20, L. L. E. '1:2, is connected with the law firm of Root, Clark, Buckner & Howland of Ne York city. John R. Armstrong, '09, is d strici manager in the life insurance busi ness at Columbus, Xebr. j A. G. Sly, "16, is principal of tLe1 high school, Whittier, Calif. j spent the week-end at the Delta Zeta house. Elfrieda Parodies, "25, Bpent the week- end at her home In ouglas. Clarence Ikkoff, '25, spent the week end at his home in Fremont. Raymond Smith, 74, spent the week- end at St. Joseph, Mo. lone Benson. 22. has returned from Sterling where she spent several days. Inea Peregoy. ex-'24, of Council Bluffs who has been spending severa' days at the Pt eBta Phi house has re turned to her home. ALPHA SIGMA PHI WINS TOURNAMENT (Continued from page 1.) . the Delta Chi were vanquished 15 to 13, in the third round; the Deli lost to the Alpha Slgs, IS to 14, in the semifinals; and the Sig Alpha were trounced, IS to 10, in the finals. The honor-winning performance ot the Alpha Sigma Phi team was espec ially noteworthy because of the fart that the same five men played the entire length'of all the games. ' Altno several of the players were somewhat njured, they played in spite of their hurts, and rarely asked for time out. Summary: Alpha Sig Phi g ft pf tp pt UNIVERSITY ALUMNI SEE FILMS IN WASHINGTON The university alumni films were returned from Denver yesterday tud were immediately sent to Washing ton where they wil! be Bhowt March 2. There are many graduates if the University of Nebraska In the differ ent departments at Washington and thev also have one of the large s University of Nehraska departments in the country. Migration of Birds and Animals It Subject for Much Discustit.i Usher, f . Klepser, f Ogden. c .. Hoy, g Tipton, g Totals Sig Alpha Ep. Collins, f R. Dewitz, f Launders, c H. Dewitz, g Thorn sen, g Peterson, f Totals 2 3 0 0 0 5 S 3 3 IS g ft pf tp pt 0 0 10 0 0 2 1 4 0 0 1 1 1 3 4 11 3 10 (Continued from page 1.) food will not be found In their nest ing regions during the winter and chat the birds cannot maintain them selves in the north during the winter The trouble with the men who have formulated this theory is that they have not looked on the broad side of the affair but only from the stand point of the ornotholigist The;- took the reasons that seemed so simple that they could not be wrong but did not go down to the basic instincts in all animals. All forms of the highei animals show the migratory instinti in some manner. The beasts prob ably once made the same journies that are now made by only birds. fishes and some mammals. The fs!i and birds have continued to do so because of their comparatively easy method of locomotion. Also a counter force has set in, namely the homing instinct, which has attached animals more closely to their own land than has that of the birds. This homins instinct is present in birds to a high degree, however, as is shown by the fact that individual birds will almost invaribly return to the same rt for all the years of their life. It is not a question of food a.-d shelter as is shown by the fact that certain species, the orioles for in stance, start south when food ahoccl and there is no need of shelter. If one of these birds is prevented from returning, during the migration fca- Personals. Kaiherii.e Flannigan, "25, left las; week for California where she will spend the remainder of the winter. Louise Waikins of Omaha spent the weekend at the Pi Beta Pi house. Naomi dBuck, ex-"22. of Harvar Eiche Floral Co. Choice Cut Flowers and Corsages 130 So. 13th i, VAJThKUSEN the Worlds Smartest COLLAR IN an incredibly short time the VAN HEUSEN Collar has become the vogue. The stiff-bosomed boiled shirt and its iron-clad cuffs had given place to the soft, dressy shirt with comfortable cuffs. I No Starching No Rough Edges) Will Not Wrinkle Saves YourShhtsj Saves YourHes Men were asking for a soft collar : "Something that looks smart and feels smooth." And because it has a dressy dignity no other collar can equal, men who scorned the ordinary soft collar are wear ing the VAN HEUSEN. Its trim and stylish appear ance is woven and tailored into it, not starched nor ironed into it. It needs no starch and but little ironing, and is as easy to launder as a handkerchief. It will outwear half a dozen ordinary collars. AW stylet and heickts in quarter sixes from 13 to 20, price fifty cents If yor detler c m ppty yvm with the VAN HEUSEN Collar mmd the VAN CRAFT Shirt (w oft white shirt with ft VAN HEUSEN Collar rtaofaa4), write m for ddreaa of oaa that oaav PHILLIPS JONES CORPORATION I22S BROADWAY NEW YORK son, moreover, it will stay content edly all winter and seem to get along wtthout any trouble, showing that the migration instinct is only present at certain times of the year. After that period haa past, the bird has no will ing motive to go. This Is not true merelv of orioles, of course but of practically all species. The so-cr.'.le1 resident birds in the northern Btates m not resident at all. The wln;er birds are individuals who have come down from farther nortn to winter, the summer girds polnb to yet more southern states. In other words. members of that' species did not make the Journey because of necessity but because they were Impelled by the iu- stinct to go south at a crtain season of the year, why they knew not ta Emrpointed and other Metal Peonia THE name VENUS is your X. cuarantce of perfection. Absolutely crumble-pcoof, smooth an J perfectly graded. 7 DEGREES aB toft St bUck H mL bard Boft aHhud F f-ra 4H extra hard HB medium for general use 15c fwr Hit fl2 lrA Jl.XJ prrdacrm ttJxi American Lead Pencil Co. 115 Fmh Ave-, LVn X New York A k us efaaf (to fcw VENVS EVERPOINTED ENCILS D AT THE EC. C. Hall. Friday, larch 3 NORTHWALL'S JAZZLAND BAND 6 Piece Orchestra Dancing 8:30 Admission $1. Tax 10c QUALITY IS ECONOMY I I Thoroughness When you engage a room and bath in a hotel you assume that some service goes with it One should assume no less when buying clothes. A suit or an oversoat, and a room and bath, are simply housing facilities, and only service can make either of them com fortable, endurable, and worth the price. In the of Armstrong's clothes, their great value, aside from consideration of style, consists in the sturdy quality of the woolens and the robust character of the work manship, by which their serv ice is projected far beyond the average life of clothes. AN ARMSTRONG GARMENT IS WORTH THE ARMSTRONG PRICE i i i A rmstrorig CLOTHING COMPANY Nebraska ' Largest Exclusive Men's and Boys' Store