The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, January 12, 1926, Page 3, Image 3

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    THE DAILY NEBRASKAN
INTERNATIONAL
SCHOOL IN WEST
Clifomi. Promoting New In.titu
tion for Study of Intern.
tional Relation.
The west coast will soon have a
o ,nnl of International Relations
SShlnit the Walter Hint Fm
School in the east. It will be called
the Lo Angeles University of Inter
national Relations and will be estab
lished at Burbank, California.
Dr Kufus B. Von Klein-Smid,
president of the University of South
em California is now touring east
ern cities on a money gathering trip
to finance the new project.
The site for the school was offered
by the city of Burbank. There will
be four colleges, an institute of in
ternational politics, school of for
eign trade, school of diplomacy, and
g school of international law.
While the press reports contain no
account of the potential intellectual
resources of the new school, it is said
that $10,000,000 will be raised to
meet the financial needs.
Freshmen at Ohio State Univer
sity are thrown into a lake if they
are cnujrht without "prep" caps.
Lincoln Theatre
ALL THIS WEEK
" the "World's Sweetheart
Mary Pickford in
On the Stage
NEW YORK'S EAST SIDE
NEWS FABLES
SHOWS AT 1, 3, S, 7. .
MAT. 3Sr NITE SOc CHILD. lQe,
LYRIC
ALL
THIS WEEK
BIG COMEDY BILL
Shou'd Wives Receive Wages? See:
WagesWives
KVW-uAV
M a Ncwi and Comedy Pictures
ON THE STAGE
"DANCE MAD"
Featuring
DOROTHY BARNETT
ARTHUR With FREDDIE
JOXDAN and HAYES
and Shirley Janoff
HARBISON'S LYRIC ORCHESTRA
Mr., Mav M. Mills, Orfanist
SHOWS AT 1, 3. 6, 7, 9.
Rialto Theatre
MON. TUES. WED.
A BIG COMEDY PROGRAM
"The Great
Love"
A Mftro-Gotdwyn Picture
"A MISFIT SAILOR"
Educational Comedy
NLWS-TOPICSREVIEW
SHOWS AT 1. S, S. 1. 8. .
MAT 2Sc NITE 35c CHILD. IOc.
COLONIAL
THIS
WEEK
The Thrilling Melodrama
"SportinglLife"
Featuring
BLRT LYTELL MARION NIXON
"THE ADVENTURES OF
MAZIE"
A Whirlwind ol Encltement
"ALL FED UP"
A Riot of Laughter
"" VISUALIZED WORLD NEWS
SHOWSAT 1. 3, S, 7,9.
1 ixT. xr
ALL THIS WEEK
OUR ANNUAL
Syncopation
Show
24
SINGERS DANCERS
24
MUSICIANS
Including tha Following Artists
GATTISON ELSIE
JONES AND ELLIOTT
WITH
HOLLYWOOD CLUB ORCHESTRA
Syncopation Supremo
6 PITTER PATTER GIRLS
SYNCOPATED STEPPERS
JIM FRANK
MOORE MITCHELL
"Smile With Us"
FRANK HAMILTON
The Dynamo Songster with
BUDDY PAGE
At tha Piano
O'CONNDR SISTERS
Syncopated Harmony Sinters
TIM MARKS
Jan Comedy Whiatler
JULIUS FISHER
The One-String Fiddler
SYNCOPATED ENSEMBLE
"THE GREEN ARCHER"
BABICH AND THE ORCHESTRA
SHOWS "AT 2 : 3or7 :00, B : OO
nm
College Press
PRACTICE ECONOMY
Indiana Daily Student
College students would be doing
well if they acquired among other
good habits the trait of being eco
nomical. Trobahly there is no other
word that Americans in general de
test somuch, but in this day of the
high cost of living, it can not bp
practiced any too much in its true
meaning. One should be able to dis
tinguish, however, between being
economical and stingy for there is
danger of the latter getting the best
of a person.
It is for the college student's own
good that economy should be prac
ticed. In collepe a student often
believes the world is waiting to re
ceive him and that it owes him a liv
ing, and a good one at that. But it
is not so. It is vastly different go
ing to college on money from home
than working for $20 or $25 a week
with all one's expenses to pay. If
a student has not learned economy
before leaving college he is due for
a rather rude awakening.
Theodore Roosevelt wisely said
that thrift was sim.Mv the art of
spending money wisely.
Edward W. Book in a magazine
article said that few acts of conduct
are so small that they go unnoticed
and that few are so lowlv and hum
ble that the eyes of some one are
not upon them. He was sneakine
of a certain young man. a friend of
the son of the house, who always
turned off every lieht when he left
his room, and how punctilious he was
in the little things about his room.
The wife had mentioned these thinsrs
to her husband, who said nothing.
But when the young man was erradu-
ated from college he was asked to
enter the business. It was the lit
tle things that counted.
It has been said if a man can be
trusted with the little things he can
be trusted in all things. There are
too few persons who realize this and
especially young persons. Being
economical should not only apply to
saving money, but one can be eco
nomical with time and other per
son's property. If all the time wast
ed were put to good advantage, only
one's imagination can picture the re
sults. So get the habit of practicing
economy. Some one may be watch
ing you to see what you can do with
the little thintrs in life and whether
you are capable of bigger responsi
bilities.
Harvard Houses Each
Class in Dormitories
Dormitories for each class are an
original feature in Harvard Universi
ty dormitory system. The freshman
classed is housed in freshman halls.
There are three of these buildings
which have been in use since 1914.
An unusual feature pertaining to
the fraternities and house clubs of
Harvard is that these organizations
do not serve as dormitories for their
members. Practically nil the dormi
tories were originally under private
ownership, but in recent years these
have been bought by the university.
In these dormitories live the majority
of sophomores and juniors in the
college.
Although the number of students
always exceeds the dormitory ac
comodations provisions is made for
the obtaining quarters near the
university.
Provision is made for a special
dormitory which is entirely occupied
by law school students. There is
also another hall which is occupied
exclusively by students in the gradu
ate school of Arts and Sciences, and
there is also another hall which
houses students who are in the
Graduate school of Business Admin
istration. Indiana Has Leaf of
Bible of Gutenberg
A leaf from a Gutenberg Bible
which is 475 years old is one of the
most treasured articles in the Uni-
versttv of Indiana Library. The ori
ginal Bible contained sixty-four
nnc-es. The naee in the possession
of the library is from the book of
Isaiah and the first issue of the book.
.Tohnnnes Gutenberg was five
years printing this book at May-
ennes, Germany. Large ootnic
rbAractera are used in the type,
which is in Latin. The headlines,
accents and colored initials are done
by hand. A small watermark is the
only blemish on the page. The ink
has defied the centuries and the
printing is very clear. In 1911 a
copy of a perfect Gutenberg Bible
was worth $50,000.
Everythlng is "n"k7
oory" with me Busi
ne is rood. Tnnk!
I still maintain the good
old plcy ol cleaning
clothes clean.
Varsity Cleaners
HOY WYTHE RS, Mgr.
B3367
316 No. 12 St.
J
tva -3FiXi7lTsr'-Ti
Distinguished Scientists Discuss
Potato Diseases at Meeting Here
An outstanding and very success
ful conference of plant pathologists
and horticulturists was held at the
Agricultural College on December
28, 1925, just prior to the Kansas
City meetings, when representatives
from Australia, Hungary, three prov
inces in Cannda and twenty stales
in the United States gathered to
discuss an extremely important
group of potato diseases. Never be
fore has such a representative group
of men from widely separated sta
tions gathered together to discuss
one particular plant disease problem.
They were hero at the invitation of
the Nebraska College of Agriculture
and the departments of Plant Path
ology and Horticulture.
The group of diseases under study
are known as the degeneration di
seases of potatoes. They have come
to the attention of farmers and sci
entists only in very recent years,
being first described in comprehens
ive form in 1913, when Dr. L. E.
Melchers, then of Ohio State Univer
sity and now of the Kansas Agricult
ural College, and Dr. W. A. Orton
of the Bureau of Plant Industry,
published papers dealing with the
mosais disease of tomatoes, and re
lated plants and potato wilt, leaf
roll, and related diseases. Since that
time interest in the diseases has
greatly increased and pathologists
are working on them in many differ
ent states and countries. The di-
scases as a group are the most im-
portant that the potato grower has
to deal with.
Specimens on Display
Specimen plants, representing
twenty different named diseases,
were on display at the Plant Path
ology and Horticulture greenhouses.
The seed from which these plants
were grwn had been sent here by
the various men who came here to
attend the conference. They were in
fected with the different diseases
and the object was to collect all of
them together in one place. Thus,
it was possible for such investiga
tors as Dr. Donald Folsom of Maine,
Dr. McKay of Oregon, Dr. Gratz of
Florida, and Dr. Rosa from Califor
nia and all the other scientists to
compare the diseases as they knew
them with the diseases that the ier
men had in mind. A few cases of
duplication, both in investigation
and in giving two diseases the same
name, were made plain.
The chief contribution of the con
ference was to give every one pres
ent an opportunity to gain a more
comprehensive insight into the na
ture of the degeneration disease d
problem. The authorities on the! a
different troubles were able to Eetjj
together with their plants before ' M
them and make clear many points. !g
Thus, each man left with a clearer IE!
conception of what the other man
was talking about.
Four Distinct Groups
The degeneration diseases on dis
play and under study by the various;
pathologists are divided into about ;
four distinct sub-groups. The first i
group is known as the Mosaics. The
name refers to the peculiar leaf mot- i
tling that is characteristic of diseas- ,
ed plants. Due to the fact that the
cause of none of the diseases is j
known there is no technical or sci-1
entific term that can be used to em- j
1 Need Leather?
Portfolios, History Covers,
Assignment Books and
Memo Books
C. Edison Miller
Before Buying
218 No. 12
Phone B2286
Your Choice of All
Hart Schaffner & Marx
Suits and Overcoats
At A
This Universial 20 per cent Discount from the regular
price also applies to all other Suits and Overcoats,
except "Silverstrype" and Tuxedo Suits
' v m r ; r
bellish the descriptions.
Therefore,
the various types of Mosaics arc
known merely as mild, rugose, Leaf
Rolling, crinkle or aucuba. Each
particular type can be transmitted to
healthy plants and its own distinct
ive symptoms reproduced.
The thing' that makes the diseases
important economically is that they
result
yield.
in a marked reductu.,1 in
A yield reduction of from
thirty to fifty per cent because of could publish a book on the wise
them has been received very often, cracks and artistic designs with which
Another sub-group is represented the heaps of the western school are
by only one distinct type. It is embellished. It is raid that the in
known as Leaf-Boll because of the spectors will permit the owners of
marked and distinctive upward roll- cars to retain these decorative fen
ing of the leaf edges. Leaf-Roll tures, providing they erase all quo
plants produce very low yields, jtations from Shakespeare and Cap
Perhaps most important group is lain Bil,y from thcir "'"incs. They
renresented bv a disease known as must als0 Tve thnt thc Ilnos on
Snindln-Tuhrr. Crrtainlv this one is
verv important in Nebraska. As the tions' 8nd that Rre not t,ullH
narne implies, the tubers are clon-,cated on any othcr tin bW
gated affairs. The farmer knows The administration don't want wo
them as "run-outs" for they do not men to have to walk home from auto
produce anything when planted. A j rides, merely because thc ancient
miscellaneous group of troubles tjre wreck coaxed along life's highway by
classed along with Spindle-Tuber for some campus playmate got into the
they seem to' develop finally the typ- j hills and was unable to get back
ical Rymptoms of the latter. They under its own power. When the
are known by various names, such inspectors finish their task even the
as Witches Brooms, Giant Hill, Curly 1 most doubting woman can go out for
Dwarf and other terms. The names '
arc descriptive of the effect on the
plant.
The men at the conference , pro
ceeded from Nebraska to the meet-
ings of the American Association for
the Advancement of Science at Kan
sas City.
Two dormitories, accomodating
500 men, will be opened at the Uni
versity of Wisconsin in September,
1926.
V
-hosiery
Chooses the loveliest of
Colorings
RoseTaupe. French nude.
Blue Fox. Grain Apricot.
Silver Sandalwood. Moon
light. Mdple. Their very
names call forth images
of their actual loveliness.
Made of superior qualit-.
Reinforced with lisle or all
silk. For daytime sports
or evening occasions, at
prices that will make it
easy for you to acquire
all the stockings you de
sire. Coax yourself to come
down to Rudge & Guen
zel's and buy yourself a
pair of Gotham Gold
Stripe Silk Stockings.
Chiffon, $1.85 and $1.95.
Service weight, $1.85.
GLJ ' Prnnal Service Bureau
11 Rudire a Gueossl Co.
;i
-rw -mmrm
isisn
WASHINGTON REQUIRES
AUTOMOBILE INSPECTION
(Continued From Pago One)
The men who designated their respec-
tivc Henrys as Ruick and a Boo are
now, at the instigation of the dean
of women, awaiting trial on a charge
of false advertising. The pet rattles
and squeaks, the invisible dust-proof
tops, and the rare paint (very rare
indeed) of collegiate flivvers may
remain with us so long as they do
not impair the running quality of
j the machine.
Some enterprising campus author
'Brs xnolr original crea-
DELICIOUS SANDWICHES.
SOUPS HOT DRINKS
Ledwich's Tastie Shoppe
trner 12th and P. We Deliver
Phone B 2189
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Try Our New Vitreous Sanitary Fountain j
I Having always had the most beautiful fountain in the west we now have also the most
sanitary, up-to-date Fountain and Luncheonette Service. We invite you to come in and
inspect our New White Knight Sanitary Fountain.
Student's 7 .QJ I! iQlj Student's
Store Y0 LB3 O 5 2 P Store
Ils-w.cor.bandpsts: & -
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IDENTIFY THE GENUINE BY((r THE NAME ON THE FLAP
4 Ay4-4H'- i
j U h 1
f V
V
a ride with the assurance thnt she
can ride back maybe. The host of
ting in late, and announcing a car
breakdown as their excuse, will have
to search through volume five of
the "Letters of Ananias" for another
tale. The campus tinware is going
to be proof ngainst sudden break
downs. All cars are expected to have
an inspection card within the next
week, if they can qualify. If not,
they will be sold to some bus line.
And as a final solemn warning, lis
ten to the word from headquarters:
"Any woman who goes out in an
auto that does not bear an inspec
college women who have been get-
If you could look beyond the Grave?
Uni Players
in
'Outward Bound'
Sutton Vane's unusual Drama of death.
Thrilling, Entertaining, Classic.
Temple Theater Jan. 14, 15, 16.
Seats at Ross P. Curtice Co.
LINCOLN, NEB.
c.
E. BUCHOLZ, Mgr.
11 iiiinii mvnu iiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiimimimiii mm
Smart Style at Harvard
The Vogue at Wellesley
GOOD TASTE is a part of every cur
riculum. It expresses itself at the foremost
colleges in the selection of Goodrich
Zippers for cold, snowy, slushy days.
Here boots are as fashionable as a
victory over a traditional rival.
Trim, neat a wide contrast to the
cumbersome, wallowing gaiter. And
a method of fastening unequalled.
Don't flunk in style add Zippers
to your wardrobe.
THE B. F. GOODRICH RUBBER COMPANY
AKRON, OHIO
A Complete Stock of Zippers
For Sale by
fl AYER ' BEOS. CO.
ELI SHIRE, Pres.
tion tag and gets caught, will bo ex
pelled from the college,"
Since Nebraska took such
a fall out of Creighton, it
will be safe for you Oma
ha men to go home this
week-end.
Liberty Barber Sbop
E. A. WARD
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