1 1 he Daily Nebraskan r Official Student Newspaper of the University of Nebraska PRICE FIVE CENTS. VOI.. XXIX NO. ):. LINCOLN. M:HKSK A. II KI)V. KKHKIAKY 2... 10 MAY QUEEN AND MORTAR BOARDS WILL BE CHOSEN Election Tomorrow Decides Who Fills Honorary Positions. ONLY WOMEN MAY VOTE Juniors and Seniors Select Queen; Seniors Vote On Mortar Boards. Candidates for Mortar Board or next year, and tbc May Wuccn Anil her maid of honor will lc elected Wednesday. Feb. 20. al poll In the main corridor of So rial Rilcace. nud at the Home Eco nomics parlors on the college of agriculture campus. The polls In Social Science will be open be tween 9 and 3 o'clock, while those at the Home Economic parlors will only be open between 12 and 1 o'clock. Senior women are eli gible to vote f ir the candidates lor Mortar Board, aud both Junior and senior women may vole for the May Queen. In voting f.ir the candidates for Mortar Board, the senior women will be instructed to vote for not less than fix nor more than twenty women in the present tun i lor iU whom luey think deserve ' the honor of membership in this senior honorary- No ballots which rontain less or more names than the specified number will be counted. Thirty Selected. The thirty girls polling: the high est number of votes in this elec tion will be those from whom the I present chapter of Mortar Board will select its successors. The list will first be checked for scholar ship, and anyone who is ineligible iK-cause of scfcolarship will be taken from the original lut of thirty. Thi first requirements for mem bership In Mortar Board is schol arship, according to the ruling made by the national organization. The local standard set for the Ne braska chapter is an average of eighty for ail previous semesters, and a record clear of all condi tions. Incompletes or failures. The second consideration upon w oieh the aelection of future Mor tar Boards Is based is a girl's par ticipation in campus activities, not .imply the number with which she has identified herself, but the quality of service she has rendered to those in which she has engaged. Number Not Fixed. Unlike Innocents, the member snip in Mortar Boaid is not set to a definite number, for a chapter may have as few as six girls, and a-s many as twenty. It is only wiibin these limits that the num ber of girls in a chapter of Mortar Board is specified. May Queen and Mortar Board both are regarded as representa tive positions. For this reason all those who are eligible to vote are urged to appear at the polls on W ednesday, so that the selection of these people may represent as large a section of campus opinion S as is possible. Polls will be in charge of mem bers of Mortar Board, with (irctchen Standevcn in general harge. Identification cards will be equired of all those who wish to vote, and the names on each card will be checked with junior and senior lists provided by the regis trar's office. Ballots will be counted by members of the advis , ory board of Mortar Board, but no announcement of the results will oe made until Ivy day. May 2, when the May Queen will be rowned at a formal ceremony, and the girl who polled the second highest number of votes will ap pear as her maid of honor. Future Mortar Boards will be masked at the afternoon service on Ivy day. SHANGHAI WEEK WILL COMMENCE THURSDAY P. M. Opening the "Nebraska in Shanghai' educational week that .staff of the Y. W. C. A., undc-r tbc leadership of Minnie Nemecbck, will sponsor a tea at Ellen Smith hall from 3:30 to 5:30 o'clock on Thursday afternoon. Novelty Chinese food will be served. Mrs. George Green and Miss Irma Appleby will preside at the tea table and will be assisted in serving by the pledges from various sororities. Mrs. Webb, a missionary from China, will dis play some interesting articles which Ehe brought from China. STUDIO DATES. Tuesday, Feb. 25. Corncobs, 12 a. m. A. S. C. E.. 12:15. p. m. Elementary Education club, 12 a. m. - Wednesday, Feb. 26. Theta Nu. 12 a. m. Kosmet Klub, 12:15 p. m. Innocents. 12:30 p. m. Thursday, Feb. 27. Colonel Jewett and staff, 11:30 a. m. Daily Nebraskan editorial staff, 12 a. m. Sigma Delta Chi, 12:15 p. m. Daily Nebraskan business staff, 12:20 p. m. j Fraternal co-operative buyers, f 12:30 p. m. Friday Feb. 28. Pershing rifles. 12 a. m. Junior-Senior Prom committee. 12:15 p. m. LAW I'RATLRNITY MEMBERS A TI END HONORARY DINNER Mrmltis tf VhT Pelt4 Thl. hon. orary law fiaternity. were the guest of Mr. Virginia Johnson at a dinner given at lh Lincoln hotel Thumday evening. Feb. V0. Mm Johnson' la the widow of Ralph K. Joliutoii. ine of the founder of the fraternity, who died last sum met. It had aUaya been his intrudon to give a dinner for I he member of lu.i fraternity but his Illness and death had prevented hun from do ing so. HINDU STUDENT IS TO ADDRESS FORUM East Indian From K. U. Will Speak on 'Ghandi and Christianity.' WILL MEET IN TEMPLE "Ghandi and Christianity." will be the topln discussed at the World Forum luncheon. Wednes day. M. Kamakahri Rao, a Hindu student from the University of Kansas, will be the speaker. The meeting will bo held in the northwest room of the Temple cafeteria, at 12 nebxk. The talk will commence at 12:20. People not caring to eat their lunch at the Temple are Invited to come and hear the address. The change was made from the Nebraskan hotel because it was thougnt that a larger number Would be able to attend if the meetings were held nearer to the campus, according to Meredith Nelson, co-chairman of the com mittee in charge of World Forum. The speaker is a graduate stu dent in the college of engineering at the University of Kansas. He has worked his way through col lege. The effect of Chandi upon Christianity in India will be dis cussed by Mr. Rao. Nelson stated that the speaker possessed an un usually outstanding personality, and was very interesting to listen to. Former Head of Ohio Uni Says Young People Are Sensible. "There's nothing wrong with the present day youth," Dr. Wil liam Oxley Thompson, president emeritus of Ohio State university, told a Lincoln Star reporter Sat urday. Dr. Thompson is to deliver a se ries of daily lectures at the First Presbyterian church this week and an address before the university convocation Thursday morning. "Pleasant comradeship" is the way be describes the freedom of modem youth. "I think young peo ple row are pretty sensible. People wori'T about how various prob lems, including liquor, will affect them, but I am pretty sure that they will take a sane attitude," Dr. Thompson declared. Although Dr. Thompson is seventy-five years old. he is still active in church and civic affairs. Not only in his judgment of mod ern youth, but of international re lations, prohibition and other sub jects, he bespoke the tolerance and love of mankind of a man who has lived well and, looking back, is able to appreciate the essentials of life. JOURNALISTS ADOPT AIL SHORT WORDS Washington State Teacher Says Headlines Arc Scantily Clad. Newspaper headlines will wear short dresses in spite of the fash ion, according to Elmer F. Eeth, Washington State college instruc tor in journalism, who maintains that brevity is the soul of the newspaper. "If there is anything new in words the headline writer adopts it but it must be brief." declares the state college man. "No matter what style dictators say, the jour nalist will clothe his work in scanty dresses. The newspaper man is forever trying to simplify short, active, descriptive, sugges tive words. Sometimes be invents new ones, sometimes he makes combinations, and sometimes he chops an old word into pieces. He borrows short words from political, scientific or sports cant. He lifts monosyllables from foreign languages. But all the while he is attempting desper ately to keep in circulation pictur esque literary words that are short and which lend color and flavor." Some of the best known pro ducts of newspaper jargon, accord ing to Mr. Beth, are "probe," "loot," "hit-run," "defy," "boOEe." "flop," "thug." "flag" and "cues." expressions which surely carry out the characteristic purposes of brevity and forcefulness. Local Dental Chapter Receives Its Charter Alpha Alpha chapter of Omicron Kappa L'psilon. honorary scholas tic rionfal fratorn'tv. received to day its formal charter, which was granted last May. Dr. li. a. oruDn, dean of dental college; Dr. B. E. Hooper, and Dr. F. W. Webter are charter members of the Ne braska chapter. OF STUDENTS FOR Kosmet Klub Announces List From Which Cast Will Be Selected. MANY TRY FOR PARTS All People Listed Are Asked to Report Tonight. Eligibility of the majority of students wh tried out for the principal parts and choruses of Kosmtt Klub's spring ahow. "The Sob Sister." has been checked and a lint of there whose scholastic rating Is acceptable was released by the club Monday night. All those whose r.arues are on the list are requested to be present in Room 203 of the Temple Tuesday night at 7 o'clock. On the list of principal parts for men weie: Don Carlson. Low ell Davis. J. Norman lloff. Roy Behrens. Cyril Winkler. George Mirkcl. Stanley Klger. Otis De trick. Claude Glllisple. Bill Mc Gaffin. Bill Stiverson and Walter Vost. Tho?e whose elegibility is all right for the male ehom are: Don McMaster. Cyril Winkler. J. Normau Hoff. Ray Casford. Stan ley Kiger. Bill McGaffin. Lowell Davis. Art Wolf. Otis Detrick. Joe Alter. Bud Hoagland. Albert Wahl. Roy A. Behrends. Maynard Gross nans. Lynn Wagganer. Donald Owens. George Mickel and Bob Young. Coeds Eligible. Included on the eligibility list of female principal parts were Max ine Weis. Done Powell. Mary Eliz abeth Long, Janis Lchnhoff. Alyce Widman. DeLcllis Schramick. Ra mona Jorgcnsen. Janet Ashman, Maxine Mathews and Eleanor Fo ley. Those candidates for the female chorus whose scholarship was sat isfactory were: Viola Baker. Betty Bell. Lucille Carothcrs. Alice Louise Dalms. Irene Dawson. Katherine Gallagher. Victoria Glatfcltcr. Betty Harrison. Fran cis Holyoke. Mabel Hcyne. Car men King. Fayette Norris. Harri ett Nesladeck. Doris Powell. Edytb Perry, Page Robb, Elizabeth Rei raers. Mary Jane Swett. Nyle Spie ler. Evelyn Snavcly. Faye E. Wil liams and Lucille right. PAINTING BY ROBERT IS Morrill Hall Contains Art Work Entitled 'The Pink Pinafore "The Pink Pinafore." a paint ing by Robert Henri, artist of na tional repute who died recently, is now on exhibition in fine arts cor ridor in Morrill hall. The picture is a study of a small snub-nosed girl in a pink apron, and is con sidered to be typical of his work. Robert Henri is said to be one of the leading figures in the school of American paintings. The pic ture was recommended to be pur chased by the school of fine arts by Royal" Cortissoz and Lila Mech lin, the two art experts appointed by the University of Nebraska to purchase pictures for the art col lection. The picture is the pro perty of the MacBcth gallery in New York. The pictures for the collection are bought each year from the sum bequeathed by Mr. and Mrs. F. M. Hall who also left their en tire group of pictures and art ob jects to the University. BEAUX ARTS EXHIBITS ARE BEINS DISPLAYED Institute Designs May Be Viewed on Top Floor of Old Museum. Sixteen colored drawings from the traveling exhibit of the Beaux Art institute of New York are be ing shown on the top floor of the former Museum building, Tuesday, Wednesday, and Thursday. The drawings will be on exhibit all day and from 7:15 to 9:30 Wednesday evening for those who cannot see them during the day. These drawings represent ex amples of the better work of arch itectural schools from all over the country'- Eight institutions have presented exhibits. Among the outstanding designs is one for a doorway to an architectural build ing, one for a postofiice and one for a horticultural society build ing. CAMPUS CALENDAR Wednesday," Feb. 26 Wurld Forum, Temple cafeteria, 12 o clock. Lu.'hcran Bible league, Temple 205. 7 p. m. DeMolay, Scottish Rite temple. 8 p. m. Thursday pen. u. Nebraska in Shanghai staff of the Y. W. C. A.. Ellen Smith hall. Tea from 3:30 to 5:30. ELIGIBILITY ROLES CHECKED Senior and Junior Coedt H ill Select (Jueen Tomorroie Junior and senior women will voU Wednesday, Feb. 26. on Ihe May Queen and hr Maid of Honor. Senior women will alto vota on the candidates for Mortar Board. Polls wi'l bo open In tho corridors of Social butnecs building and in the homo economics parlors at the college of agriculture. Tho polls will bo open be tween the hours of nine and five at Social Sciences and be tween twelve and five at the agrieu'lura campus. $1 ARE NOW AVAILABLE Awards for Foreign Study In Junior Year Are Being Offered. MEN, W0MEN ELIGIBLE Announcement has been made that ten one thousand dollar scholarships are open to both men and women and are available for study during the junior year in any country in Europe. In formation concerning these may be obtained In the office of Dean LcRosslgnol. At the same time, in a new bulletin from the University of Il linois college of commerce and business adiiiiuilration. an nouncement is made that a num ber of scholarships and fellow ships are available, for the pur pose of encouraging advanced study In the economics of public utilities. These scholarships and fellowships offered by the Uni versity of Illinois have a stipend of from four to eight hundred dol lars, but are offered for graduate students only. Requirements Are Named. Regarding the scholarships for undergraduate study in Europe, the main requirements are. that an applicant must be not less than eighteen years old: must have been in residence for two aca demic years at an American In stitute approved by the institute of International education: and must intend to return to his American college to take his de cree. These European scholarships are offered by the New orx committee on Foreign Travel and Study, and are administered by the institute or international txiu cation. Awards are made on the basis of sound health, high men tality, seriousness of purpose, in tellectual interest and attainments and high moral character. Appli cation blanks for the junior year scholarships in European coun tries may be received from the in stitute of International Education at 2 West 45th street, New York. UNION SLATES MEET 'Witnesses for Christ' Is Subject of Annual Conference. "Witnesses For Christ." is the theme of the annual conference of the Nebraska Student Volunteer union which will be held at Ne braska Wesleyan university from Friday evening. Feb. 28, to Sunday, March 2. From too to 130 are exoccted to attend the conference, twenty schools throughout the state being represented. A number of returned missionaries will also be present, some of whom will take part in ine programs. Prominent ficures featured on the program aie: Mrs. Induk P. Kim. of Korea, now a traveling secretary for the Student Volun teer movement: Lvman Hoover, regional secretary for the Y. M. C. A., John G. Alber, secretary for missionary work in Nebraska for tho Christian church: and Dr. G. Keller Rubrecht, pastor of Grace Lutheran cnurcn. cnanceuor Shreckengast of Nebraska Wes leyan and Miss Erma Appleby, Y. W. C. A. secretary at the Uni versity of Nebraska, w ill also take part in the programs. Individual campus groups are contributing parts of the program. The university or AeDrasKa is taking care oi the advertising. STUDENTS INVITED TO ATTEND TALK GIVEN THIS MORN Xfr. .1. L. Henn of the Interna tional Han-ester company, will speak Tuesday at 11 a. m., in So cial Science 101 on "Domestic ana Foreltm Service With the Interna tional Harvester Comoanv for College Graduates." According to Professor T. T. euiiock, cnairman of the business organization de partment, all students are invited; seniors esneciallv. should be inter ested. Interviews may be sched uled after the taiK. Crutnmann Will Address Tho Delphian Meetings Prof. Paul H. Grumroann, di rector of the school of fine arts. will address the Delphian meeting at 3 p. m. Tuesday, Feb. 25, on the exhibition in the picture gal leries in Morrill hall He will talk at 7:30 p. m. on the same day to the Lambda Delphians, concerning the same subject. Botr. organiza tions will meet In the art gallery. CLASS CHUN DECIDE 10 ELECT MR OFFICERS Three of Four Presidents Chosen Announce They Will Call Meets. COMSTOCK IS UNDECIDED Officials Chosen at Mass Meeting of Class; Few Usually Attend. Three of the four class presi dents elected last week announced yesterday that they would call roeetiogs of their classes to elect minor class officers. The other one. William Comstock. president of the sophomore class, said he had not decided yet. Determination of these rla.vs presidents to have minor officers chosen is In contradiction to a recommendation passed by the student council, rejected by the faculty committee on student or ganisations and then repassed by the student council. The faculty committee in veto ing the proposal by the student council, gave no particular objec tion to doing away w ith the offices but saw no reason for abolishing them. In 1he words of Dean Thompson, "We simply left the matter up to the students." John Brown, newly elected senior class president, told a Nebraskan reporter that he expected to call a meeting of his class some time next week. He was unable to set a definite date. Bob Kelly of the junior class, feels that Inasmuch as these minor offices are apparently sanctioned by the faculty, they might as well be elected. Their duties, he said, are at least as heavy as those of the president. Bill Comstock and Arthur Pinkerton, prexies of the sophomore and freshman classes, respectively, were of the same opinion, according to statements made yesterday. In the past, these minor class of ficers have been elected at mass meetings of the class. The presi dent has had the prerogative to designate the time and place of the meeting. Mere handfuls of stu dents have attended these meet ings in the last few years. GIRL RESERVE WORK I Leadership Trainig Course Will Be Directed by Violet Olson. Annual leadership training course for girl reserve work will begin Thursday, Feb. 27, under the direction of Violet Ann Olson, city secretary of Girl Reserves. The course is designed for the benefit of girls who are preparing to teach next year, and would like to be qualified to supervise a branch of extra curricular activity, and for underclasswomen who would like to have an opportunity next year to sponsor one of the Girl Reserve clubs organized in Lincoln grade and junior high schools. Attention is called to the change of meeting place, as it will be im possible to schedule Ellen Smith hall for the scries of eight meet ings which comprise the course. The group will meet in the base ment of the University Episcopal church on Thirteenth and R streets at 5 o'clock each Thursday. Head of Fine Arts School Will Discuss Plays of Wagner. A combined radio-correspondence course on the musical dramas of Richard Wagner will be given by Prof, Paul H. Grummann director" of the school of fine arts, on the University of Nebraska radio program. Preparatory to the course will be a scries of radio talks on northern mythology. Ia four addresses he will sketch the main outlines of the northern myths in order to prepare his hearers for a study of the Ring series of Wagner. Immediately after the discussion of the myths, analysis will be made of Wagner's deviations from the sources, and the reasons for these. Four lec tures will be devoted to the Ring series, and after that the other plays of Wagner will be discussed to show listeners their chronolo gical order. The purpose of the series is to acquaint listeners with the general trend of Wagner's work; to give an idea of the significance of his plots; and to acquaint the listener witn tne hibtorical background of each play. Students May Get Blueprint at A. M. Student subscribers for the Nebraskan Blue Print may hereafter get their copies in the Orientation paper files in Ap plied Mechanics 201.. Subscrib ers will find their copies of the February Issue there now. 7fAf. IS IIF.IIF.: A liandelion Hot llevtt Found on ihv (Vimhm Mus Elualxth Reese. f the de partment of Romance languages, claims the dtstini-tion of having discovered the firl dnndelion of the ieaion. The yellow blossom, nesrlv rerfrr:. but act yet f'i" grown, was found in the triangular bit of turf just couth ff Pharmacy hall. It was all alone, but appealed to be having a fine time of it. and seemed in the best of health. Miss Reese reported. She puked the yellow flower, and is preerving It. At any rate, the campus ran le sure that spring i.i here, al lean temporarily! playersITsTage Karcl Capck's Play 'R.U.R.' Portraying Future Life Is to Be Given. SHOWS MECHANICAL MEN BY MOSELLE KLEEMAN. Nebraskans w ill catch a glimpse of future life on this planet when they attend the presentation of Karel Capck's plH.v. R. U. R.." which will be given by the Uni versity Players from Feb. 28 to March 6. The play is a symbolic fan tasy in whiJh the author tiics to point out that man can reach such a state of perfection in his scien tific, commercial, psychological developments that he will tend to bring about bis own destruction. Mr. Capck. however, doesn't be lieve that this will happen for he is an advocate of the inherent di vinity of man which he thinks is a perpetual safeguard that flour ishes and blots out despair and establishes hope. The action of the rIa' deals with robots, mechanical men. who are produced according to a serret formula on a mythical island somewhere on the universe in the far distant future. These men be come so perfect that they kill off all the real men except one. The difficulty arises when the robots cannot find the formula by which they are made and therefore are threatened with extinction as soon as their bodies wear out. The three acts and epilogue of the play resolve themselves into a hair raising melodrama with as much power to raise the human gooseflesh as "The Bat" or any modern day mystery thriller. The entire effect is bizarre and exotic. Evening perfoi rcances start ex actly at 7:30 p. m.; Saturday mat inee at 2:30 p. m. Reservations may be made with Ross P. Curtice company for single performances. ELECT NEW OFFICERS Committee on Rush Cards Plans Make Report on Its Findings. Election of officers for the next year will be the principal business of the Intei fraternity council meet ing to be held tonight, at :30, in Morrill hall. The officers to be chosen tonight are president, vice president, and secretary. A financial report ot tne lnier- fratcrnity ball will be given by Fred Grau, general cnairman of the committee in charge. Plans relative to the coming rush season will be discussed. It is expected that the commit tee in charge of rush cards will re port to the council. The duplicate rush card system has been ap proved by the council and will go into effect immediately. The rush cards, which are being printed for the various fraternities under the direction of the council, will be ready for distribution soon, accord ing to Kenneth Gammill, chairman of the committee. Czech Traveler Finds Nebraska the Ideal Place to Live; Man Enter Uni BY LA SELLE GILMAN. "You Americans, you mid-westerners, are so frank, so fine, so friendly, that I shall never return to Czechoslovakia; I shall stay here to live the rest of my life." This is the decision of Loudy Knezck. world wanderer, and now student, at Nebraska State Teach ers college at Peru. Mr. Knezek is in Lincoln temporarily, in he contempulates attending the Uni versity next fall. "I went to Nebraska State Teachers college at Kearney dur ing the last semester." Knezek said. " This is the country for ed ucation, for progress. I want an education now, the progress, as far as fortune is concerned, must come later. Here in Nebraska the trail ends; here I can settle." Sets Out at Nineteen. Knezek. having finished his high school work in Moravia, set out six years ago, when be waa nineteen years old, to sec the world. While attending school he bad been apprenticed to a tailor, and with the knowledge of this trade, he was able to travel in d e p e n dently through Europe. Africa, the West Indies. Central America, and the United States. He went through Austria and spent six months in various cities in Germany. He arrived in Paris and happened to meet country men of his who asked him to be come editor of a worklngman's i i STUDENTS MOST SOLVE ALL DAY RALLY QUESTION Faculty Suggests That Pep Demonstration Problem Rest With Pupils. SEEK POPULAR OPINION Committee Will Be Picked By Student Council to Gather Views. BY POLITICUS. Whether University of Nebraska students are to bold all day raUic before football games next fall is to be left to the students them selves to decide. Such was the preliminary a.-tioo taken by the hpecial faculty committee on tallies at its initial session Monday noon. The wi!l of the students on the matter is to be guaged by the re commendations of a committee Irom the student council, which group the faculty has requested co operation in effecting a definite program for rallies. The council has been asked to select this com mittee at its next meeting. Wed nesday. Match 0. Whatever the students say tbey want will govern to a larje extent the final action of the faculty com mittee." declares Dr. C. H. Old father, chairman of the committee. "If the students decide to have rallies during as well as after class hours, then a definite pro gram as to the manner in which these rallies shall be conducted will be drawn up." Started Last December. The genesis of the whole pro ceedings was a university senate meeting, held In the middle of De cember, when two plans for the future management of rallies were discussed. Neither proposal, one from the student council and the other from a faculty committee appointed shortly before the sen ate meeting, met with the ap proval of the faculty. As a result a committee was ap pointed by Chancellor E. A. Bur nett to undertake the task of set tling the matter definitely. The meeting Monday was the first to be held by the "committee and the general feeling among committee members at that time was that Us regulations should only pertain tn those rallies which are conducted during class hours from S a. m. to 5 p. m. "We have no special concern over pep demonstrations that aie held in the evenings or early morn ings." says Dr. Oldfather. "What we are striving to do is to get a definite understanding between faculty and students as to what is desired in the way of rallies dur ing the day." Final Action Postponed. Another meeting of the faculty group will be called shortly alter the student council's committee is appointed, according to the chair man. Final action on the question, however, may not be taken until later on in the semester, in order that the students may have time to express themselves. Other members of the faculty committee, besides Dr. Oldfather are: Dr. W. C. Erenke, Prof. T. T. Bullock. Dr. J. P. Senning. and Coach Dana X. Bible. Dr. T. J. Thompson, dean of student affairs, and Ralph Raikes. president of the student council, are ex-officio members. HINDU WILL TALK TO VESPER GROUP THIS AFTERNOON M. Kamakabri Rao. an East In dian student of tbc University of Kansas, will speak at the Vesper service today at 5 o'clock in Ellen Smith hall. He will describe the customs of interest to college stu dents. Marguerite Daniclson will lead toe meeting and there will be a program of special music. newspaper; thus, be says, he con siders himself a Journalist of sorts. From Paris he traveled down into Spain and crossed to the coast of Morocco, where he. worked in a P'rench department store, selling calico and ribbon to transient Arabs. Goes to Canary Islands. In company with a friend, he went to the Canary Islands, off the coast of Africa. Here their ways parted, as Knezek intended to pay his passage to Cuba, while his friend being out of funds, hoped to work his way. "I got across well enough, third class, barring a lot of sea-sickness," Knezek said, "but my poor friend. He tried and tried to sign on as a seaman. They would have none of him. There was no work for him in the islands. So he stowed away. They caught him after three days and put him in the brig, after taking away the little money that he bad. The ship was going to Mexico, but they said, 'No, no! Not Mexico.' You would not last a minute. Revolu tions! So they kicked him off at Havanna, and I h.ve not heard from him since." Worked In Havanna. Knezek worked in Havanna a short time, and he curses the country. He made haste to reach Guatemala, wf.ere he worked as a tailor for several months, then to Continued on Page 2.