The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, September 19, 1933, University Players Edition, Page TWO, Image 2

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    Tlil'.SIIAY. SKITOIIIKR I1). 193.1.
TWO
The Daily Nebraskan
Station A, Lincoln, Nenraska
OFFICIAL STUDCNT PUDLICAT ION
UNIVERSITY OF NEBRASKA
Entered .is wcond cl.iss m.-tw .it the postoff ice in
Lincoln, Nebrjbk.i. under act ot coiiijiess. March 3. 1879.
flnd at speci.il rate ot pnstn.ige provided for in section
1103, act ot October 3. 19 ' 7. authorized Jnui.ity 20, 1922.
THIRTY. THIRD YEAR
Published Tuesday, Wednesday. Thursday. Friday and
Sunday mornings during the academic year.
SUBSCRIPTION RATE
$1.50 a year Single Copy
J2.50 a year mailed
unaer direction ot the
Editorial Office University
cents $1 CO a bcmeslei
$1,50 a ternestr mailed
Student Publication Bn.nil.
Hall 4.
Business Office University Hall 4A.
Telephones Day: B-6E91 ; Night: B-6S82. B-33.U (Journal)
Ask for Nebraskan editor.
from the start the advantage ol the be.st hri-edinf;
ground for morale in their work together.
Too institutionalized restrictions may have de
tracted I mm their potentialities a.-r many so ve
hemently allege hut the fundamental value or then
work together remains the important consideration.
IK the e:;ample set by
there mii;ht he some
fnreyoins conclusions,
that It is not isolated.
Howard hall were isolated
cause for skepticism ol the
Laurence Hall
Druce Nicoll
Burton Marvin
Bernard Jennings
George Hclyoke
EDITORIAL STAFF
Managing Editors
News Editors
Carlyle Hodgkm
BUSINESS STAFF
Editoi -in chict
Violet Cross
Business
stant Business Managers
Wilbur Erickson
Manager
Dick Schmidt
Beginning
The Eighteenth.
It can be shown. However,
College cai.ipi all over the
land harl.or similar projects, and from them come
t-'itniln r lepnrts nt highly successlul opeiation No
later than Inst spring the Iowa tUate StudHiit com
mented on the success with which a co-operative
project was iieinj; sponsored in one ol the Ames
sororities.
Something nt the same reasoning, indeed, may
be applied to explain the greater scholastic success
of professional groups. Bound together with inter
ests giowine, from mutual wotk, the professional
fraternities invariably stand hihei in scholarship
than their purely social contemporaries
It is something for the Greeks to think about.
and seriously. mvoiveo as iney are in iwiiiucini
hogs, it might prove highly beneficial tor Nebraska i
chapters to still the voice ol pseudo "dignity" and
"ai istocracy" in older that they might hear the j
voice of co-operative effort. j
If Howard halls achievement is meaningful
anil the Nebraskan believes it is scholarship
; (mlilc llodylwn
A 1-AI'V KKO.M 1
lleie's the story
Killev tuld it lo a
economies
time when
Ii'lMOKK
is Plot. H. C.
chis.-i in rural
Some years ago, at a
omplamts grew lo be
CONTEMPORARY
COMMENT
t
NEW AQUATIC COACH NAMED
Ken Sutherland, A.A.U. Stivr
To Replace Lee Potter
And Rudy Vogclcr.
too ll.lld
ed a l'o:i
quiry to
tini-wiile
the government Hppnint
imiltee of Agricultural In
stnily and report on the
margin between the price
,il pi, tat. :cs m I'oilunk aim ine
price ol l't ouch-fries in New York,
or more generally, the discrepancy
between pinlncer and consumer
prices nl fa i m products,
Tii that committee came com
plaints from fa i and wide. One
complaint came from a house-wife
in i' iltiniore. She had ordered
from her grocer a jar of sliced cu
cumbi l pickies. The pickles had
cost her thirtv-t'ivi? cents. Keeling
i that she had got too little for her
! money, the Baltimore house-wile
i i;h.i' .,11 Ih.i ulii., leicl tueethel
inn ii "o '1,v ... v ., ....... .. -p, . - . - -
and found that for thirty-five
cents she had got exactly two cti
cunibei s.
This she told to the committee.
j And she fold them that in the
i vegetable markets of Baltimoie
j that same time she could buy fil
s I cunibeis at two for a nickle. She
CULTURAL sterility has been charged to the um-
versitv so often that the attack is as trite and
stale as last year's wage scale. The charge, it must
be admitted, is not without some justification in the
light of certain neglected opportunities, but neithei
does it state the whole truth.
It is a truism that the machinery ol institution
alized education, although the be.st we have, is in
evitably ponderous, but since there is little hope ot
immediate escape from circumstance, acceptance of
that circumstance seems the best alternative. A
"Pollyanna" attitude- is certainly not to be implied,
either, for only constant alertness and diligent ef
fort can gradually overcome the deficiencies which
cause such spirited criticism of the university.
Meanwhile there are hopeful foundations al
ready laid, and it is upon them that any improved
structure must be built. Among the foremost of
these encouraging phenomena is an organization
which this fall begins its eighteenth year of active
work: the University Players.
Inspiration for both extravagant criticism and
bitter condemnation, the Players yet remain as val
uable a cultural addition to the university as is to
be found on any campus. Presenting dramatic ma
terial of superior merit, and doing it in a commend
able fashion, the dramatic department, through the
University Players, is making a very real contribu
tion to student lives.
It may be true that the ability of the actors is
not to be ranked with the type of performance at
tributed to Broadway. That escapes the point. If
the Players' art was so great, then it is obvious
that Nebraska would not have the opportunity to
enjoy it any lor ger.
We have the University Playeis, and we should
be grateful for so much. And the gratitude should
take the form of the support which the Tassels are
soliciting today as they open the annual ticket sales
campaign.
The University Players open their eighteenth
year. Few other activities can equal t'.ieir record of
successful achievement.
more than study
ellable "morale"
plctely with real
: it is closely linked with that in
that seems to come most com
co-operative work.
Discourse
ostali;ia.
DKHSONAL
Oil
reflection deserves small space, per
haps, in an editmia column, but strolling along
a shaded university walk to the accompaniment of
a clamour of associations, it is almost impossible
not to recognize a kind of melancholic reminiscence,
and recognizing it. to give it expression.
College students, however much they may ridi
cule sentimentality, are as much given to nostalgia
as all other human beings, and whatever the indi
vidual's particular brand of "homesickness"-
whether it be for the great American fetishes
home and mothei," or the days of the past, or the
I lelt Dial the mice difference be
tween slued pickles deliverer! at
her dooi and cucumliers in the
market was too great.
The committee thought so too.
Tin' committee thought so too. and
they sot out to investigate the
matter They found that the grow
er of those encumbers had a high
cost of production--rent on the
land, cost of fertilizer and imple
ments, tost of hired men, cost o,
risk, cost of transporting the crop
to town. And the vegetable grow
er complained that he could not
make any money.
Next the committee found that
the wholesaler had a host of serv
ice costs to pay. He had capital
invested in buildings; he had in
suiance on his buildings and risk
on the perishable products; he had
workers in the plant, stenogra-
liers salesmen and others to oav:
girl who camped across the lake, or whatnot - it is. llaiJ transportation costs out to
! the letaileis to whom lie sold. All
I the time the cost of services put
jar of trickles was risiny
very likely to creep out from time to lime, i ne i
frequency varies with the individual, of course, but j
it is sate to say that almost everyone experiences j
these occasions of dreamy melancholia.
Sentimental? Certainly. But so nearly univei- I
sal that even the most vociferous professor of cyni- j
cism has somewhere a vulnerable spot. '
As for the editorial justification lor the expres
sion of these observations, the point that the recog
nition of the phenomena mentioned is connected
with a college education need not he labored. No
hint of the pedant's "evaluation" is intended; ephem
eral manifestations within the mind of the individ
ual cannot be evaluated, unless, indeed, some sort ol
I poetical measurement be applied. It is enough to
say that to he on speaking terms with one's own
j nostalgic moods, and to recognize them as having
a place in the complex of personality, is another
little part of that vague "culture" which university
students avowedly seek.
wholesaler complaino'i
Id not make much
How Tradition
Heath Work.
From China, land of confusion,
tradition vs. "modernity." comes a
tal.- which the university in gen
era!, and its student
n.'irtioular. miirht well
in
I be
and
Morale:
'A Fundamental.
THE fervor with which self appointed vocational
advisers have overworked the "co-opeiative"
concept obscures, in a measure, some of the real
value attaching to the mutual projects we brand
co-operative. But once in a while something occurs
to re-emphasize the fundamental virtues accruing to
joint effort.
On the campus such a renewal of emphasis
v,-as glimpsed only recently when the scholastic
standing of undergraduate groups was released.
There, at the head of the list, was Howard hall, a
thoroughly co-operative enterprise undertaken by a
few girls last semester.
It was probably shocking to many aristocratic
Greeks that the manual labor attendant on actual
housekeeping and home management could be cou
pled with high scholastic achievement. But the
facts are there, and they are not such as to be con
troverted by mistaken notions of the inherent value
of wearing Greek pins.
Howard hall stands alone at the head of the
U. illation of scholastic achievement, It stands
alone in certain other respects, too, and therein may
lie the explanation for the high position in scholar
Ship, The girls who lived in the co-operative house
were first of all girls who were working together
to keep their enterprise a going concern. Theirs
was the energy that cleaned the house and kept it
presentable and homelike. They alone were respon
sible for their own financial'welfare, and their minds
the ones that made the budget and devised ways and
means of sticking to it. The girls, in short, had
type
have
Actually
All-l iiiversit
OYV many times have vou heard some enthusi
astic student bemoan the lack of any sort of all-
university social functions comparable to the "var
sity parties" which prevail at other schools'.' It
would not be wide of the mark to guess that the
number of undergraduates, and faculty members
too. whir have voiced such a plaint mounts rather
high.
Attempts have been made in the past to actual
ize the dream of a scheme of "varsity parties," but
they have almost iinil'oi mly met with a failure that
can only be described as dismal. "All-university
parties," under the direction of the barb council.
were a gesture in the direction of the desired
of all-student social entertainments, but they
failed to meet the requirements.
They have failed, that i.-, previous to this year,
hut if the Coliseum dar.ee Satin day night is any in
dication, the campus is going to see this year a type
of party that can be truthfully described as "all
university." A good crowd, i epresenting as near a cross sec
tion of student life as can be obtained on a campus
the size of Nebraska's, payed money to dance at the
Saturday party. Mu h is left to be desired in the
way of decorations, of course, but once the Coli
seum's permanent drapes are adequately de netted
and made available for general use. this difficulty j
should vanish. i
It may be, of cuui.-.e, that some of the success
of the party must be discounted as arising from the i
circumstances of its being among the first student
social ai fairs of the year. Kven so, however, a good j
beginning has been made, mid the committee in ,
charge need only follow up its inaugural success to
insure a kind of party f' i which the campus has
long felt a need.
into that
And the
that he c
profit.
The grocer also had capital in-ve.-led
in his building, and in stor
age room, and in i ef rigci at ion.
And the grocer had to pay u host
of sales clerks, and office help for j
cash customers, and more office j
help to take care of customers
who found it more convenient to
pay their bills once a month or
less. And the grocer had to pay a
delivery boy to take those pickles
out to' the home of the lady who
had made the complaint. More
services piled up, and the grocery
man complained that it was diffi
cult for him to make money.
When the Committee of Agricul
tural Inquiry grit back to the lady
who had complained because she
only got two cucumbers for thirty
five cents, about the only thing
they ti.uld tell her was that there
were a very large number of serv
ices that had to be performed on
those cucumbers before they
reached her in the form of sliced
pickles. That every person who
rendered those services had to be
paid. That paying for all those
services had made it impossible to
get the pickle to her fur any less
than thirty-five cents. And that
the only way the cost to her could
lie reduced would be to find some
way to reduce the number of serv
ices. And then that lady sat down and
figured out that if .-.he had bought
two pickles ill the vegetable Ill.ll
ket. paid catf.uo down to the mar
ket and back, paid for all the ma
terials to put up the pickles, pait
tier miiiil tn do the work, and nai'1
to have the refuse hauled awa,l01'
her jar oi pickles would probably j
have cost mine man it Ui'l to orir
them from the gnu er.
leaders
heed.
l.-nr fount, ess eeilllllies, we me
informed, the ancient customs and
traditions of the far-off Kansu
province have prevailed - influenc
ing and mellowing the inexperi
enced actions of any "younger
generation." Since time im
memorial, the Kansu women have
fervi ntlv followed one particular
creed; sunshine on the sixth day
of the sixth moon is a command
for I hem to flock to the open, roll
up their pantaloons and sun their
legs as long as the sun shines.
The,- nrp confident that by con
tinuing this practice they wi
protected against contagious
infectious diseases.
There came a time when nearly
all of Kansu's sage, elderly lead
ers had passed, their places not
filled by the younger men of the
province. So a new governor was
sent to Kansu, Ceil. Chu Sliao
liang, a tempestuous militarist,
wi li-versed in political strategy.
When he learned of this particular
tradition prevailing among the
women-folk, he decided to abolish
it. "It doe.-, no good. Times have
changed. The officii ncy of my ad
ministration will be disrupted by
such a meaningless custom." he
thundered.
The few remaining older heads
sighed sadly. "IVstioy this tradi
tion and you permanently wreck
an innocent custom, a vital part of
Kansu," they advised the governor.
TMscretion 'is the better part of
valor." they reminded him. Womhr
of wonders', they persuaded him
not to act until he had seen the
custom in effect, until lie was sure
of what he was doing.
On the sixth day of the sixth
moon Ceneral Chu, yielding some
what reluctantly to the advice of
Ills elders, wandered to the open
spaces. wh--iv h'- saw thousands of
legs belonging to female citizens
tannin- nicely. By the end of the
day the governor had completely
circumstances that one gets into.
The longer the lapse, the more
tangled aft'aiis become and the
harder it is to cut loose from it all
and come back into school. A stu-
dent's return to the campus after -an
indefinite absence signifies a
wot thwhile determination.
changed his mind. He had no in
tention of interfering with the
tradition cherished by the woman
hood of Kansu. "It really is a nice,
picturesque custom," he remarked.
Thus far everybody is happy in
cluding the Moil. General
Kansu is, of course, several
thousand miles away from the
university campus. Yet, strangely
enough, the problems of both are
similar. The Kansuans convinced
their political mogul that traditions
are pleasant, innocent pastimes,
and are often very beneficial. May
the Californians do likewise!
Daily Californian.
A Political
Machine Falls.
The federal government's ex
tensive reduction in veterans' re
lief was one of the best things that
has ever happened to the Amer
ican Legion.
Through promises of obtaining
governmental aid for ex-service
men, the American Legion was
able to build up one of the most
politically influential organizations
in the country. Until President
Roosovelt knocked the props from
under it, the Legion was able to
get almost anything wanted from
congress.
As a result, the whole organiza
tion was generally discredited, and
"pension racketeers" and "treas
ury raiders" were opprobrious epi
thets hurled at the Legion.
President Roosevelt's economy
bill caused great hardship to thou
sands of veterans and their depend
ents. This fact lias made it neces
sary for the Legion to revamp its
program to prevent veterans who
do not need and who do not de
serve aid from sharing the govern
ment's relief appropriations.
As the time of the annual con
vention of the Legion nears, offi
cials are laying plans to see to it
that only deserving veterans and
those who wen; actually disabled
while in service are placed on the
federal payroll. They have recog
nized that the Legion can no longer
continue its quondam policy of
getting all it can out of the gov
ernment. Oklahoma Daily.
dents will supplant the traditional
system of graduate study, consist
ing of formal lectin cs and regular
ly scheduleil seminars in the latter
experiment.
Only ten students pet year 1 n
four years will be allowed to en
roll in the public leadership course.
Thus a total of forty students will
be enrolled in the course at one
time. They will he trained in Greek
and Latin language, in liteiature
Ken Sutherland, former A. a
U. diving and gymnastic star 'ha I
been appointed to coach sw inimiiw
and to head swimming classes '
the university. Sutherland, wim
won fiftfi in A. A. U. gymnast i s
will replace Lop Potter, formerly
in charge of the class, and Rudy
Vogeler who was in charge
coaching.
nrt, philosophy .history, economic"
politics and religion.
According to Prof. A. ). v, m.
spear, who will direct the new
course, students will be trained b,
see these human activities in their
proper context and not tlivorcel
from the unit of human experience
and treated as abstractions, but
rather as heniing upon and influ
encing one another in the unity f
the whole human test.
The tutorial method of instruc
tion will be used in the new expoii.
ment, and students in the course
will be required to pass a comprc.
hensive examination covering pv.
erything taught during the four
years.
The new system of giaduato
study made possible by a grant of
funds by the Wisconsin Alumni
Foundation, a non-profit corpora,
tion organized by Wisconsin al!ffi.
ni interested in the development nf
research.
U. N. Beanery
1227 R Gt.
Operated hy
MR. nnd MR3. HODCHS
Kni-tnefly at ;',"1 N". l'l
Tjc PLATE LUNCHES 2SC
15c and 20c Special Comriinitions
WELL, Here
WeAreAgain
Beady to serve you when
you want youi garrnents
cleaned, pr
paired.
Thi.- is oui H'oth
Lincoln. Call the
.iahle
eased or ie-
yeai in
old re-
CLEANERS
Soukup & Westover
Phone F2377 21st & G
mm iiiikw Piuill PP1 WIUHW?
10 STUDY LEADERSHIP
New and More Economical
System of Graduate
Work Installed.
STUDY CLASSICAL LIFE
THESE PENS MAY BE PURCHASED AT
FENTON B. FLEMING
131 So. 13
Jeweler
AT
STt'I.iKNTS CO MR HACK
.lohn Limit II is bar k in school
this semester. So is Robeit Cor
bet t. So. undoubtedly, are many
others who have been out of school
a semi .-tel. or two, or moie.
It is pat ticularlv difficult to g, r
I bai k to school after a conimued
! ali-erce because of the tangle
Two new courses, one designed
to train young men and women for
public leadership and the other in- j
augiiiating a new nnd more ceo-j
nomieal system of graduate study
will be given this year at the Uni
vei sity of Wisconsin as an experi
ment.
The course in public leadership
w;l! consist oi a tour year course
in classical humanities, provided
the study of Orer k and Koman
li.ation in a manner that will
orovide an indirect attack on the
I modern American problem, while
I the other involves a new method of
: eiaduate study under which the
university will commission thirty-1
isix of its productive scholars in the
, dir ection of between sixty and sev- j
enty important researches !
! Informal master-apprentice . ela-j
tionship between thirty-six scien- ;
fsts and scholars directing the te-,
i searches and their graduating stu-
LATSCH BROTHERS
1124 0 St.
Phone EG83
PBIVATE MECHAM, K. P.,
DESCRIBES WEEKS "CUT
OFF FROM CIVILIZA
TION" AT NEBRASKA NA
TIONAL GUARD CAMP
(Continued from Page 1.)
Inrr nffirpr fiwis a specK or nusi
nn the under side of a mess table
a place he is very sure to look
he'll say things that aren't nice.
And so will the Kitchen Tolice,
hut not so loud.
Sometimes the kitchen inspector
happens in early and finds things
in a mess. There is no "1W per
cent kitchen" for that company
for that day, but these early visits
have a compensation all their own.
For after the inspecting officer
leaves, says M-cham, "we could
horse 'around plenty getting the
rest of the work done."
"Alter trn T' rning scrubbing,"
Mecham wrote, "it s time to start
peeling potatoes, bu.mels and bush
els of them. I never want to peel
another potato as long as I live.
At 12 o'clock fifteen hundred
hungry national guardsmen put
their guns, men y i
su'annrnz. or wnai not
At 9:13
away
quarters is sounded at 9:30
comes taps. l
The -.-amp's hand, comprised j
chiefly of students, wa.s a special ;
source of entertainment for the1
guard-men. Previous years a band
from Crete, Neb., had been used at,
the camp But this year a larger,
i band was desired and officials pro- (
cured a band Irom Lincoln most i
of its members ft. O. T. C. oands-,
men W rote Mecham of the band: I
"They were the biggest bouquet of:
lilies that ever existed in Camp
Ashland . . . they wouldn't be in
sulted ... vt..- tried everything. '
even throwing potato peelings . . - i
they were tender infants, rarely
ever said, 'lu ll.' " j
Why the hand ilked the Kitchen ;
Police is obvious; ti.e band boys t
had '-'irl ftiends; the girl Irietin.s
came to visit; and the Kitchen Po
lice had mon mouths to feed. Visi
tors were many nt Camp Ashland
Some days. Mecham writes, then
would be eighty gursts for dinner,
and perhaps as many again for
supper. Kccreation and dissipation
-one and the same at Camp Ash
land - was in the form of visitors,
hoxinc match'-s. and shows.
GREEK GOVERNING
GROUP TO DISCUSS
REORGANIZATION :
(Continued fiom Page l.i j
ably be oresented at the Tuesday
evening meeting. A committee ap
pointed .it the last spring meeting i
of the Greek legislative body is ex
pected to repoit. I
Reorganization Important. r
"The ii-or yaniat ion plan which
will be given the nrt attention."
Tlnele indicated "is. I believe, the
one ccntcting aiound senior repre
sentation. In any case, however,
q.ialitii .itiniis for council delegates
will Ire based on experience and
ability i i her than on the pu-Hcn'
sup'-rlii i.rl political system."
I land in hand with the reorgan
ization steps to be taken will be a
discussion if the new alumni inter
fraternity group, now in process of
formation, which the Inteifiater
nity -ouncil i-i t xpe ted to approve.
i --I In'1.' n i 'J
c-.... A,c vi i.nvpmnr
their varn swapping, or wrmi hoi.., wn .-n.e.-. - ----- -- -
and march into the company mM; Bryan left his home for the first
v,it. fc.r dinner. The menu will be: time after many months of illness
notatoes. cravy. beef or pork.
and drove to Camp A-hland to re
view the national guardsmen's fi
nal narad. Next dav thev broke
beans, tomatoes, onions, inm.
. i: v,,it onrt iced tea or
lemonade. Aft.r dinner the kitchen camp Thus "cut off from civiliza-
hall eel ineir si-cuiei mm . mm
runn nj m-r . i"i,ni
and mess
daily scrubbing
of the, unl-rsl.ii ts
AG STUDENT GOES TO MILLS
Institutional Management
Graduate Assists at
School in West.
Dorothy Luchsinger, former Ag
College student, is at Mills College,
Mills College, Calif., this year hs
Fisting in institutional manage
ment. Miss Luf hsir.Pcr ha ihxrtrp
id fifteen nun- j of frU,.n More nall at Mllls CoIlopPi
JhtiTZ'u2 d read o idri Nebraska nation,, guardsmen d 1S a,s0 ukiK work
eold.ers find "V.t.nn hll "P""'' th two we.-k t mmp Ash- A SPnior at Nebraska last year
sit and visit, -sit and think, or just
sit Back in the mess hall at ( 30.
the Kitchen Police begin prepara-
Io fill- ;imtlCr. Mil'Iiei ir-.
LIU l.T - ' II
tion and cussipauon.
land.
Cut h
sand i'
ttiMP e-iv
- With H p:
e.leo.
remainder of the day is for r- rea- Trim Ml all
.L, and divination. The call to' beyond the dK
ka last year.
Dorothy majored in institutional
I management, served on the Coll
to h ued in ieri-fun committee lin, helnnc'l
,i of fi issot.s tn the hot'ie ri onomii s sororities
that project ! phi t'psilon Omicrnn and Omlcron
ol ."andwii h. i
Nu.
AfW0jT
V.
. Wf
495
What arc sublimated corduroy trollf;, The
answer in nearly every impoiuni university
is: Campus Cords! Even a I'hi Beta Kappa
knows that!
l f '.Hvml with-m ih
r 1 e v'.l M t I it rt
CANT BUS. EM
CArMPUSCCBDJ
lAm mac K
,JI.
SMART CORDUROY TROUSERS
A'o Morp
Running I)r
At a Critical Moment
HOLDS 102
Now at only $.V-a nrw nioilcl ,,f thin
revolutionary I'arkrr Yaiiimatn- f iller.
Ila marvelonrt traimpurrnt nnii-liri-.i1.-aliln
barrel -lioh quantity of ink Hi ail
time cmU niu.ancc of running dry nt
the critical niomi-nt.
Invented by am ii-nlint at tlnr I'nivi-r-Hity
of Win nn-in developed by Parker,
am. Kil.ir.nrli-eil inn Imnicjll v perfect.
Contain no rubber oac.no pi-ton pump
or valves nothing to fail and render it
uncle- later. Hence IioIi.h H2'',', more
ink, uitli no increase in nic.
tin ami nee it. Sec a.0 ',,i ,.r'H l.imi-
nateil acumatic filler at J , ..Vl, h nli all
pirrpinc revertible pnint tli.it wrilert both
iilen. 1 lie I'arker Ten Co., Janet
w incnnin.
Quinlr.New Ink Discovery, Ends Pen-Clogging
1 diki-r (irii'i Hie ii'w non
il'wmit iiiini: ii,! wnii i.
v-i e-i wilvi-m - i Ir.im a ien hs
n wnies! (,et (mi limn any
iIciIit, or -ri! two :w sl;irnei lo
rover iMikini; ami pustaiic luf
large toal iw bullae.
! PARKTD'C Drni UTinUiDY PPM I
m m mm w m mm w mm w w ami a i t
-Varmiin I illoil j
X ''''l FJIT Moipj ro3v. noil '"'
V V won. ,. ''Ji' I
MORE INK
j revolutionary I'arker Yaiiimatn- f iller. i
I Ila marveloiiH traimparent nnn-lirea'.- , vA.
I- I V
I
m m .a
i iiri
cor
' vacumatic r i Lien j
Trampartnl laminated Ptarl ft, f-""
Point, $7.50 Ptnril to Mated. SJ J
Jt or Plain Trantpartnt Per.
t-wmy Point, iSj Ptncll, Si iO.
tAOKA LIIOIIIIIIS
PARKER and SH AEFFER PENS
STUDENT SUPPLIES PARTY FAVORS
PRINTERS STATIONERS
1213 N St. Next to Lincoln Theatf
P.A.SFMF.XT.
PARKER PENS SOLD BY
Boyd Jewelry Store
1144 0 S.
1