The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, September 21, 1933, Page TWO, Image 2

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    1
THIjRSDAY. SKI'TKMHKlt 21. 1 o;i;i
i WO
A
The Daily Nebraskan
Station A, Lincoln, Nebraska
OFFICIAL STUDENT PUBLICATION
UNIVERSITY OF NEBRASKA
Entered as second elats matter at the postoffice In
Lincoln, Nebraska, under act of congress, March 3, 1879.
and at special rate of postaage provided for in section
1103, act of October 3. 1917. authorized January 20, 1922
THIRTY-THIRD VEAR
Published Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday and
Sunday mornings during the academic year,
SUBSCRIPTION RATE
$1.50 a year Single Copy 6 cents $1.00 a semestei
$2.50 a year mailed $1.50 a semester mailed
Under direction of the Student Publication Board.
Editorial Off ice University Hall 4.
Business Office University Hall 4A.
Telephones Day: B-6891 ; Night: B-6882. B-3333 (Journal)
Ask for Nebraskan editor.
Laurence Hall
Bruce Nlcoll
Burton Marvin
EDITORIAL STAFF
Managing Editors
News Editors
Carlyle Hodgkin
Editor-in-chief
Violet Cross
BUSINESS STAFF
Bernard Jennings Business Manager
Assistant Business Managers
George Holyoke Dick Schmidt
Wilbur Erickson
Replacing
Old Nonsense,
PRESHMEN have had first glimpses, so far, of
university social life, university classes, and
some university activities. Today as they gather in
the Coliseum for the annual convocation, they get
the first real look at university tradition.
Sprung from customs of hazing which made
the freshman year an inevitable period of unpleas
antness, the annual initiation ceremonies as they
survive have become symbolical of the actual en
trance of new students to their work at the univer
sity. Massed in the field house, as they take the
Cornhusker oath, freshmen have an opportunity of
sensing; the unity and variety of which their own
unit is now a part
Tradition is a thing greatly maligned and de
based by the absurdities which claim its name, but
in the Coliseum this morning a sensitive observer
will be able to feel its weight.
The freshmen, too, are expected to gain an im
pression of the solidarity which is tradition. If they
realize what that solidarity means surviving the
flux of the changing student body, assimilating even
faculty and policy changes then they will indeed
be "initiated." Today's freshmen will doubtless hear
much of "spirit" and "tradition"- in the years of
their connection with the university, but at no time
will they have a better opportunity of sensing it
- than at their meeting this morning.
Freshmen, the university pays tribute with you
to tradition.
A Bookless
Year,
rIRECT results of unreasonable economies forced
on the university were seen Wednesday when
the Nebraskan carried a story in which this para
graph appeared:
"The library budget has been cut to such
an extent that it will be impossible to purchase
any new books this year, Mr. Doane said.
Here is evidence all too direct and actual of the
circumstances in which the state's institution of
higher education finds itself. Other revisions of pol
icy have been made necessary by drastically reduced
appropriations, but in almost no other single in
stance has it been made so clear that the functions
of the university are being seriously hampered.
A university unable to buy new books! The
condition suggests a research chemist without labor
atory equipment. The next step is obviously to
make it impossible for the library to subscribe to
magazines and periodicals; then the campus would
be completely isolated from the world, and even
more money would be saved.
New books the ganglions from the sphere of
Intellectual achievement have been eliminated. The
whole burden carried by new library books must
now be borne on the shoulders of individual students
and faculty members, never wealthy at best and now
least of all able to assume a burden. Books, fore
most among the seeds of culture, must be done
Without
T is unnecessary, however, to dwell on the serious
ness of the straits into which the school has been
thrust More to the point is consideration of the
grave charges impelled by the necessity of being
forced to do without new books for a whole year.
Thruout the period of financial stress, the uni
versity and everyone connected with it has main
tained a desire to be of assistance in meeting prob
lems attendant upon decreased revenue. It was
granted without hesitation that there were opportu
nities for reduction of operating expenses, and that
euch reduction should be carried out. There was no
denial that various aspects of the university's func
tion could be curtailed and economies thereby ef
fected. But hand in hand with this acquiescence to the
restrictions imposed by universal conditions was a
firm determination to fight any measure that would
Impair any of the vital functions of the organism.
That fight was successful, in some degree, and
it was with considerable relief that the university
Baw its appropriations given fairer consideration at
the hands of the state senate. But the battle could
as well have been left unfought if vital functions af
fecting the whole university's welfare must be sac
rificed. Better a sacrifice of educational advantages for
a few, than a wholesale curtailment of facilities
from which the entire institution profits.
Student Council
Meeting.
A LTHO evincing less enthusiasm than their mates
on the Interfraternity council, new members of
the student council meeting for the first time Wed
nesday evening made two Important things known
about their plans for the year.
The first of these was the very evident desire
ol the members to carry thru to a success! u con
clusion the work done last year on a student activi
ties tax, and the selection ol a committee for that
purpose. The second was the delegation of a com
mittee to look into proposals for changing the rep
resentation scheme of the council, in accordance
with suggestions made late last spring, but never
acted upon.
In the inauguration of these two projects, the
council starts the year with two major jo'.s. Defi
nite work, other than the appointment ol the com
mittees to deal with these affairs, remains to be ac
complished, but even to outline such an ambitious
program is a great deal for the legislators to
achieve at their first meeting. Encomium is hardly
justified at this stage of the game, but promising
vistas beckon.
That the new governing body has no intention
of letting work on the student activities tax slacken
is probably the most encouraging omen of all. Ef
forts to concentrate material gathered thus far will
begin immediately, and the student body may ex
pect to see their representatives rounding off prep
arations to submit their data to the beard of re
gents some time this fall. There is plenty of work
to do. it must lie granted at the outset, but it will
i be done and as speedily as possible if Wednesday
night's meeting may be used as a basis for predic
tion. "pHE othet proposal of great importance to the fu-
ture ol extra-curricular activities is the one em
bodying a desire to place the student governing body
cn a more eflicicnt basis. The movement has, to
date, taken no more definite shape than the ap
pointment of a committee, but indications point to
a drastic revision of the present proportional repre
sentation scheme.
If the committee empowered to investigate pro
posed changes really can outline a plan to get coun
cil representatives who will take more interest than
has been shown by any of their immediate predeces
sors, then they will indeed have performed real
service. To work out a system whereby delegates
will be chosen from constituencies really interested
in student activities, rather than from the present
unrelated and almost meaningless entities, would be
a piece of work unequaled in council history.
Several proposals designed to effect such a
change are understood to be in the hands of the new
committee members already, and whether this is
true or not, here is one section of the council which
faces work of very great importance.
CONTEMPORARY
COMMENT
GUIDES and controllers of student activity are, in
any case, started on their year's tasks. It can
not be predicted what the results of that work will
be, but a good start at least has been made toward
some needed and highly valuable achievement.
Flags Ware
Again.
"pHERE was a time when student editors thru-
out the country rarely concerned themselves with
topics weightier than next week's parties, when, in
deed, it was tantamount to high treason for a stu
dent newspaper to look into any governmental
workings. More recently, however, that attitude
has found a substitute in a liberalism which glories
in pyrotechnical displays directed against the status
quo. 1
To the Nebraskan's way of thinking, the wel
come extended to the "new liberalism" is vastly
overdone, for the present college editorial attitude
is only blightly less obnoxious than the complete
indifference which preceded it, founded as it usually
is in soirhomorish ignorance of the topics dissected
so splendidly.
From time to time, however, evidences of rather
sound thinking may be seen thrusting themselves
up thru the mass of printed material that reaches
the Nebraskan office through the exchanges, and
these are the articles the paper strives to make
available through its Contemporary Comment col
umn. Just such a thrust at truth is the article re
printed Wednesday from the Daily Oklahoman.
The Sooner writer is concerned lest America
break out in another rash of imperialism like the
one which made the early years of this century so
fervently patriotic and so crowded with pension
beggars. There is indeed cause for concern if the
reports emanating from Cuba and Washington are
correct. The muddle that presents itself now is only
the old theme with variations, and in 1898 just such
a muddle precipitated what has been derided as the
most unnecessary and awkward war ever fought.
Cuba has replaced Spain, to be sure, as the al
leged anti-Christ; but the locale is the same, and the
"sugar interests" those guarded puppeteers are
presumably almost identical.
That is the stage, manned by its stagehands.
The next step is the box office ballyhoo designed to
inflame public emotionalism to the war pitch, ana
the prelude to ballyhoo was sounded when battle
ships and cruisers began to be concentrated in the
Carribean.
The outline is complete, lacking only a session
of congress to complicate the scene as effectively as
it was done in earlier years.
Yet there is this difference, and it is probably
of major importance. When the United States first
began to feel its strength, that virility was untested,
altho grounded in an extreme nationalistic in
sanity that was almost boundless. Now, however,
the country bus a tradition of power, and it is a
ruthless tradition, calculated to cause little hesita
tion at forceful dealing with a small republic. And
although it might be maintained that the futility ot
such an uneven passage of arms in itself be a chec k
to actual belligerence, history does not bear out the
contention.
In any case Cuban-American affairs are in the
spotlight, and the thoughtful student is being af
forded a glance at imperialism as it actually operates.
lie Who (lets
Slapped
The battle of Sands Point is
ovei. A phantom assailant came,
s.iw and conquered. In what must
nave been a most satisfying mo
ment, the phantom unruffled what
ever senatorial dignity the much
touted "Crawfish" from Louisiana
ever possessed and left his mark
over that person's eye. Once more
Muey Long, who seems to delight
in thumbing l:is nose at law, order
anil the conventions of society,
found himself floored.
Unlortunately, he was not down
for the long count. While headlines
screamed his latest eccentricities
the Crawfish hastened to Milwau
kee to condemn that city's news
papers, and certain policies of the
adininistrUion. In no uncertain
terms, the filibustering, swagger
ing "Crawfish" who recently held
his brother senators dumbfounded
by establishing a non-stop record
for speaking and saying nothing,
lambasted the press.
It is too bad that Huey must go
in for the spectacular and melo
dramatic. That senatorial dignity
-which 's not Huey's might
serve him in good stead as he
blazes his way around the country
digging his political grave with his
uncalled for diatribes and harum
scarum tactics. Perhaps the Ro
man Gladiator who this week was
sacrificed to the lions of Long Is
land prefers this method.
But it would be more in keeping
with his retiring nature to hire the
evangelistic temple of Aimee Sem
ple McPherson Hutton. Garbed in
his sacrificial robes and flooded
with the glare of publicity which
his psychopathic mind craves, he
could, after the manner of a Ro
man Gladiator announced to the
world:
"Huey, who is about to die, sa
lutes you." Newsdom.
The Old
Conflicts
"Enthusiasm takes cold, hard
facts and makes them spit fire," so
the adage goes. The incoming
freshman class will do well to keep
this thought in mind. Many stu
dents come and go on the campus,
students whose average standings
are among the upper two-thirds of
their classes, but whose lack of
this necessary spirit is obvious to
their associates.
The group in question takes its
college life with dour misgivings,
sometimes with not a little touch
of the inferiority complex. The so
cial contacts made by members ot
this group during their years at
the university are few and far be
tween. This is decidedly not a plea
for the purely social side of uni
versity life but it is a plea for a
balance between play and study.
College students realize only too
well that concentration on social
events to the neglect of studies will
result disastrously.
The four years spent sincerely
in the pursuance of a college edu
cation are intended to broaden
one's perspective to assure a se
rene state of mind or as some per
sons say, happiness. In order that
this may be attained without a
mental and physical strain, a bal
ance between the social side and
the educational side must be main
tained. Suggestions as to how to do this
are in order. The cultivation of
persons associated with you in col
lege is the first requisite. Friend
ships made in college are endur
ing. Choose your intimate friends
wisely, with a thought as to their
character, sincerity and philosophy
of life. Attend university gather
ings that will profit you most in
the way of meeting these persons.
Be natural. Do not attempt to
play the part of the sophisticate.
It doesn't pay. The democracy of
a college campus is refreshing and
different. Maintain this spirit of
good fellowship and friendliness
prevalent at Kentucky. It serves
admirably in aiding freshmen to
become adjusted to the strange en
vironment of the campus.
During these times when every
one is urged to do their part to
assure economic recovery, you can
do your part on the campus by
keeping a miK on your face and
a ready word of encouragement to
all students. Enthusiasm will then
reign and it is surely needed if we
intend to regain lost leadership in
the realm of nations. Kentucky
Kernel.
OFFICAL
BULLETIN
All uliiilcnn orranlmlrnns or family
KTtHip ricfclring to ihiIiMmIi millers of
uirfiinicn or othpr Information for
nirnihrrii may have hirm prtnlrd by
culling the Daily Nebrunkan offlre.
PERSHING RIFLES.
The first meeting of Pershing
Rifles will be held Thursday night
at five o'clock in Nebraska hall.
All members should be present
Max Emmert, Captain.
AWGWAN WORKERS.
All students interested in work
ing on the business or editorial
staffs of the Awgwan should re
port to the editor or business man
ager any afternoon at the office of
the publication in the basement oi
U Hall.
Bandmen. Captioned 'Tender
Infants' by Private Mecham,
Camp K. P., Tell Other Side
of National Guard Story.
(Continued from Page 1.)
would think a session of tent pitch
ing would do our souls good. Other
wise we would drill til) dinner time
in regular band formation.
At 2 or shortly after we began
again. A rehearsal first, followed
sometimes by more drill in band
formation. Back to the tents for a
moment only to be whistled out to
stand or play retreat After re
treat another session in the sun
playing for the guard mount. !
Kvery other evening we played for
the fights.
In the spare moments we amused
ourselves serenading various com
panies, or some visiting officer. If
t membr of the powers that were
and still are for that matter) felt
thargic, we would stir up his liver
with a roi'sing march. The lest of
the time was our own.
We notice that our cynical K. P.
bemoans the fact that mention of
the neth-r regions, politely called
Hades, failed to roll from our
aesthetic Hps. ( Horn blowers are
always aesthetic in the eyes of the
world, i Personally, we hadn't no
ticed, but the explanation is easy.
Men undr strain don't use their
immediate environment as a cuss
word.
But we have no axe to grind
with Private Mecham. He can stick
to his potato peeling or whatever
his soul longs for. We'll continue
to blow our homs. (We have to for
three years. An old army custom.)
It was hard work, and while few
of us would chooue It for a life
work. th camp was fun while it
lasted. It was a man's job, and we
hope, Private, that you'll take us
out of the floral category!
Ag Collide
By (jtrlyle IlodgLin
EVEN UP.
There are exac tly 222 girls and
223 boys registered as undergrad
uates in the college of agriculture.
Why not let the presidents of
Home Ec and Ag clubs choose
sides, and then have the entire
gang stage a tug-of-war.
THE FARM.
When At college student think
of books about THE FARM, they
are likely to picture huge text
books with drab type, long dull
titles, and endless topic heads
printed In the margins. They usu
ally shudder at the thought of
what such books cost, shrug when
they are asked what they learned
from them: and an noon as the
course is finished, into the bottom
DRAMATIC CLUB.
The dramatic club will meet
Thursday, 7:30 p. m. at it rooms in
the Temple theater.
Reg Porter, President.
VESPER CHOIR.
Marian Stamp, director of the
vesper choir announces final try
outs at Ellen Smith hall from 3-5
Friday, or 9-10 Saturday morning.
Those desiring further particulars
may call B6695.
CHOIR TRYOUTS.
All students wishing to try out
for tne University Episcopal
Church Choir should report to Mis.
Elizabeth Bonell Davis, at the
University Church, 13th and R
Streets, Thursday, from 7 to 8 p. m.
SWIMMING CLUB.
The women's swimming club will
meet Saturday, Sept. 23. at 12
o'clock at the coliseum. All mem
bers must get swimming permits.
CONCESSIONAIRES.
All girls wishing to sell candy at
the f.iotball games please call
Maxine Packwood at B62..
of the trunk goes the book to stay
there for ever and ever.
Ixnis Bromfield has recently
written a book which, should a stu
dent of larm life once get his nose
inside it, would be likely to be en
tirely different. The took is called
THE FARM, and is a story of peo
ple who came to Ohio in earlier
days than these, of people who
worked, played, fought, loved,
married, had babies, died, and did
all the other things that human
beings do.
The magazine TIME points out
some interesting spots in the book:
Writing informal history as much
as fiction. Author Bromfield does
not try to make what he has to
say sound like a story. The book
is a collection of notes alxjul the
people whose lives touched the
Farm seen as Johnny saw
them or as he might have known
them. ... (Johnny is the central
character in the story).
There are enough minor charac
ters in THE FARM to fill a dozen
"Spoon Rivers" people like Dr.
Trefusls, whose grandiose Gothic
house was one of the town's sights;
Big Mary, an amiable, immensely
efficient Negro cook, who refused
to exchange her status of "accom-
modntor" for steady employment;
Johnny's Uncle Robert, a champion
bicycle racer who was killed in a
railroad accident when, during a
wild thunderstorm, his train plung
ed into a ravine. Sharpest of all
Is the picture of Johnny's Grand
father Willingdon who came home
to Johnny's house when he was an
old man. He lived, embittered,
eccentric and alone, in a room
above the kitchen that was per
vaded by the aroma of his kero
sene lamp, his dry tobacco and the
apples he kept piled upon a table.
He wrote the book in Switzer
land and dedicates it sententiously
to his three children, "the story of
a way of living that has gone out
of fashion. . . .It was and is a good
way of life I counsel you to
cherish it It has in it two
fundamentals which were once and
may be again intensely American
characteristics. There are integ
rity and idealism."
THE SPUD.
Students batching their way
through college in stuffy little
third-s t o r y apartments usually
have for dinner one day potatoes
and bread, and the next day bread
and potatoes. But this year such
students are finding potatoes pain
fully high priced.
Landladies who earn their daily
bread by feeding college boys po
tatoes are finding the same thing
to be true. So are boarding clubs
and fraternities. So is John Citi
zen. Potatoes are unusually high
priced this year because there is a
seriously short crop. That situa
tion is true over most of the Unit
ed States. Prof. H. O. Werner,
horticulture department, says that
on Sept. 10th the government esti
mate was for the shortest potato
crop in fifteen years.
The crop in Nebraska will per
haps not be as light as the aver
age over the country. The eaily
crop was very light, but Mr. Wer
ner thinks that the fall crop may
be much better Nebraska's crop
of market potatoes will vary in
good and bad years from 4,000 to
8,000 cars.
One long suit of Nebraska's po
tato produc tion Is the raising of
certified seed for use in the south.
From 400 to 1.000 cars of certified
seed are shipped from Nebraska
every year. Southern states all
the way from Texas to Georgia
plant certified spuds from Nebraska.
STUDY STRUCTURE
OF
Theoretical Physics Course
Developed After Two
Years Abroad.
Recent spectacular developments
in the knowledge of the heart of
the atom will he surveyed in a
special course of atomic nuclei to
be taught by Dr. J. Rud Nielsen,
professor of theoretical physics,
and Dr. G. A. Van Lear, jr.. as
sistant professor of physics, it was
announced Wednesday by Dr.
Homer L. Dodge, professor of
physics.
Dr. Nielsen has just returned
from 'two years of study at the
University of Copenhagen with
Niels Boiir, who is recognized as
the leading authority in the world
in the field of the structure of
matter. A former professor of the
university, Dr. Nielsen, received a
two years' leave of absence to
study in Copenhagen on a Guggen
hoin' fellowship, offered only to the
best scholars in physics.
In this course the very latest
discoveries of the neutron and the
positive electron, together with the
many artificial transmutations of
elements recently accomplished,
will be treated in detail, Dr. Dodge
said.
The other course on atomic
structure which wns scheduled for
this semester, physics 440, will be
replaced by physics 354, physical
optics. In the latter course, which
will meet at the hours assigned to
physics 440, the electromagnetic
wave theory of light will be de
veloped and applied to those opti
ca! phenomena which can be
treated without the use of the
quantujn theory, Dr. Dodge announced.
STUDIO
SQUIBS
You have to be a movie fan to
work in the Hollywood postoffice.
The film city leads the country in
receiving letters with mystifying
addresses on the envelopes, and
yet the mailmen rarely fail to
make correct deliveries
The latest was a letter ad
dressed, " 'You Can Be Had," Hol
lywood, Calif." It was delivered to
Mae West at Paramount studios.
Shortly before that, Mae re
ceived a letter from an Oakland
high school boy, addressed "Why
Don't You Come Up Sometime?"
and another from a Gloucester
fisherman, reading "Queen of Sin."
The letters were all delivered
promptly.
Postmen Must Know.
Seldom do these writers put the
studio name on the envelope. They
let the Hollywood postoffice figure
out that part of the riddle, as well
as the star's identity.
Another lettezr was one address
ed to "Girl Without a Name," and
Judith Allen, a newcomer to Hol
lywood, got it without delay. This
proves that not only do postal
workers see movies, but they also
read movie publicity. For several
weeks. Judith Allen was without
a name while Cecil B. DcMille
was trying to find a new one for
her when he chose her for the lead
in his Paramount picture, "This
Day and Age."
Character Names Used.
When James Cagney made his
first big hit in pictures, he wes
flattered when the mailman deliv
ered a letter to him, addressed
merely "The Public Enemy," and
Edward G. Robinson got the same
thrill when one came marked
"Little Caesar."
Bing Crosby recently had a let
ter addressed to "The Ace of
Crooners," while better still, a fan
in England addressed a letter to
"Bing, U. S. A.," and there was no
delay in it reaching the crooner.
Fredric March was the recipi
ent of a serial letter from a fan
in the middle west. The first let
ter, unfinished, came addressed to
j "Dr. Jekyll," and the continuation
, was marked for "Mr. Hyde."
Two More for Frawley.
William Frawley will be fea
tured with Cary Grant in "Come
On Marines," and with George
Raft and Carole Lombard in "All
Of Me," both at Paramount.
SLASHED FUNDS
FORCE LIBRARY
CURTAIL STApp
(Continued Irom Page i ,
purchased in the future when ti
legislature is able to appropri,.'
the necessary funds. e
Other universities have i
found it necessary to resort to"S
similar policy. The University ,f
Chicago will be unable to edd vol
umes to its library this year
Northwestern university has 8llf
fered a deep cut. An accurate re.
port on the .situation m other
schools will not be available uiuii
late in October when the America i
Library association will convene ,!,
Chicago. It is expected that th ,
will be one of the main topjrg tu
be discussed by the delegates.
The association which boasts
some ten thousand members is dj.
vided into several sections Doanj
will represent his department at
the convention for which he has
been asked to prepare and read a
paper. "The Librarian As A Writ,
er" is his subject and it will fce
presented before the university
and college section of the tissoria
tion. "The policy to which we have
been forced to resort is rcgrettabl
and puts a definite obstarle In the
plans of continually building 'p
our libraries," said Donne "it js
hoped, however, that the nppto
priations will be sufficient in the
future to allow a continuance of
the usual program."
Ask Your Dad
or Mother
Who cleaned their clothes
when they were at Nebraska
Uni. Invariably the reply
will be Modern Cleaners.
i
This is our 29th year In Lincoln
We have cleaned a lot of clothe.
Let us take care of yours.
Modern Cleaners
Soukup & Westovcr
Call F2377 For Service
Coeds at Stanford university
must pass physical examinations
and be excellent in their studies be
fore they are allowed to stay out
until 12 o'clock one week nights
and 1:30 on Saturday nights.
Don't Borrow a Car
Good rental cars are available for
all occasions, flat rate on evenings,
with insured cars and special rates
tor long trips. NRA
Motor Out Company
1120 P St. Always Open B68I9
ien!
Young Men!
We don't ami nt to scare
you inlo Iniviiiit now
But Facts
are Facts!
jn ll.o face ol' VJ'a ml
ii nee in raw wool . . with
woolen mills w it lulniv, in2
ii(itiilioiis on future in
lefs . . wit li iiiaiiiil'ii'-tiM'
in;: costs nsin:x in lnrs
iind lioiuirls . . 1 1 1 1-1 1 emu
plijiuee with 1 1n N
eoiie there is no need 1
I rv to fool ourselves -
t.'lothiiijr prices liae al
ready ureatly advanced
and are yoni- still hi-licr.
Only because we pre
pared months ahsed for
this fall can wc show
such remarkable fine
all wool suits at $18.50
and $20.00
We won't he :M- 1" sl""
such unusual values for
lonp. We urjrc vein to Im?
now and save
Interest should be aroused in the
"coin belt" 1y the announcement
of the agiicultural ttharps in Wash
ington that there are thirty-five
ways of eating eornmeal.
YOUR DRUG STORE
Try those snappy noon lunches at
our fountain you will enjoy them.
Quick Delivery
The OWL PHARMACY
14S No. 14th V P Street
81068
B Special Oil Permanent $2.00
II Oil-O-Pint Permanent $3.50
; FREDERICS VITRON SCOQ
J Permanent Wave
Shampoo and Marcel J0c
Shampoo and Finger Wave 50c
Haircuts 25c
i mi fvi V
Nti A-fYiAmfc. Beauty Parlor-
2W Sec Mut Bldg, 12th A O B2327
' -
SAVE MONEY
on
SUPPLIES
Fine Arts Bus. Org.
Bot. - Zoology Law
Engineering Sets
(University Approved)
Seal Stationery
Loose Leaf and Bound Notebooks
Fountain Pens 45c and Up
Lowest Prices
at
7j R7(Sul