The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, March 02, 1928, Image 1

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    HP
IL
.Daily
Nejbra
HE
SKAN
LEAP YEAR?
"Didn't know it was."
George Holdrege, Omaha.
WEATHER
fair, not much change.
vnTxxvn. no. 100
THE UNIVERSITY OF NEBRASKA, LINCOLN, NEBRASKA. FRIDAY, MARCH 2, 1928.
PRICE 5 CENTS
HUSKER QUINT
ENTRAINS FOR
SOONERSTATE
Saturday Tilt With Oklahoma
Terminates Season for
Valley Leaders
BLACK TAKES TEN CAGERS
Elliott and Brown PUf ' Last
Varsity Game in Aggie
Fray Monday
(By Doug Timmerman)
Departing for Oklahoma on the
jarttrip of the 1928 season, ten Ne
braska cagemen leave Lincoln late
this afternoon for Norman, where
he Huskers meet the Oklahoma
Sooner quintet Saturday. Spending
Sunday in Norman, the Comhuskers
will move on to Stillwater for a con
test with the Oklahoma Aggies Mon
day evening.
The ten players who were selected
bv Coaeh Charley Black to make the
final road jaunt include Captain Tom
Sott, John Brown, Willard Witte
H.rvcy Grace, Glen Munn, Carl
Olson. Kenneth Othmer, Elmer Holm,
Bob Krall, and George Gohde. Gohde
Von the final place from Lewandow
ski and will fill in as substitute guard
on the southern invasion.
Carl Olson, who has been filling a
euard position for the Varsity dur
ing recent practices, reported to
Black Thursday afternoon with sev
eral badly cut fingers. Although they
are stiffly bandaged, Olson will make
the trip with the nine companion
basketeers. Bob Krall left at mid
night Thursday, and will make the
journey alone to the Oklahoma col
lege town.
Sooner Out for Wia
Saturday's game with the Huskers
ends the season for the Sooner bas
keteers and reports from the Norman
camp indicate extensive drill going
(Continued on Page 4)
HOOP TOURNAMENT
TEAMS REACH 252
Entrantt for .Eighteenth Annal
Meet Surpass Officials'
Expectation
Two hundred and fifty-two teams
had entered the 18th Annual Ne
braska Basketball Tournament up to
Wednesday afternoon, it was dis
closed by a careful check of the en
trants yesterday. This shatters early
predictions, as the athletic depart
ment had not expected over 240
quintets to compete.
The time limit for entrance blanks
to be returned closed Wednesday
night at midnight, and W. J. Bra
ham, secretary of the State Athletic
Association will bring the complete
list of teams to Lincoln today. As
soon as Mr. Braham arrives, athletic
officials will meet to classify and pair
the teams for competition.
With the number of teams now en
(Continued on Page 2.)
AWARDS OFFERED IN
BUSINESS RESEARCH
Chicago Treat Company Announces
$2,500 in Prize T-r Be.t
Unpublished Study
Awards for research in business
development and the modern trus
company will be offered according to
an announcement made by the Chi
caj Trsct Company of Chicago, Il
linois. A triennial research prize of $2,
500 will be awarded every three
years for an unpublished study whicl
is submitted in competition, anf
which is considered to contain the
greatest original contribution to
knowledge and advancement in the
field outlined. Papers are due not
later than June 1, 1930. No restric
tions are made as to eligibility of
ronors.
Monograph Prizes
Annual monograph prizes of $300
and $200 respectively will be given
for briefer studies, not exceeding
twenty thousand words in length.
Papers will be accepted up to Aug
tst 31, 1928. This competition if
open to students registered in the
American Institute of Banking and
to bank employees generally, except
ing officers of banks, to students ir
commerce and law and in depart
ments of economics of colleges and
universities, and graduate students
who have not completed more than
one year of graduate work.
The committee of award rill be
headed by Ralph E. Heilman, profes-
of Economics and Dean of the
school of Commerce at Northwest.
XJaiverzity, Chicago, Illinois.
Thesv prizes will be given to en
JHwage study and publication in tho
-omain of finance generally.
Annual Prom Tickets
May Still Be Procured
Students who have not secured
tickets for the Junior-Senior Prom
may obtain them1 at the door of
the Scottish Rite Temple tonight,
it was announced yesterday by'
Charles Bruce. Tickets may also
be secured at the Cornhusker of
fice this afternoon.
Students selling tickets for the
party should check in their money
in the Cornhusker office today be
tween the hours of 11 and 12
a. m., and 1:30 and 4 p. m.
K.W.C.A. ELECTS
NEW OFFICIALS
Ruth Davis, President of Ag
College Branch, Heads
1928-29 Cabinet
LARGE NUMBER OF VOTES
Ruth Davis, 29, Syracuse, was
elected president of the University
Y. W. C. A. at the annual election
held in Social Science Wednesday
and Thursday. Marjorie Sturdevant
'29, Lincoln, was elected vice-president;
-Lois Haning, '30, Lincoln,
secretary and Mary Ball, '29, Long
Pine, treasurer. Two hundred and
seventy-five votes were cast, which
is the largest number for several
years.
All candidates will serve on the
cabinet for the coming year. The
new president will appoint the other
cabinet officers and the installation
of the entire new cabinet will be held
Wednesday, March 28.
Ruth Davis is a member of the
Student Council, Phi Epsilon Omi
cron, professional women's home ec
onomics organization, Home Ec club,
Iota Sigma Phi, honorary chemistry
society, and the Cornhusker Country
man staff. She served as president
of Ag college branch of the Y. W. C.
A. this year.
Marjorie Sturdevant is a member
of the Student Council, Theta Sig
ma Phi, the Dramatic Club and is a
member of the Cornhusker staff. She
was elected treasurer of the Y. W.
C. A. last year.
Lois Haning has served as a mem
ber xf I)., conference rtafx of the
Y. W. C A. this year and is a mem
ber of Xi Delta and the A. W. S.
board.
Mary Ball is vice-president of the
Silver Serpents and served this year
as chairman of the social committee
of the Y. W. C. A. She has also
been a member of the Vesper choir.
Leap Year May
Change Tactics
Of Pin Hanging
(By Bill McCleery)
Pin-hanging at Nebraska is serious
business, but at Omaha University
it's just another popular indoor
sport. This is reported that is, the
facts were reported, to a reporter by
a Nebraskan visiting Omaha.
"There's nothing serious about
hanging pins at Omaha University,"
says the university lad. "There, it
seems that if a girl wears more than
one pin it means popularity. Here
it means threatened homicide."
There are no definite facts con-
the oriein of the old custom
WW. ---O
of pin-hanging. Undoubtedly the tra
ditional habit has come down tnrougt
the ages from some prehistoric ani
mal. The act probably originated in
the male sneaking up on, and slitting
his prospective mate's throat. Today
the method is less hasty, but equally
effective.
This is a trifle off the subject, but
w notice that students at Omaha
U hung their prexy in effigy Tuesday
night. They don't take their hanginr
seriously at Nebraska we woiuY
probably well, you know what we
mean.
It won't be very long now unti'
the new crop of freshmen have their
pins to hang. Let us hope that thej
(Continued on Page 2.)
H1NEY TELLS OF LIQUID AIR
Lincoln High Chemiatrjr Clnb and
Liona Hear Lecture
Professor Jiles W. Haney, chair
man f the mechanical engineering
department, lectured before the
Chemistry club of the Lincoln high
school Wednesday afternoon. His
nt "Liauid Air: Its Produc
tion and Some of Its Uses." The talk
.r.1pniinted with a demonstra
tion showing some of the peculiarities
of liquid air.
The liquid aid usea ny i-roieoeur
Haney was made in the laboratories
nt the Denartment of Mechanical En
gineering of the University.
A similar iecturo and demonstra
tion was given before the Lion's club
at the Chamber oi commerce ai
noon, Thursday.
COUNCIL VOTES
TO QUASH PLAN
OF PROBATION
Special Committee Is Chosen
To Cast New Program to
Replace System
OFFICERS ARE ELECTED
Representatives Decide Upon
Five Dollar Penalty to
Insure Attendance
Definite action by the Interfra-
ternity Council regarding probation
week, was assured when the motion
proposed at the last meeting, to abol
ish probation week or period as it
is understood and practice on the
Nebraska campus at the present
time, was accepted unanimously at
their regular meeting Thursday eve
ning. The action came as a !re
suit of the necessity of legislation
of the probation activities employed
by Nebraska fraternities.
A committee, composed of Eldred
Larson, George Shaner, and Oscar
Norling, was elected to draw up a
program to replace the present pro
bation week Dr. R. J. Pool will act
as faculty advisor. The plan, if ac
cepted by the council, will take the
place of the present system of pro
bation, which has brought forth such
severe criticism.
The proposal made last week,
came after a thorough discussion of
the probation practices of certain
fraternities during the last informal
(Continued on Page 3.)
KAGGIES INVADE
HUSKER CINDERS
Dual Indoor Track Classic Is
Slated for Stadium Path
This Saturday
MANHATTAN HAS STARS
Coach Charles W. Bachman will
bring fourteen of his Kansas Aggie
track? men to Lincoln Friday night to
meet the Cornhusker cinder team in
a dual indoor meet under the east
stadium, Saturday afternoon, March
3, at 3:30 o'clock, according to
Coach Henry F. Schulte, Husker
mentor.
Gartner, Marchbank, and Fairchild
will represent the Kaggies in the
sprint event. Coach Schulte will en
ter Easter, Lowe, and Snyder in the
dash for the Comhuskers. The Ne
braska combination has been break
ing the tape in good time in this
event w-ith Easter the most consistent
runner of the three.
Gartner and Fairchild, Wildcat
star hurdlers, will run the low and
hieh barrier events against Krause
Thompson, and Arganbright of th(
Huskers. The hurdle races promise
to be one of the most interesting
events of the meet with some of tne
Missouri Valley's best hurdlers com
peting for honors.
Gartner, Marchbank, Smerchek
and Winburn will carry the Aggie
colors in the quarter-mile event. Cap
tain Perly Wyatt, E. Wyatt, and
(Continued on Page 2.)
PHI DELTA PHI HAS
ANNUAL INITIATION
Law Fraternity Take in Sixteen
New Men at State Supreme
Court Chambers
Phi Delta Phi, law fraternity, in
itiated sixteen men into the organi
zation last evening. Initiation was
held at the Supreme Court chamber
in the State House, and was followed
by the annual initiatory banquet held
at the Lincoln hoteL
Charles Eastman, Thomas Elliott
Donald Kelley, Edgar Armstrong
Charles Mattson, Dwight Wallace,
'"orest Horton, Leon Sprague, Lee
iankin. Robert Hamer, George Ray
Bill Lamme, John Clark, Ed war''
Hermanson, George Healy and Ed
ward Blick were initiated into Phi
Delta Phi, having been pledged re
ntly to the national organization
of lawyers.
The banquet was made up as a
trial at court. The program was head
ed as if for a petition to the court
"Comes now the petitioner," read
the program, "and prays the court
(Continued on Page 3.)
Pa.Iad.an Will Open
Meeings With Play
"Suppressed Desires," a two act
comedy, will be the feature in this
evening's entertainment at the open
ing meeting of the Palladian Literary
uutk-i--'. TltGft fr'IS tiliy bo W.I&C read'
ings end musical numbers. The social
period will begin at 8:30. Everybody
welcome.
Kansas Science Head
Will Lecture Sunday
Professor H. P. Cady, of the
University of Kansas, will give a
talk on the topic of "Liquid Air"
Sunday afternoon at 4 o'clock in
Morrill Hall. The lecture will be
accompanied by several experi
ments. Mr. Cady is known as a
forceful and entertaining speaker,
according to Prof. F. W. Urson.
He is head of the chemistry de
partment of the Kansas school.
HAGER HEADS
UNIVERSITY T
Sari Olson Is Elected to Fill
Vice-Presidency Vacancy;
Tomscn, Secretary
JOE M. HUNT IS DELEGATE
Gordon V. Hager, '29, Lincoln,
was elected president of the Univer
sity Y. M. C. A. for 1928-29, accord
ing to an announcement made from
the general secretary's office last
night.
Other officers elected at that time
were Carl W. Olson, '30, Lincoln,
vice-president, Coburn Tomson, '31,
Lincoln, secretary, and Joe Hunt,
'28, Scottsbluff, representative to the
Rocky Mountain field council next
summer.
Both Hager and Olson have been
very active in Y. M. C. A. work. Be
sides being secretary of the Univer
sity "Y" last year, Hager has served
a year as secretary of the state coun
cil. He is a sergeant in the advanced
military course and a member of
Delta Upsilon.
Olson is a member of the basket
ball squad, Glee Club, Sigma Tau,
and Delta Tau Delta. He also has
been serving as assistant business
manager on the Blue Print this sem
ester. The newly elected officers will as
sume office April 1.
T MEMBERS MAKE
CONFERENCE PLANS
Annual State Student Officers' Camp
Wu'l Be Held Aprii IS, iV, la;
Place Undetermined
General outlining of plans for the
annual spring Y. M. C. A. State Stu
dent Officers' Training Conference
to be held at some camp on April
13, 14, and 15, were effected at a
meeting this week of the executive
members of the state student council.
Those present at the meeting were
Gerald Sias, of Cotner college, pres
ident; Lyle Eurdick, Wesleyan Uni
versity, vice-president; Gordon Ha
ger, University of Nebraska, secre
tary; Joe Hunt, president of the
University Y; Dean H. C. Gossard
Wesleyan University; F. C Steven
son, state student secretary, and C
D. Hayes, general secretary of the
university association.
Newly elected officers will plan the
activities for the comine year.
Among the leaders of Y. M. C. A.
work who will be present at this con
ference are Dean Gossard, Mr. Stev
enson, and Harold W. Colvin, who is
the executive secretary of the Rocky
Mountain student council, with head
quarters at Topeka, Kans.
DR. WERNER CHOOSES
'LEARNING' AS TOPIC
Radio Speech on Parent-Teacher-Program
la Broadcaat
Thursday Night
"Tools and the Technique of
Learning" was the subject of th'
-adio talk by Dr. O. H. Werner
Thursday night. Mr. Werner discus
sed tl.e nature of the learning or
'anism used in the learning process.
The muscular, nervous, and glandu
lar systems are all used in the leani
ng process. "Learning may be de
fined as the modification of existing
ways of behavior and development o-f
new ways of behavior," according t'
Dr. Werner. The function of the
teacher is that of a stimulator, guid-
er, builder.
This talk was one of a series spon
sored by the State Parent-Teachers
Association to inform the parents of
school children in the state as to the
work of the schools and the trend
of education.
Rev. Lever Will Giva
Che$ietton Readings
Sunday afternoon from 5 to 6
o'clock at Westminster House, 833
North 14, the Eeverend John
Lever, rector of Holy Trinity, wiH
read to book lovers from G. BL
Chesterton, the brilliant British
jot;r?r,!t( TlPvP!-, """ylrtj pub
licist, and lyricist. AH university
men and women are invited.
HILL WILL GIVE
FIRST ADDRESS
OF CONFERENCE
Associate Political Science
Professor Will Talk
On 'Outlawry'
OTHERS GIVE PEACE PLAN
Vernon Coop - Instructor
At Cotner ' ;- e Has
Sunday Lecture
Dr. Norman L. Hill, associate pro
fessor of political science, will speak
on "One Hundred Years of the Out
lawry Idea," this evening at seven
o'clock at the Temple. His address
will mark the opening session of a
three-day conference on "Outlawry
of War" being held under the aus
pices of the University Y. M. C. A.
and Y. W. C. A. and also the Cosmo
politan Club this week end.
An account of the various peace
proposals submitted during the in
terim of a century will be given by
Doctor Hill at this time. In addition,
the Shotwell or American plan will
be introduced by Lester Schoene,
while Martha C. Weaver will present
the League of Nations Protocol plan.
Discussion on these two plans will
follow.
Supper Meeting
Saturday afternoon at 5:45 o'clock
there will be a supper meeting at
which the Borah plan will be presen
ted for discussion by David Fellman
(Continued on Page 2.)
NEW TOURNEY
PAIRINGS MADE
Frat Horseshoe and Handball
Teams Will Battle on
Coliseum Floors
ACTIVITIES START TODAY
Competition in the horseshoe and
handball doubles games will start to
day in the Coliseum, several frater
nities being scheduled to play their
first round. Games will be continued
over tomorrow in order to get these
sports on the intra-mural program
out of the way before the state bas
ketball tournament requires the at
tention of athletic officials.
When the singles games will be
nlaved was not indicated by Jimmy
Lewis, head schedule-maker for inter-
fraternity contests, but it is gener
ally thoucht that he will start these
as soon as the doubles matches have
(Continued on Page 2.)
INSTRUCTOR GOES
TO INSPECT SPODS
Brown Fruit Company Sends Werner
To Florida to View Seed
Potato Tetta
Professor H. O. Werner of the
Horticulture department left yes
terday afternoon for West Palm
Beach, Florida, at the expense of the
Brown Fruit and Produce Co., to in
vestigate the results of planting
treated certified western Nebraska,
seed potateos, of the 1927 crop.
Those western Nebraska potatoes
are given a treatment of ethylene
chloro hydrin and then shipped direci
to Florida and replanted.
"This treatment really 'kids' the
Knuds out of a whole winter's rest
and wakes them up ready to grow
immediately after they arrive in the
south," Dr. Werner says. "Anyone
knows that potatoes will not sprout
in the fall. The treatment is a real
factor in potato production in the
south where potato men must have
seed to plant in the early winter."
With this method of potato rais-
ine new potatoes may be available
on the market at all times of the
vear because they can be grown at
all times of the year in the southern
states, and with this new treatment
it is no longer necessary for the sed
to be stored away for a length of
time before it will sprout and grow.
ENGINEERS CONVENE HERE
Nebraska Will Be Hoet to Eight
Schools' Representatives
Rerjresentatives of eight universi
ties in the Dakotas, Wyoming, Colo
rado, and Nebraska will meet at the
University Friday evening and Sat
urday, for the regional conference
on student branches, District No.
of the American Institute of Elec
trical Engineers. .
The University of Nebraska Col
lege of Engineering will be host and
Dean O. i. Ferguson will preside at
. , - . T i s- - - - 5 . 9
bUU aUlCCiua'2ke . L 'OjLHiii v a 4a AU
Satarday afternoon with an inspec
tion tour of the state capitoL the sta
dium, coliseum, and Morrill HalL
First Lecturer
;(,.;, Ail '
Dr. Norman L. Hill will give the
opening address at the three day
conference on "Outlawry of War,"
being held under the auspices of the
University Y. M. C. A. and Y. W. C.
A., and the Cosmopolitan Club this
week end. Dr. Hill will speak on the
subject "One Hundred Years of the
Outlawry Idea," Friday evening at
the Temple.
PLAYERS OFFER
'SDN UP' AGAIN
Miss H, Alice Hcwell Takes
Lead Part in Intense
Dramatic Work
SUPERSTITION IS THEME
University Players presented "Sun
Up" in Temple theater last evening,
with Miss H. Alice Howell playing
the principal role, Widow Cagle.
"Sun Up" is an intense drama of the
Carolina mountaineers. Exception
ally striking dramatic work was
done by Miss Howell, Ray Ramsay,
male lead, and Beatrice Hullett the
other principal character.
Other University Players and their
respective parts follow:
T'ap Todd Robert Reade
Bud Elwood Ramay
Sheriff Weeks Thad Cone
Preacker . Jack Rank
The Stranger Herbert Yenne
Bob Zolley Lerner
The theme of "Sun Up" deals with
the ignorance of the mountaineers,
and the thing called hate which
(Continued on Page 2.) .
76 Nebraskans
Are American
Men of Science
Seventy-six University of Nebras
ka professors are given recognition
in the 1927 edition of "American
Men of Science", a biological scien
tific "Who's Who", according to a
complete compilation made recently.
The directory lists more than four
thousand outstanding men of science
in the United States.
The list of faculty members whose
names are included and the science
in which their records were made
are as follows: Alexander, Prof.
Hartley Burr, philosophy; Almy, Dr.
John Edwin, physics; Anderson,
Prof. Arthur, agronomy; Avery,
Samuel, chemistry; Barbour, Prof.
Erwin Hinckley, geology; Beber, Dr.
Meyer, biochemistry; Bengtson,
Prof. Nelo August, geography; Blair,
Prof. Thomas Arthur, meteorology;
Blake, Prof. Irving Hill, zoology;
Blish, Dr. Morris Joslin, biochemis
try; Brenke, Prof. William Charles,
(Continued on Page 3.)
DR. HAHTER DESCRIBES
NEW PARASITIC FORMS
January Transactions of American
Microscopic Society Has '
Research Article
Descriptions of some new forms
of parasites collected here last spring
from wild ducks, is included in an
article on "Some Monostomes from
North American Birds" b Dr. Har
old W. Manter, associate professor
of zoology, and O. L. Williams, for
mer Nebraska student, which appear
ed in the January Transactions oj
the American Microscopical Society.
Because the work connected with
this treatise was in the nature of a
research, a reprint lias been issued
in separate pamphlet form. This
reprint is No. 155 of the studies of
the zoological laboratory at this uni
versity. Dr. Manter became a member of
the faculty in 1926 and the following
year attained the rank of associate
professor of zoology. As a student
bee last year, Mr. Williams was ar
assistant in the department of zcol-
University of California, having a
graduate acsiEtantship at that Insti
tution.
JUNIOR-SENIOR
PROM TONIGHT
ENDS FORMALS
Elaborate Spring Decorations
Convert Ball Room Into
Garden Scene
LINN AND HOWARD ACT
Identity of Prom Girl Will
Not Be Revealed Until
10 O'clock
Final arrangements for the annual
Junior-Senior Prom have been com
pleted and everything is in readiness
for the closing of Nebraskas formal
season and the presentation of the
1928 Prom girl, this evening at the
Scottish Rite Temple. The Prom will
be the last of the winter parties and
will open the spring season. It will
be formal as in previous years.
Attendants of the Prom will vote
for their choices for Prom girl from
the six candidates chosen at the an
nual mid-year elections. Votes will
be cast as the couples enter the door
and will be counted by members of
the committee and faculty represen
tatives. The Prom girl will make her
appearance at 10 o'clock.
The decorations, which are in the
hands of Mr. Smiley Boyd, profes
sional decorator, have already been
placed in the ball room. The ball
room will be in the form of a garden.
Lattice work, interwoven with smilax
and spring bowers will surrounds the
pillars. Low hanging lights, held from
the ceiling by minature dancing girls
will be over the entrance to the dance
floor and over the orchestra. A gar
den wall, covered with flowers and
ferns will be in back of the orchestra
platform, which will be covered with
grass matting. Ferns and palms will
be banked in front of the orchestra.
Pretty Lighting Effect
Low hanging shades Tith drooping
rose petals will cover each shade. A
large flower basket, lighted from
within by a huge flood lamp, will
cover nearly the entire north end.
! (Continued on Page 3.)
STUDENTS DISCDSS
NEW BOOK BY JONES
University Pastors Plan Series of
Noon Luncheons for Each
Friday of Week
Discussions on excerpts from Dr.
Stanley E. Jones' new book, "Christ
at the Round Table," were made by
Congregational, Methodist, Baptist,
and Presbyterian sutdents in their
respective church houses last night.
This was the first of similar meetings
to be held by religious groups during
the Lenten season.
In addition to the Thursday eve
ning meetings the university pastors
have planned, in collaboration with
their student councils, a noon-day
luncheon on Friday of each week.
These sessions will be permanent
round-table discussions on vital re
ligious subjects with some outstand
ing men as leaders.
Schreckengast Talks
The first three addresses in this
series of noon-day meetings will be
given by Dr. L B. Schreckengast,
chancellor of Nebraska Wesleyan
university. Dr. Schreckengast is re
cognized as one of the outstanding
religious leaders in Methodism, ia a
graduate of Ames and Boston uni
versities, and is familiar with stu
dent life at both state institutions
and denominational colleges, accord
ing to Rev. Wm. C. FawelL Methodist
university partor.
The dates 6et for Dr. Schrecken
gast's lectures are March 9, 16, and
30. The subjects and places of meet
ing will be announced later. Bishop
Shayler of the Protestant Episcopal
church is scheduled to be a speaker
at one of the April sessions.
Passion Week, the week preceding
Easter, will be observed for students
and faculty members, in accordance
with a decision made by the univer
sity pastors. Brief five o'clock ser
vices will be held daily during that
week at the "Little Church on the
Corner," 13th and R streets, each
pastor giving a brief address at the
even-song hour.
Stewart Will Talk at
Nebraska Corn Shows
Paul IL Stewart, extension agron
omist, left yesterday morning to at
tend and talk at seveml corn shows
in the north central part of the state.
He will ta'i on the ia created profits
from corn, increasing soil fertility,
cheaper methods of producing corn
by the use of efficient machinery,
and the nse of legumes on ecra l&sd.
Mr. Stewart will talk at the ccrn
show and meetings at Elrpn, Thurs
day afternoon; Friday afternoon he
farmers of that corsTPTjr'ty. Fri !y
evening be will rpetk before a
at St Edward.
I