The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, February 17, 1929, Page TWO, Image 2

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    TwO
The Daily Nebraskan
tatlvn A, Llneoln, NeSresKe
OFFICIAL PUBLICATION
UNIVSP.SITY OF NtiAASKA
JeSer direction f the Student Publication Board
TWKNTV.ilQHTM YBAR
Publlehed Tuesday. Wedneeday. Thureday. Friday and
Sunday mornlnge during tha eeademlc ytar
Kdllarlal Offlca Unlvaralty Hall 4.
Bualnaaa Orrlca Unlvaralty Hall 4A.
Offlea Haura IdlforUI Stiff. 1:00 ta :00 encept Friday
and Sunday. Bualnaaa Staff I 1i00 ta 4:00 aftarnoona
capt Friday and Sunday.
Talaphana Kdltortali Mil, Na. tSj Bualnaaat Utl,
Na. TTl Night B-MS2.
Intend aa eecond-claes matter at tha eoatefflee In
Lincoln, Nebraska, under act Cangraaa, March S. U7t.
and at apaeial rata af pestsge aravldad for In aaetlan 1101,
act f Octakar I. 1117, autharlaad January SO. 1121.
SUBSCRIPTION nATt
Slngla Copy eanta M a yaar 1.tS a aamaatar
DEAN HAMMOND EDITOR-IN-CHIEF
Msurlce W. Kenkel Aggoclats Editor
MANAQINQ EDITORS
W. Jojce Ares Cliff F. Ssndshl
NEWS EDITORS
Ilarl Andersen J Elllott
Edgar Backus William McCleery
Con CarUon Ono Hobo
CONTRIBUTING EDITORS
Miurl? k'n Kenneth Lewis
Veiuuu Kotiluf William McClwiy
Robert Lalng Gene Robb
Douglas Tlmmernian
MILTON McQREW BUSINESS MANAGER
ASSISTANT BUSINESS MANAGERS
William Kearna Marahall Pltaer
Lyman Can
THE DAILY NEBRASKAN
SLM)AV, FEBRUARY 17, ly
DOLLARS AND CENTS
Aatonlahlnjt are the results of a aurvey of the
relationship between the average salary and the
arerage expenditure of University of Nebraska
faculty members during the past year. The resulta
of the survey, announced Saturday, Indicate that
the average annual expenditures of 165 faculty mem
bers exceeded average annual, salaries by $163 for
each member of the staff. Savings averaged $220
for each member reporting.
The survey was Indicative of the situation fur
ther, by showing that S8 per cent of the members
found it necessary to resort to other means of
Increasing their Income, aside from instructional
duties. Of the 830 faculty members receiving the
questional, 155 answered, for a report of 47 per
cent of the faculty, distributed among the different
teaching ranks and department.
Salary Inadefltiaclea of members of the faculty
have heretofore been largely a matter of rumor,
opinion, and speculation. This survey brings out
Into tangible form, the actual situation of an un
derpaid professorial staff. In enables the critic to
place a finger directly upon the salary problem, in
stead of depending upon a limited few concrete casei
and making generalizations from those few cases.
The survey shows that insufficient salaries are not.
characteristic of a small Circle of faculty members,
but a general faculty-wide condition.
a a a
Sixty-four per cent of the 133 returning answers
to the questional stated that they were prevented
from doing graduate study on account of living
costs. Summer teaching, night classes, book royal
ties, and outside employment provided means of
Increasing income to meet current expenditures.
Underpaid faculty members have been tho 'sore
spot' in the affairs of many universities and colleges.
When average expenditures exceed average earnings
for members of the University of Nebraska faculty,
by $1(3 worth per year, it produces a sltuatoin
which is deplorable and discouraging. Instructors,
as well as any other class of people, have that In
herent right to demand a fair profit for their servi
ces. Certainly, In face of insufficient salaries, in
structors are going to be on constant vigilance for
opportunities which st least insure them a living
wage.
The desire to meet the requirements of their
professoln, the necessity for diversion from currlc
ular activities, the call to do valuable research, to
write and contribute to their own field of study,
mutt be satisfied. When financial worry casts a
gloomy shadow over the activities of members of
a college staff, that worry proves detrimental to
the educational Institutoln. Instructors are inca
pacitated. When they are forced to seek other em
ployment to meet the necessities of a home, to meet
those absolute expenses, their responsibility to the
classroom and their Interest is depleted.
a
The recommendation of Governor Weaver in
his budget message a few weeks ago calls for a ten
percent Increase In manitenance for the University.
If this provision becomes a reality, the sum received
from the recommended Increase, minus the costs
of the general expenses of the University, would
become almost negligible when It Is proportioned to
a large University staff.
With the nearness of class elections sctivity of
has-been politicians, hand shakers and baek patters,
has become fairly common.
DANGER AHCAD!
Ileus Roll 1T, legislative measure which would
prohibit freshman students from pledging sorori
ties and fraternities st any state institution, was
reported out to general file la the house of repre
sentatives Friday, coming from the committee on
education. In a hold-over session Saturday, the bill
was referred baek to the committee for a few minor
changes, with a proposal which would not make
deferred pledging active until 1950. Sentiment In
the committee on education prior to the release of
the bill la the house Friday was not wholehearted
ly In support of the deferred pledging proposal.
Release of the bill from the committee on edu
cation into the house of representatives places de
ferred pledging within another step o becoming a
law. If the house stamps Its approval on the meas
ure when it comes up for dlscuswiou In a few days.
will have almost reached the lu.lf- ay mark in
the legislative grist mill
see
Defeat of the proposal to grant t!.s University
the revenue reoelve from the 80 per eent Inheri
tance law places the dormitory question a step far
ther away from reality. The breach between deferred
pledging: and obtaining adequate dormitory facili
ties for ths freshman student coming to the Univer
sity has heed wldtned rather than closed up.
If the deferred pledging WU 'courses through the
legislature to the statute Jsooks, mors than twelve
hundred students, fresaajen i the University of
Nebraska, will not have ategls choice as to the
homing facilities whloh are offered to them. They
will so compelled to take what Uncoln has to offer
la ike way of rooms In private dwellings. They will
be serrated from the University administrative of
fices even more than they are at the present time-
Adequate oratory facilities cannot be devel
oped In a hIu nli- w-Hr. It will take one, two, tnrei
years. Othiv unl erhlili have experienced the
muue Idcn.io.l MliiiHtioii, und they have not create i
(I jitnliories oveiuiKht. They have not taken away
il . iitfht of eoroilUuH und fraternities to ptedgo
freshman students before a dormitory system was
provided for and actually established.
If the fratornlly pledirlnR legislation Is designed
to serve as a lever ou the dormitory proposals, It
Is Indeed an uucerlaln and weak lever. What If
dormitories are not provided for during the present
session of the leglriliiture, while the, antl-fresbmon
pledge bill has become a law? Affaire that are
on the way to smooth running at tho present time
would be dlsruptod.
Almost four hundred more freshmen would be
thrown out for exploitation by commercial room
ing houses In Lincoln. No fair chance whatever
Is ottered for fraternities to adjust themselves M
the antl-freshman pledge bill If It slides through this
session of the legislature. Ninety per cent of tho
effectiveness of a law comes with the eiwo with
which circumstance ran bo adjusted to meet tho
rcqulrenien' of that law.
With the dormitory question still hanging fire,
and with the conceded opinion that dormitories and
a dormitory system are not the product of a sin
gle year, passage of a deferred pledging bill at the
present time would be a plain case of 'getting the
tart before the horse.'
LEGISLATIVE
HIGHLIGHTS
BY BOB KELLY
Faction leaders always consider the outstand
ing men for the candidacies of offices. Eligibility
rules count after the caucus.
WELI
Utterly disregarding the ruliug made by the In
terfiaternlty council stating that all probational ac
tivities should be confined to tho Inside of the fra
ternity houses, several fraterntlles on tiie Nebras
ka emphasized violation of that rule during the last
two days. Others respected the council's action
and work to eliminate the undesirable aspects of
probation on the campus, and never once exhibited
a pledge outside the house in the garb of a butler,
coachman, or what have you.
Now. what Is the council going to doT Will
they sit back on their haunches and let such viola
tions go by unnoticed? Will the council cower in
the corner, and rermlt four or five fraternities to
send freshmen on expeditions In search of mice and
sparrows, parade the streets and exhibit themselves
ni cuBtomary probation outfits and predicaments?
If the council looks favorably upon the viola
tions of the probation ruling, then they will have
seen the biggest single piece of work that they have
ever accomplished for the fraternity system at Ne
braska, junked. The council will be accepting these
exhibitions of disrespect, and utter disregard for the
business which It transacts. If the complaints are
registered with the committee of the council, and
the members of that committee fail to act, then the
council has automatically branded Itself an Ineffec
tual and flimsy organization.
OTHER STUDENTS SAY-
BROTHERS ALL
An editorial in the Nebraskan Friday titled
' Probation Is On" once again demonstrates the
necessity of the probation period; once again un
successfully. To show their metal and to prove that
they will make "real fraternity men," that is the
purpose; no, It is the excuse for this alleged per
old of correction.
The fact llmi fratcrnltlCE ruuet have period
of concerted correction Is In itself an admission
that they are unable to make men out of the neo
phytes in a sane way. The fact that the probation
period has been reduced is an admission that the
method Is ineffective; for, If it were actually worth
while, one week would be all the better.
How can one Bhow his metal by submitting to
the will of the wily brethren? Members of the
fraternities assume the attitude that "this Is going
to hurt us worse than it is going to hurt you." Even
this is stretched a point when they try to convince
the freshman that probation is actually going to
make him a "real fraternity man" a phrase utterly
meaningless.
What method do the sororities use for making
women out of their freshmen? Only a meagre rem
nant of probation remains In a very few of the
sororities. There Is no Intention here to say that
what is good for one sex id good for another; but
they demonstrate that women can be made good
sorority members without browbeating.
A university senior in a fraternity may have
developed -ell In knowledge, but certainly he can
not claim to know what Is lacking or what is over
done In the ilmractr r of a fraternity freshman. All
he knows Is what lie likes and what he dsilikes
about the freshniaa. He will try to pound out what
he dislikes.
Why not admit that the probation period has
but one real purpose? It Is easy to find reasons
for probation, but the real purpose Is simply to
amuse and to entertain the uppcrclassmen. Why
not adroit that a fraternity Is good only for the
society of Its members? Is that not enough in
itself? It appears not, for fraternity members
grasp out at straws, reach for time worn reasons
or excuses, drag In platitudes when they argue for
the right of existence of their organisations.
P. B.
ANOTHER POINT OF VIEW
"THE OLD ORDER CHANGETH'
It seems that the waning lutereat In pep meet
ings here is not a local ailment. It Is a national
epidemic.
Observers all over the nation this year have
noted the fact that organized cheering is losing
force In universities. No longer do crowds of under
graduates flock to pep meetings on days before big
games. Instead they go about their other activities
sod go to tho game when game time comes.
Football, It seems, Is becoming a sport. It Is
no longer a religious effort of entire student bodies.
It Is the business of the two doien or so inea w bo
are actively engaged In It.
We cannot help but shed a tear as this phase
)f college life spparently totters on its last legs.
The organised effort of an entire school bent on
one central objeet was inspiring.
Organized yelling- la soma schools bad come
to the place where special pep displays for the
games were practiced that bigger crowds might bs
drawn. A religion w-as commercialised. In other
schools, pep came from a desire of upperclaasmen
to show their authority over freshmen. Conse
quently many upptrclassmen ceased to attend.
As a sport football Is a splendid spectacle.
There Is no reason It should not take Its correct
place in school life.
Oklahoma Daily
"All work Bnd uo play makes
Jack a dull boy." nd no the House
played around In committee of the
whole Friday afternoon. The ob
lect nf their deiinlon and merri
ment was a bill to curtail the crop
ping or dogs ears. Alter navini
had their lun the legislators ad
vanced the bill with some amend'
inents. .However It did not got
through without some opposition.
Tim hnrhera failed in their at
tempt to Induce tho legislature to
elevate their trade to the status
of a profennlon by requiring bar
bers to have two years conege eau.'
ration. The bill, as Introduced,
would compel barbers to get a
nnrnili In nlv their trade. The leg'
Islators decided that that would
discriminate against the operators
ot beauty snops.
A prerequisite of a college edu
cation, It ws argued, would raise
the quality of coneratlon which
the barber might carry on.
"Ilarbers should be better in
formed than they are on many top
ics,' 'said Representative Chet
Wynne of Omaha. "Their conver
kriIoii when worknis on a custo
mer IH Hiiiillhir I'llthcr dull. I
want to improve the quality of tall;
heard In barber shops."
They must have their fun.
.
The house committee on medi
cine looked unfavorably on a bill
which would require doctor to
make their drug prescriptions In
plain English, without any cabalis
tic symbols or Latin terms. Tho
bill also provided that, the doctor
would be compelled to give the pa
tient a ropy of the prescription if
it Is desired.
The bill was probably Impracti
cal. However it Indcates that ithe
public is coming to the place where
it will not be awed or misled by
high sounding terms. It will not
be surprising if some of the other
professions will be required to
come down to earth.
A further step In the emancipa
tion of w omen Is threatened in the
bill, advanced to third reading in
the Senate, to compel women to
serve on Juries. An amendment
,was added before the bill was ad
vanced which exempts housewives
from Jury duty.
A survey was taken., according
to one senator, of 100 women in
Lincoln to find out if they wanted
the law which would fompel them
to serve. They answered "no." But
the senators must have reasoned:
What Is sauce for the goose is
sauce for the gander. If woraeu
are seeking equality they must
take it in all things.
A bill which would require school
boards to publish the minutes of
their meetings failed to find ap
proval with the legislators. Some
of them apparently smelled a rat
In that the publishing of the min
utes in the newspapers would con
tribute some revenue to the eaid
newspapers.
T'-e .Senate is growing slightly
Imp;; i lent waiting for Governor
V:c-.:r to present to the legisla
ting 'i bill for an audit and lnves-ti,-,;'iio.i
of banking affairs. Espe
cially is Senator Wherry of Taw
nee, the introducer of the first res
olution in the senate asklcg for
this audit.
The attitude of the leaders In the
house seems to be that Immediate
action on such a bill should not
be taken. It now appears that the
legislature will scarcely begin to
solve the banking muddle by the
end of the session.
The house, thus far in the pro
ceedings has shown a tendency to
look at the bills pashed by the sen
ate with a critical eye and then
proeeed to stamp the sign of dis
approval. On two of these bills,
S. r. 36 and . F. 37, Durke, the
floor leader of the majority asked
that they be reconsidered. Ilia
request was granted.
a
Happily the Nebraska legislators
have not yet become as wrought
over their grievance as the law
makers of the slate of Tennessee.
Two of the esteeemd gentlemen
'down In Dixie,' advanced toward
each other with the obvious Inten
tion of inflicting bodily harm.
PONIES WILL STOMP
AT TEMPLE THIS WEEK
tonHnumt from Fa !
do act feminine, think of being a
master of ceremonies.
To be In the pony chorus will not
have the edge in the tryouts, un
less they want to get them half
soled. Since the advent of silk
clothnlg where?) Into the ranks
of the masculine, it won't be quite
so b ird to acquire that demure
look and frivolity that marks the
aveiag'- coed.
The i re son why small boys are
being plc:..'i f r the pony chorus is
because the i.ndience might want
to see the dashnig principals In
back stage. But anyway, the Klub
promises to be Broad Minded.
GEORGE BROS.
Semi-Formal
Favors
For Dinner Dances
at the Home !
Here are twq numbers repre
sentative of ur New Spring
Line:
Wrist Pack, suitable for
Favors In Gpld, Silver snd
Jeweled.
Smart, Hand Purees in Dee.
orated Leather, expressive
snd useful.
Many Gay Colorful Items that
will meet yeur Spring Party
and Favor Needs
Ask About Our
Party Service
GEORGE BROS.
1213 N St.
B1313
DOCTOR AVERY CITES
EARLY CHARTER DAYS
Chancellor Emeritus Gives
Account of Observances
Of University
Early observances of Charter
day, the official birthday of the
University, were recalled yesterday
by Chancellor Kmentus bamuei av
rv whn HAHi-rlhxrt the chanae from
the old form to the radio program
uaeu m me past rew years.
"In the early nineties Charter
day was observed by keeping open
house in the various departments.
The engineers, physicists, chemists
anil nlhnri onirueeil in laboratory
work prepared spectacular displays.
Open House Held
"This was the forerunner of En
gineers, Pharmacy and Blzad
weeks. II was a general open
hnnuA whpn evervone who had any
thing to display, took part. Such
departments as that of Hebrew
could not very well show their
work, however.
"I well remember the department
of physics' display of wireless teleg
raphy . '1 he sending nf a mcHg
over a 6pace of eight reel was con
sidered a wonderful thing by Pro
fessor Brace."
In rhonnnllnr MoT.aln'g time S
general university lecture was held.
Finally degrees began to be Issued,
so visitors' day became the mid
winter commencement. It was
about aa distinctive an affair as the
spring commencement. Prominent
speakers were brought here, and
under Chancellor McLalu It became
a real university Dirtnaay pow
wow. There were few opportuni
ties for entertainment In those
days, and local citizens canio out In
great numbers.
As, however, unarier uay cenie
later than the close of the first se
mester, it became the custom to
grant the degrees earlier, ana cnar
ter day was abandoned as a holi
day. As a local celebration it fell
Into disuse because of the institu
tions having separate days, and
(Vina hAfoma rilfferntla.ted and
ceased to be a day of local InteresL
"Charter day was a very rine
thlriir In Ita Aav unit Ha revival bv
Harold Holtz, the alumni secretary,
is a really brilliant iaea, ana nas
rescued Charter day from oblivion."
Two years ago Doctor Avery at
tended a meeting or aiuiuni inem
hr in sn Dieeo. ' They tried to
get the program, but were unable
tn and asked Doctor Avery to tell i
them what he Imagined they w ere
saying.
Many Clubs Organized
Last year the broadcasting of the
nrnrnm was nrevented by radio
commission regulations. In 1927
forty organized clubs. In twenty
lutpnpH In on the broadcast
ing, which was featured by the use
of the bell taken rrom me tower
of University hall.
In 1926 the program w-as pre
onteH from nt&tlnna in Lincoln and
Hastings. One hundred and fifty ar
tists took part, ana me program
lasted from 8 o'clock In the evening
until 2 o'clock the next morning. In
i oik the Hasiinen station only was
used, and 125 students took part.
KOSMET KLUB HOLDS
SPEINO SHOW TRYOUTS
( onllnofal from Tata 1.
will be picked from the tryouts.
lu.nji.iln. rt I . nrln r.(tia I n. ri m
LTBIIJlUU V. IHr l M I,.... ........
is as follows: i
Those who try out for the priiici- i
pal parts of the show should come ;
prepared to read lines of a char-!
acter similar to that which they
wish to take and to sing a soug or
two of a popular or ballad type.
Just which of tile principals will
have solos to sing will depend
somewhat on the nature of the cast
selected. The characters which
will be chosen are as follows:
i-reoaie riacwiinan, inn noy. ni
Is an entertaining person of about i
twenty-three, who Is so facetious'
that he is called "silly."
Phyllis Fairfax, the girl. Na
turally, being a lending lady, she
(he) Is good-looking, refined, good
looking, intelligent, and good-looking.
Dan Mansfitld, the rival. He 1.1
a younn lawyer, about twenty-
. i i.- low anil Mill
seven, who in.;o " ,
self seriously. He too. will be called
upon to sing. .
Mr. Lloyd Griffith, a millionaire
who falls In pretending to be
grouchy. If witty remarks are a
crlyerlon In a man of forty, ho is
eccentric
' Mrs Ll'oyd Griffith. She Is gush
ing aiid elforvesceut. but kuows
what she and Mr. Griffith want.
Lalnson, the butler. Ho is suave
and sober and quietly has plans of
his own that make him the villain.
Hilda, the maid. She has a pro
fount diHllko for Lainson and a
powerfully slangy way of letting it
be known.
STUDENT BODY WILL
VOTE ON OFFICERS
(.'ontlnued from faite 1.
and Claude Rowley: freshman class
president: Marie Broad, Howard
Gardner and Harrle Shearer: for
Ivy Lay orator are David Fellman.
r - In.ninn .Tnhn McKnlght,
Lester Schoene and Bruce fenyder.
"Chick" Dox Is a member of
Delta Tau Delta, was last semes
ter's yell king, and is a Blue Shirt.
r,i.'. ,., vi u nn independent
IfrruiDQi -
candidate and la a member of tne
Dellan Literary society, raui iiui-
. I. . .omhr nf It Ala TtlOta Pi
and Theta Nu, is on the Junior-Sen
ior Prom committee, anu is a i"
shirt. Olen Kelcheubacli is a non-
1 1 tl ll-l 1111 .. .
Itobert Danielson is a nou iro-
.n.ii.inin f'lsndu Rowley
Is a member of Alpha Gamma Rho,
a backfleld foot ban man, anu j
Blue Shirt. Marie Broad Is an Inde
pendent candidate. Howard Gard
ner is affiliated with Sigma Nu and
Is a Yellow Jacket. Harrie Shearer
In a Blue Shirt, and Ih a memher
of Alpha Tau Omega.
David Fellman is 8 niemoer ui
Sigma Alpha Mu. George Johnson
ia ,i nmn.hsr nf Phi Gamma Delta.
Phi Delta Phi. Delta Sigma Rho,
and Is on the debate team. John
VlnVnlirlit In a MIlMlia Nil. fPSteT
Schoene is a member of the debate
and of the Dellan society, fcnyaer
Is a member of the Farm House
fraternity.
The men who were deciareu in-
nll-iHlo hv ho roirlatrnr's office ar
as follows: Art Schroeder. tiled for
senior president, does not nave sen
ior standing: Dale Weese. filed for
senior president, did not make the
required number of hours last e
mesier: Morris tisher, filed for
sophomore president, did not make
Kfant v.ajivnn hnni'ft tireredlne vear:
Sherman Whelpton, filed for junior
president, am noi mane iweive
hours in College of Law the first
semester of tills year.
Students will also vote Tuesday
on Amendments to Articles IV and
V.
.......tin in r:i..i,iiH. i . ..
KLtuluuin iv wimuum lieiKg
member of the Mortar Board i..'
charge of the election.
Tho names of twelve candidate
appeared on the ballots to be voted
upon. Au extra space was lefi to
write In an additional name. The
election was held Wednesday and
Thursday In the main corridor of
tbe Social Sciences building.
The ballots were counted Thurs
day evening by Miss Florence I. Mc
Gahcy, registrar of the University
assisted by the Mortar Board mem
bers. The non-sororlty vote was
unusually strong, Miss Helkes
stated.
HENDRICKS SPEAKS
AT Y. M. C. A. MEET
Nebraska Professor Will
Talk on Chemist's Work
Dr. It. C. Hendricks will addreP
the Sunday afternoon young men's
forum at the city Y. M. C. A. this
afternoon at 3:30 o'clock on the
subject. "Life as a Chemist See
It." the third of a series on "Life
as a Scientist Sees IL"
Dr. Hendricks, associate profes
sor of chemistry, will show the p&j-t
the chemist plays in the rapidly
changing world where he is moi-e
than a mere spectator. He will
explain the means by which men of
his profession create substances
which were once thought to be pro
duced only by "life processes."
Since tho chcmlot must turn his
attention to entitles beyond the
range of his senses he must be
something of a philosopher, and It
is with this In mind that Dr.
Iendrlcks will view life.
STUDENT OUARTET
SINGS AT VESPERS
A quartet from the Robblns voice
studios made up of university stud
ents will sing two groups of num
bers at the Lincoln high Bcliool
band vesper concert at tbe high
school this afternoon. The quartet
Is composed of Marjorle Way, so
prano; Gladys Loetlorle, contralto:
Gene Robb, tenor, and Carrol
Pauley, bass. They will be accom
panied by Miss Ruth Randall.
BY
PEAOT
THE
1 "rioi"
LARGE MAY QUEEN
VOTE IS RECORDED
Many Non-Sorority Ballots
Are Cast in Election
When more than two hundred
ballots were cast by senior women
Iti the Mnv Oiippii plnr'tlnn IjikI
week, the largest vole in sf veral
years ior that honor was recorded, '
You Always Win By I
Going to Pillers j
Everything ia lull a bit better, tha J
service ia from those wh are t
paraopillv Interested In your f !
purchaee. i
Mantainlng splendid prrscri'.tion t
department and a fountain that t
Is second to none.
M. W. DeWITT j
Pillers Prescription Pharmacy !
1Mb and O B.4IJ3
1 1
1 810
! V3f 7
i; ' .
7
P
HAOk'K'S newesl creation
th "KF.IJtA." Ulai-k Crepe
Ymnp Wn'-k pimdow clock fluar
tiT -mid heel. The Hi-Arch, anim-h-l
iHitnrt nMuja you a perfect
fit liryonrl compare.
CORDON HOSIERY
IPIEACOC
SHOE SHOP
140 So. 12th
J New Car for Rent i
jatsGa, Fords, model "A" and "T",
)Chevrolets, all styles. Time charge J
baglne at 7 p. m. Reaarvatlona held
i until 7 p. m. J
MOTOR OUT COMPANY
MIS 1120 P Street
lungry
Eat Your Sunday Meals at
Tbe ALL-IN ONE
Special for Sunday
Beef Tenderloin Sandwich
mighty good
Delicious Waffles
Butter Crust Pies
Coffee-the very best
MX
Scrupulously Clean
Quick Service
Reasonable Pricei
Lincoln's Finest
Sandwich Shop
COLLEGE MEMORIES
t
t
The Greatest Tie
COLLEGE
JEWELRY
AU With N, Seal or N U
PLAIN GOLD PINS 10K
$3 to $6
10K GOLD PINS WITH PEARLS
$4 to 117.50
SILVER RINGS $2 to 14
K COLD RINGS $6.50 to 112
COLLEGE MEMORIES
COLLEGE BOOK STORES
facing Campus
LONG'S