4-H HEALTH PROJECT Mortar Board Finds Chicago Not So Tough; Spends Summer Ixihorinn in Colonel William . Oury. Head of military Department, Was Student And Football Player Here in 1895 at rue tor where be remained fee sevea years. After that perte4 of sen ire. be waa detailed la tbe t'Meisity C'f Nebraska where be will temaia for four years. IM AIM PLAN STUDENT IRK A i4 aca'er Sae awe mm ti'M mi is Sa44 K4 i v 1 3 a 1 Douglas County Country Schools Take, $200 Cash Prize. A 411 t luub health program of Hour las count jr has been aarte4 the t hamjuncahip tt U country, trmttlmc to a lelejram from the NelKmai llry rouiirj to ill Clare. Noyes. assistant county tenaioei of ruj, las county. Tr.e aril lacliwlea cash !' f Oct hundred and fuieen mem bers of Keep Writ -l club In four schools rlayel ir.mporxani rvie in the 19T-M healih program, alias Noyes in ber report of tb project. On hundred and twetvt mora younjer boys and flrls were benefited. Only 14 of 113 boys and flrls tmdrrwelsht at tbe start of the prof ram a year af o failed to fain weight and ahow siftis of better by the tima acbool was out last but rp rlnr. tba report say. One hundred and eighty-eight of tbt i boys and aula were wanned and measured last (all. 103 of the US erer mora than 7 percent under, weight for their ages considered a serious condition by bealtb authori ties. Only 40 of tba 109 were un derweight at tha cloaa of school last spring. Tba Improvement waa due to a WrU organised aeries of health talks at school, bealtb games and exeirlses, better acbool lunches, and better health babtta In and out ef school. For example, children In oca school chased a code pot around the wall of tba school room and out of the door with due cere may by subaututlnx milk for tba accustomed coffea at noon lunch time. For each bottle of milk they drank, they slid tba coffee pot far enough toward tba door to make room for a paper milk bottle be hind It. In another school, a club sold a bottle of milk, a cookie, and a straw for a nickel, making a penny profit on each sale. With the prof its from about 14.000 sales during the yesr. they got additional equipment for their club work at school, lipped the Ice man J1.98. gave a partv for the little toL. and enjoyed a theater party them selves. Their treasury is still well filled. Before they started the Idea. any youngster who tro"gnt mil to school wax called baby. r:.1ct No. 28. Ponca school Irvu-g school, and Ashland Tark school were the four uaieresiea in the project. All cf them are close to Omaha but rural districts. Hiss Angeline Tauchea was local leader at Ashland Park. Miss Lucy Phal- cn at Irvington. Miss Harriet snz man at Ponca, and Miss Loretta Harprter at district No. 38. Tbey received wholehearted co-operation from the University of Neorasica collepe of medicine at Omaha., the renort states. The project which Miss Noyes worked out to win the national iionors has been recommended to county extension agents and teach ers in a number of other counties. Miss Florence Atwood. foods spe cialist, and Muss Helen Noyes. club worker of the extension service at Lincoln, have been interested in the health propram and have pre pared the out line of the project for use In other counties. ALL U. CHURCH NIGHT SET FOR FRIDAY EVENING (Continued from Pse L) Journey to the First church wbeie refreshment will be served. Tranrportation will be provided for the students. It is the inten tion of the Presbyterian workers to carry out the Indian motif dur ing the evening. Entertainment PIANO STUDENTS! Adult beginners nd Intermediate wanted by graduate student with nine years' piano teaching experi ence. Phone between 2 snd 4 L 7981 RATES RESASONABLE NOW OPEN! MAUNA L0A INDOOR GOLF CLUB SOMETHING DIFFERENT Scenic Colorful Artistic Hawaiian betting Come, See snd Play POPUtAR PRICES 136 6outh 12th 6treet Rudge at Cuenzel Basement Outdoor Course Bth and O 6U. 4J Kiddiea Don't forget to make your plana tor our tia Saturday Morning Party. Filled with fun you'll be long In forgetting goaded with laughs you'll love to remem ber Charles Rogers Nancy Carroll "Follow Thru" with JACK HALEY 2ELMA O'NtAL VAUDEVILLE Lane aV Harper Three Attlson Sisters Stuart Stage Band BARGAIN HOUR 12 te 1 25c LINCOLN The picture that Is sweeping all Lincoln A picture we ask you not te miss. "Common Clay" WITH CCrSTATCS BE2TCTZTT LrW AYRES BEStYL WERCE Shows Continuous 12 to 11 P. M. Mat. &. Eve. M. In Cafe in Windy City's Loop District BY MARY BUTTON. Kithi-r ( liiragti "ain't what alia used to be," or el XI Us Ituth llatfulj, nit ruber of the rauiput Mortar Hoard society, an. I kixtreti other cord from midwrsttru schools just naturally took the city of jutu and gangsters by stortu. Anyway, Strang it may sum, these young philanthropist! assumed the roles of i.or working girls and labored during the summer months anuq me esrlltmant of ITllcagOi loop. Like tha proverbial heroine, each went ber own av and at tba and of tha firt day la tha Windy City Miss Hatfield found herself In aa emplo) tr.enl agency with tea negro women ana twenty white men aa m-ora-seeking companions. Cour ageously the young Nebraska road applied for work and was Immedi ately rewarded with a position aa a cars waitress u tba midst of tha city's busiest section tha loop. Fine's Utile Clamour. Miss Hatfield soon discovered that the glamour that Is Broad way's certa' 'v d s not radiate to tba main a v tha second city Chicago. i alary of 116 a weak to... .ih a list of ex panses waa banded to one of the girls who bad charge of tha expe dition and she received back a small part of ber salary after It bad been split up to defray tba ex penditures of the group. The experiences which Miss Hat field encountered in securing a po sition are parbapa the most Inter esting part of ber story. "Hsva you bsd any experience T" ber employer asked. "I can wash dishes and wait on tables." answered Misa Hatfield de murely. -Pretty good- waa the half hearted reply. "Can you bus?" "Oh yes, 1 can bus." lied tba trembling young philanthropist, I will be provided at tbe different churches. Methodists Ask Attendance. Methodist students have been re- ' quest d to come to some Methodist , church in the city. Between eight , and nine hundred students are ex pected to attend these various re-, ceptions. W. C r swell. Methodist student 1 pastor. Berenice Hoffman, Miss ! Mary Werner, president of Kappa Phi. Methodist sorority; Itrniy Rinker. president of Phi Tau Tbeta. Methodist fraternity, and Carolina Cooper, president of tbe Wesley players, will assist in greeting the Methodist students at tbe churches of Lincoln. Baptist student receptions are being held at tbe First Baptist church at Fourteenth and K streets and at tbe Second Baptist church at Twenty-eighth and S streets. Christian students will meet at, tbe First Christian church at Sixteenth and K streets. Congregstionalists Plsn Meeting. First Plymouth Congregational church: Seventeenth and A streets, ana Vine Congregational church. Twenty-fifth and S streets, will be tbe places for Congregational Lgatnerings. All Evangelical stu- oents wui meet ai ine iaivarr Evangelical church at Eleventh and Garfield. University Episcopal church at Thirteenth and P. will bold a re ception beginning at 8 o'clock, as will the St. Mark's Reformed church. Fifteenth and Q streets. All Souls Unitarian church. Twelfth and H streets, and Cold well Memorial United Brethren, Eighteenth and M streets. All university church Sunday is to be observed Oct 26. Git to Work. New York Sun: A couple of Kentuckians, meeting In a feud district, according to an exchange, one asked the other. "Look bere. Bill, what did you shoot at me for? I ain't got no quarrel with you," "You bad a feud with Ben Walker, didn't you?" "But Ben s dead." ' Well, I'm his executor." CLASSIFIED WANT ADS. AFTER ALL it's a Townsend photograph that you want SLKEPIKG room, for rent. Large rooms, nrly dararalatf. Very reaaooible ratw. 1417 Q . For men only. B17S3. FOUND Hlrh nol honorary ef holas lie pin in front of Lr bid;. Owner may tiave same by calling at the Ix.nt and Found Dept. Daily Nebras ka snd paying for Ibis ad. r LRLEALL LfdDdDLD 55c When former Vice President Marshall said that what the United Statts needed was a good five-eent cigar well, he said a mouthful. And by the same token, it was a real mouthful those twenty University of Nebraska football players said when they agreed with D. H. Harris to man age the upstairs dining room of TOmb ANNtEXl CALFE and put on a Special Students' Lunch and Special Students' Supper at tbe low price oi 35 cents. Lunch begins at 11:00 a. m. and lasts till 2:00 p. m. There are three num bered lflncbeB, different each day for thirty days, consisting of meat, vege tables, rolls and butter, and coffee or milk. - Tbe supper menu is ready at 5KX) p. m. and lasts till 8:00 p. m. Three num bered suppers, all different from the lunch menus, give you for 35 cents meat, vegetables, rolls and butter, and coffee or milk Why not try the excellent food tnd enjoy eBting in a place where everything is clean and comfortable and the service courteous! Open all night now. fouUlb LEGVG3uuSlhi 5S having never beard tha term before In ber life. Miss Hatfield got the Job. Cat Premetien. She "bussed" diligently for three days, a eertea of labors which consisted mainly of carrying dirty dishes to tha kitchen. Her excel lence la this position resulted In a rapid promotion to the steam table and tbea to the counter where aha remained during the remainder of ber working period. Miss Hatfield worked a shift of tan straight hours with a half aa hour off for eating After two weeks of this procedure aba was placed on a night shift from T to 7 with two hours. (3 a. m. to 3 a. m.) off duty. During thia rest pe riod she slept on a small wooden cot with only aa old apron as a pillow. "My position.' admitted Miss Hatfield, "necessarily brought me Into contact with a very cheap class of people. Any gesture of courteay oa my part waa met with aa Incredulous stare, and I rspidly acquired the reputation of being "different" "1 received every thing." she asserted, "from projo sals for marriage to proposals for high balls but I refused them all." "A false burglar alarm waa tbe nearest approach I bad to any real Chicago excitement," confessed Miss Hatfield. "As for guns, mass seres, robberies, or bl-jacktngs I Just didn't see any. that's alt" Meeting of Pershing Rijlet Called Today First meeting of the year at Pershing Rifles will be held in Nebraska ball at S e clock to day. All eld members, includ ing sophomores, are urged to be present as some important busi ness must be transacted. Claude t. Gillespie, Captain. RUTGERS PRESIDENT Tells Freshmen to Leave Conceit at Home; All Get Same Start XEW BURNSWICK. X. J. (UP) The 200.000 or more men and women who are entering col lege for the first time this fall were advised to leave tbeir con ceit at borne." wben Dr. John if. Thomas, president of Rutgers uni versity, addressed them over a na tionwide radio hookup. "Conceit in any society or group is not tbe wsy to popularity," be said, "least of all tbe college cam pus. It is better to keep still about one's merits and achievements, andbetter still entirely to forget them. "In every college one starts from scratch, and it is wise not to scramble to tbe first row wben the freshman picture is taken. Merit, ability and powers of lead ership find tbeir just recognition as surely and aa properly on an American college campus as in any place in theworld. "Tailors and haberdashers can help very little in that process, and a tongue too well lubricated is a great handicap." MORE TAKE NORMAL WORK. The enrollment of twenty-five juniors and seniors in the normal training department exceeds all previous enrollment in that depart ment, according to Lillle M. Parka, supervisor of normal training in tbe teachers college. Modern Orchestra Playing Hampton Orchestra School Teaches All Instruments and Puts You in the Business 208 Liberty Bid. B 1553 Full Program Outlined for Winter; Dr. Ray Hunt Directing Work. Tbe Ywuog People's council of the insclples of Christ students Is getting well under way with plana for a comprehensive program fur tbe achui yesr. The council works under the directum of lr. Rsy K. Hunt who is the student pastor for tbe Christian church and Homer K. Deadmaa who is tha student repre sentative of tbe Nebraska Chris tian foundation. Tbe officeis of the council are James H. Ander son, president: Lloyd U PuspiabiL vice president; lieu lab Seymour, secretary; and Helen Lapp, treas urer. Tbe officers together with the committee chairmen plan tbe program for tbe year. Co-educalional classes in the church acbool are taught la tba young people's department. Tbe coursea for the first semester are: "How Jesus Met Life Questions." by Dr. Carl Roeenqulst; "The Place of the Bible in Modern Ufa" by Dr. B. C Hendricks, and TJementa of Personal Christianity" by Miss Gladys Beaumont. The church school classes meet every Sunday morning at 43 o'clock. Sunday afternoon a soclsl hour Is held at 3:30 o'clock at which aa Informal gel-acquainted program Is plsnned. Light refreshments are served. At 6.30 the group has a discussion bour In which subjects pertinent to student life are dis cussed. A full pre rarn of activity la planned during the week dsys for tbe students. Dramatic programs, parties, gospel teams, mission work. Journalism, art work, pro motion plans, setting up services, music programs and gymnasium programs all make up the program for the young people and students. All disciples and Cbru-tian church students are invited to participate in as many of these activities as possible. All of tbe program out lined takes place in the First Chris tian church at Sixteenth and K str a. Oldest Medical School To Obarrve 16.lli Year PHIL ADELPHIA (IP) The I 166th anniversary of tbe founding l of tbe University of Pennsylvania school of medicine, tbe oldest on tbe American continent, will be celebratAl here on Oct. 10 and 11. Outstanding medical leaders from this country and others will take part in the ceremonies. Honorary degrees will be con' ferred upon a number of men known internationally in the field of medicine. Mississippi Turns Out 15 Collcee Instructors GULFPORT. Miss. IP I For reasons not immediately an nounced, tbe trustees of the Uni versity of Mississippi, meeting here, have dimiased four profes sors at tbe university and eleven members of the faculty at Missis sippi state college for women. Unsubstantiated rumors on tbe campuses of tbe two schools blamed the dismissal of the eleven men and women on the alleged liberal views entertained and promulgated by tbe faculty mem bers. Xo bull fights are permitted in Spanish towns where the public instruction is not up to the gov ernment standard. MOTOR OUT COM PANY specializes in Rent-A-C&r services; new and nearly new cars at low rates for all kinds of trips. We invite old and new cus tomers to call us. MO TOR OUT COMPANY, B-6819, 1120 P Street, Always open. Enjoyable and Profitable 4 j Military tactics at tbe Univer sity of .Nebrsaka now are under tbe direction of a Nebraska grad uate. a former football stsr. fj.e new commandant la Cot William Ourv. who was I rs Justed In 11 ' from Omaha b ib acbool. now Cen tral high eihoU. After his grad uation, be came lo the University of Nebraska, where be showed a marked interest lo military work. The year after bis graduation. tbe Binin-Amencaa war rve out and be was ooa of tba first to enlist. His ability was soon rec - ognised and be was commissioned aa a captain, lie iook ma com pany to tba Philippines with tbe hecond Kipeditionary forces dur ing the war. and took an active part In tbe taking of Manila. In Philippines Four Years. On tbe same day tbe Maine waa blown up be applied for a com mission in the regular service. He was then commissioned a second lieutenant la tba JJrd Infantry. V. S. A. He served four years In tbe I'bilippinea Must of bis time waa spent In comma ml of a mounted detach ment chasing leaders sucb as Ales andrto and A gu anal do. After Aguanaldos cspture. Colonel Oury returned to the united States. Ha waa than slslloned at Fort Apache. Arisona. for two years, after which time be was then detailed to tbe Infantry and cavalry at Fort Leavenworth where be put In a year. At Leavenworth be received bis cap taincy, a rank which be held for seventeen years, or until tba out break of tbe World war, wben fur ther promotion came. Served m World War. At the beginning of the war be was serving a detail In the quar termaster general's office, la charge of tha construction division. He asked to be relieved from tbis duty In order to go to France. He waa made lieutenant colonel of a national army regiment and waa Drug Store NEEDS HECTOR'S PHARMACY iMh a t "Our Sura Is Veur Stare" University men oppreciote hSe not style difference between Com put Cereti - and the trsueJ corduroy trousers I Compvs Cords ore foil, orod to gnra the smart hep-fit mot distinguish good trouieesi they hove cioofi, trim lines; they hang right. And they keep their distinctive siyte to the very last through counties re juve notion 'm the wash tub at home, or at the laundry- " Some men prefer to hove) them dry cleaned. Iff oB the same to Com put Cod ! . . . They're tailored of the finest qual ity Crompton corduroy, farrow-ribbed. In a distinctive, cream color. Good stores, with a keen sons of what unreerwry men wont, are showing these good-looking corduroy trousers. Ask for thorn by noma, ploosa) Compue Cords. ToHsrae- Sy ELOESSER-HEYNEMANN CO. New Vara lm Aaaaiai fartlsad Sea fraausw 1113 0 St. liromuted lo tbe Colonel of tba JMtb Infantry regiment. 7th division, whkh regiment be took to Fiance and commanded in tbe Ar gun offensive. After a year in Fiance be returned with tbe 314th regiment. He wes made colonel in lbs regular army upon Ita reor ganisation, ai.d was detailed to command the 14tfe infantry in Panama, where be served three years. His command ctasisted of an unfinished post and little or no money to finish It with, a regiment i of Infantry, made up of tbe raw est kind of material, and a battal Ion of te!d artillery. Returning le the United States be was detailed lo Ibe national guard of Pennsylvania as la- nrnrsrarnrwrir-r-jririr-r Style 2') OWMO AND OPIMATCD The Ul"h and artl. lie m of fur. on the fall r.n that are ehovins. s I e e a them a luaunuue ar.d Sietinrtiie air hy are really Ih perf real for the perfect lady. $24.75 Ns. 0 8f Hats that Are Fmart an 4 Hffren HOSE TO MATCH LiLl BURNETT'S THESE CORDUROY ARE TAILORED TO en fill III Usr-, w I SMART CORDUROY R O U S 1201 O Street KILLIAN'S Campos a m, fc a fct For Renl Vtry la'f flit r"M wxh tale la an 4 Sn for fir a-y 4ata -i'.e Aim is mm I m i.e f ssia as4 itHfwt t"IS. pace Hi'i nS r at StudenU Stop ted Knew Oak Hail Tea Koom la Open. 11 te I te Veu Are Wtkeene Best f4 In Tewa 10)1 la. 11th at Phene -inn -tetrtwnrar Shoppe 12 V LINCOLN WOMIN WELCOMK STUDENTS! Your Crtdit la Good With Ui! 1 T- aew frorhs that w rrarha that U lvlrt st ear IT eery day are. ff vt dletlnetlea 1 a that have J at am shoppe ery tr.a mnet creations been motWied for fall ear. Our ahovtng of draaey, talloead and arhonl dreaaee la sura to wni with your ss prorsl. $15.00 7. TROUSERS FIT I E R S Cords in AH Elxet h i