THE DAILY N EBRASKAN AO SOCIETY TO 8TAQE CONTEST (Continued from Page 1) bility to fields, drainage, prevailing winds, water supply and the nature of the soil. Although long lanes are usually con sidered as economic loss, It is very often advisable to put the farmstead in the center of the farm and con nect it to the road by means of a lane. This place is approximately equidistant from all the fields and from the highway itself. The second thing to "onsliier is the drainage. It is imperative that the land should slope from the house to the barn tnd where it is possible from the wel toward the house, at least the well should be higher than the barn or barn lot. If the prevailing wind? are from the north as we have them In this section of the country in the winter, it would not be a bad plan CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING RENT A JEW FORD High class cars for particular people. Lowest rates and always open. Motor-Out Company, B4718, 1120 P St RAIN OR SHINE, snow or sleet, you'll see Munson's Rent-a-Fords on the street. B1550 B1517, 1125 P St. LOST Black leather notebook Tuesday in Social Science. F4314. LOST Folder pocketbook with Art-Garland Stove Mfg. Co., printed on the leather. Possibly lost in "U" hall. Reward. Call L5194. LOST Gold Redipolnt pncile between Bessey hall and Library. Finder call L5184. Reward. Look Ahead for Xmas Diamonds Rings Pocket Books Watches Tie Pins Pens Pencils Ivory Silverware .i " !" Correct lenses and up-tvdate l HI frames. Our work guaran- jjj !:! teed. Moderate priees. Ili !!: Prompt repair work; broken jji ill lenses duplicated. :jj Mendenhall Optical Co. J. H. PHILLIPS, Mgr. 1306 0 St. Phone B2401 ; I REMEMBER Vall's Barber Shop 131 No. 13th St. Pi G TAKE HOME TO MOTHER A Sterling Silver Carving Set 5.00 to 20.00 Plated Sets 2.00 to 10.00 HALLETT ill Uni Jeweler Estb. 1871 II Order Now Your Printed or Engraved Chrletmas Greet ing Card. Boyd Printing Co. 125 North 12th St. GRAVES PRINTING CO. Student Printing. SU IT. 11TH BT Lincoln. to place the farmstead on a south slope thus affording as much protec tion from the weather as nature pro vides. The water supply probabbly ranks as the first consideration In the preliminary plans. A good well Is one of the most valuable assets a farmer could have. It is the basis itntion for himself and the livestock on the farm. It Is a good plan, in fact it Is usually done, to dig tho well before anything else has been done on the development of the layout. Nine times out of then this will insure the water supply close to the house. These them, in a general way, are the things to be considered In lo cating the farmstead with respect to the rest of the farm. It is quite an other problem to locate and arrange the buildings with respect to each other after the site has been chosen. The foremost consideration, I believe, Is convenience convenience In do ing chores, convenience for the stock and convenience for all the dally farm operations. It Is estimated that the average farmeri wajks in .fche neighborhood of 300 miles a year in the simple operation of doing til" morning chores. If you would tell Mm that It would be necessary for him to take a 200 mile trip during the next year and that he must walk all the way carrying milk, feed or. harness he would declare that he never in the world could find time to do it. And yet hundreds of farm ers are walking that much every year over and above the distance that would be necessary if their buildings were effectively and effeci- ently arranged. The location of the farm dwelling is the key to the whole layout and should therefore receive first consid eration. It should be placed on the high ground and as close to the well as possible. If the prevailing winds in the summer time are from the south or southeast, it Is well to lo or to LltS and to cate the stock barns, stock sheds and lots to the north, northwest northeast of the dwelling, so as carrr off all offenslce odora that might arise from this source. The barn should be in the neighborhood of 150 feet from the house. This cu the distance down to a minimum a at the same time fire is not apt travel from one building to anothei. All opon sheds adjacent to the barn should open either to the south or east The corncrlb, grainary and im plement sheds should be accessible to the fields. The hog lot should ad Join the cattle yard so as to facili tate the common practice of letting the hogs follow the cattle. The chick en house can be placed most any where but Is a good plan to locate It close to the orchard. . This latter can then be fenced in hen tight and used for a chicken run. A provision for trees, vines, shrubs, flowers, etc., adds the finishing touches to any arrangement and should therefore not be overlooked. As was stated before these consld rations are in lieu of ideal conditions and while it is absolutely esesntlal that we have in mind ideal conditions from which to base and construct our plans, it Is very seldom that they are encountered. More often the farm stead site has already been stablished and a few buildings erected. The Agricultural Engineer is asked to solve the problem of making this lay out an effeciently arranged farm stead. It is indeed quite a problem. Its solution depends upon common sense, good Judgment and a thorough knowledge of the particular existing conditions. If the farmstead site is to remain unchanged and a new building added from time to time, the ideal arrangement should be born in mind constantly and should be the ultimate goal. If a new barn or any other building is to be added to the farmstead, It would not be neces sary to erect It in the position of the Wfnirir Can more than pay your way thru oollepe by de votiiipr a few hours per week to selling a specialty proposition. Write Department CP. FULTON MERCANTILE CORP., Woolworth Building New York City 1 Chrysanthemums For Thanksgiving Mail a few home to take your place. The flower of the day. $1.00 to $5.00 a dozen. Roses $1.00 to $3.00 a dozen. Carnations, $1.00 a dozen. "Scarlet and Cream" Chrysanthemums for the football game. J. K. HILTNER 135 So. 12th St. tor. ti iirriTt"---iTST.t - r ' 1 -vt 'ip'-'"''"' . i u in ranr, uiuimt a a I e P k A IB LORSHEIM SHOE -A - t' ' F.S yveragccl over their long period of service FLORSHEIM SHOES arc truly cc6' nomical their cost per month surprisingly low Most Styles $10.00 ehmidt & Bro. 917-21 O St. FOR THE MAN WHO CARES old one but It should be so placed, with the Idea in mind that vhen other new buildings are added later on, It will harmoniously perform Its function with respect to these build ings. In conclusion, I Just wish to em phasize again the importance which Is beginning to be felt tnrougnoui this farming region of this rather un heard of and unsponsored subject. 1 believe that the farmstead Is the cen ter of all farm actlvtlles, that It is the means to the application of sci entific principles and shall 1 say, the very key to farming success so why not give it ranking consideration with the other fanning Questions. BEAT NOTRE DAME Lunacy may not be a cause for divorce, but at time we suspect that It is a cause for matrimony. MICKEY TALKS TO FROSH ENGINE RS (Continued rom Page Three), pyramids of Egypt." said Professor Mickey. Civil engineering work in cludes highways, railways, marine works, heavy masonry, bridges, ac queducts, dificult foundations, irriga Hons and drainage, manufacturing plants. surveying, hydro-electric power plants, cranes ana ecvu.u8 machinery, and transportation Ulio Kv BOA innd and air. Among the noteworthy achievements of modern engineers are the Panama uanai. me Galveston sea walls, the Quebec bridge, irrigation of Imperial Valley. California, and the subways and tun nels under the Hudson at New York City The water supply of New York City comes down from the Catskills in a tunnel 250 feet below the surface of the earth 100 feet under eolld rock with enough force to send a stream as high as Woolworth tower. Professor Mickey then presented some statistics showing the startling Increase of money expended upon motor vehicles for highway transpor tation over the money expended on highway maintainence and construc tion. Then a group of slides of the future state capltol were shown, and a number of slides showing Irrigation projects such as the Roosevelt dam, which Professor said was the first one of Importance. Tuesday, November 18, ijjj. MANY LINCOLN PEOPLE GIVE LARGE AMOUNTS (Continued from Page 1) Towle, C. a 1000 Union Insurance Co.. University Publishing Co 50ft University School of Music.... 555 Walt, Edward J .: j 00() Western Brick & Supply Co jqo Western Sand & Gravel Co 553 Western Supply Co. j00 Woods Bros. . s.OOO BEAT NOTRE DAME- SUBSCRIPTION DANCE Music by LOUISIANA RAGADORS LincolnHotel Dining Room Thursday, November 30 Tickets $1.10, including Tax 'NOTICE! I We will close all day November 30. You have just today and tomorrow to arrange for Thanksgiving Day and for the Day of all Days. The day we BEAT Notre Dame. Men's Suits Cleaned and Pressed, $1.00. 316 No. 12th VARSITY CLEANERS N n M PFhat zAre the Toung Men Up To? "There may be something in this new art," you say, "but I don't get it ; one modern thing looks as queer as the next to me. What's it all about what arc the new men up to?" The Dial is the one American magazine to intelligently explain the mean ing and interpret the trend of the new movements in art and literature. It is the only magazine which publishes side by side the best work produced by Americans the best work produced abroad the best work in traditional styles the best work in the modern manner in fiction, poetry, essays, criticism, and reproductions of the fine arts. You know that in a few years certain of our contemporaries, whose work is anathema to the present generation, will stand out like giants. They will be hailed as great artists and geniuses by those who now lack the critical discernment to understand what they are trying to do. The genius of Swift, Milton, Blake, Molierc, Ibsen, Shelley, Poe, Thorcau, Melville, and Whitman, to mention only a few, went unrecognized, except by the dis criminating minority, in their own generation. Don't wait for the next generation to see your contemporaries in perspective, but enjoy their work now in The Dial, and accord them your appreciation while they arc yet alive. In addition to the best work by the new generation, The Dial presents the finest work by established writers': Joseph Conrad, E. A. Robinson, George Moore, Thomas Hardy, and Anatole France, appearing side by side with Sherwood Anderson, E. E. Cummings, Waldo Frank, Van Wyck Brooks, T. S. Eliot, D. H. Lawrence, and Ezra Pound. The Dial thus offers you the unusual jJitdsuit ui v.uiiiuiniy uiu i iii.iui. READ THE DIAL and knolv the world of modern art and letters as it is. THE DIAL FOR NOVEMBER contains among other things THE WASTE LAND T. S.Eliot the fin: long poem by Mr Eliot in several years. THE PLAYER QUEEN W. B.' Yeats i full length play in prose fantastic, humorous, and poetic. AND THE SECOND INSTALMENT OF MANY MARRIAGES h Sherwood Anderson - a new novel by the most important and interest Ing figure in contemporary American literature. Many Marriage surpasses anything Mr Anderson ha previously written, and tb first instalment in the October Dial ha already created a great stir in Jiterary circles. This significant novel will be con cluded in the March issue. OTHER CONTRIBUTORS EZRA POUND PABLO PICASSO DUNCAN GRANT BERTRAND RUSSELL ARTHUR SCHN1TZLER ON Alt NEWSSTANDS SPECIAL STUDENT AND FACULTY OFFER This coupon is good for $1.00, towards a one year subscription to The Dial. 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THE DIAL I ei West 1 Jih Street New York City Gentlemen: I am tending to the Business Manager of our college paper, I4.00, for a year' subscrip tion to The Dial, under the terms of your special offer outlined above. 1 understand that the sub scription will begin with the November isue and that in addition, you will tend me a copy of The Dial for October. Name Addrtu. N 1 H H n S3 rsz: ft B-3677 111 in