..t,'Nl).-.. OCTOHKH !' 1933. THE DAILY NKHRASKAN TWO V depa J The Daily Nebraskan Station A, Lincoln, NeDraika OFFICIAL STUDENT PUBLICATION UNIVERSITY OF NEBRASKA in i -,.- mitfiir At thfe cnra at wnu-v..... Marh 3. 1879. Tor in aecnon under ! at apeci.li r... u. hx";--'- - - H ,..,. 9Q. IBM. pottoff ice Lincoln, Nebraka, ...a t .neial rata tioa. act ot October 3, 1917, THIRTV.THIRO YEAR o..k,i.k- T,.piav. Wednesday, Thursday. Friday Sunday rr.ommQI Ounna tht academic year. SUBSCRIPTION RATE $1 50 a year S.ngie Cony 5 eenti 100 a tcmeatti 2 SO a year mailed I' M emeter mailed Unaer direct.on of the Student Publication Board. Editorial Office univertily Hall 4. RuinBA Office L'mveriity H hi I 4A. T"eph"ei-DaT: B-bS9ii Night: B-68S2. B-3333 (Journal) Ak for Nebraskan editor. EDITORIAL STAFF Laurence Hall Editor-in-chief Managing Editori Bruce NicoM Violet Cr0, Newt Edltora Burton Marvin Jack Fischer Margaret Thlele BUSINESS STAFF Btrnard Jennings Business Manager Assistant Business Managers Crorge Holyeke Dick Schmidt Wilbur Erickson Passes for Entertainment. -the Jay when every one of the closed campus activity is broken! No one circles of has ever been able to explain very adequately what students do with themselves during this irresolute interlude; there is some show of social dalliance along the row, but even this does not account for , very many undergraduates. Libraries closed, build ings locked, and can-pus deserted (except for strol- : lers, and perhaps museum program audiences i the , university for a day each week apparently becomes an institution without a student body, and without a faculty. Where do the people go ? The Nebraskan doesn't know, but assumes that all are in dire need of some kind of entertainment. For the pleasure, then, it may give all the persons who are presumably at loose ends from having ' their routine inexplicably shattered, the Nebraskan I inaugurates a policy of what might be called "Dilet tante Reflections for the Sabbath. Each Sunday, ! for your entertainment, fancy will take over the editorial reins. The custom is cot without precedent: other col lege newspapers have sought to amuse their readers in similar fashion, and the Nebraskan itself has damning evidence in its files. The venture is at tempted with open eyes, and we have only our selves to blame if it is scorned. So much for "ration alizing" the maundering. COR the present. Fancy altho she is the most fickle of guides will be allowed to take things completely into her own hands. The necessities im posed by the rigamarole of educational routine have made us a little unfamiliar with ways of directing her flights, so control is abandoned as we close one set of eyes and open the other pair to a glimpse at a glamorous world college as fancy views it. First of all then, the hodge-podge that is Ne hrsski's campus s.sd Nebraska's student lite pre sents itself to the observer. The method of fanciful perspective sees the campus whole, being the only method that can see it that way. Large, overwhelm ing, almost crushing, the institution looms above everything else. Standariied, organized, American ized: That is the realistic patchwork that almost obliterates the individual and their isolated groups. Some of the smaller figures can be glimpsed ob scurely, however, and they are the luster and the color in the large design. Here and there is a stu dent who seeks to learn how to live, beneath the array of those seeking the degrees they consider passports to success. And here and there, too are the men to help these few who seek meanings in stead of sibboleths. Kven our guiding fancy, it must be admitted, is a little taken aback hy the rarity with which the lustre occurs in the university patchwork. I3nt after IIia individual u-hn.ri minlitii'Q run hp " " ' . very inteiesting discerned in the general fog, what else can be . 'teachers h Ag College It t.rlle tloilgkin AT MERRILL PALMER. An interesting letter to Miss Fedde and the home economics faculty recently came from Muriel Motittt, home ec. senior who is at tending Merrill Palmer university at Detroit tins semester. Aierrui Palmer has a nation wide reputa lion ai a trading center for nurs ery school teachers. One or two seniors from NeLraska, go there i to stu.iV each semester. I Muriel says that her work is and that she finds umun. One in par- .seen? Well, there Is always a groat deal of haziness ticular, Doctor Vincent, who sped arising from a small fire called "duty-to-the-people-; alizes in child psychology, she of-the-state," so other thing, do not stand out XMSfiS any prominence. I jtpartmont here one summer. An- There is a great deal of noisy buzzing anil a vast other interesting person whom she ..Mirrvine- ahmit underneath tho smoke, tho. and lias met is the eminent nutrition- closer inspection reveals that the hubbub is caused by what look like disconnected parts of a machine, wrecked, but still churning and revolving. Even nearer, the general complexity resolves itself into j scattered groups. They comprise th- "activities." and bear curious labels. nartment clinic where they ex To attempt any description of this realization of amjne ftrui cave for infants, school fanev would impossible, so we take the liberty j children and pre-school children, of organizing the groups under genera, classif.ca- nd to the T Beta community tions into which they seem to fall after long exam- . s.,hoo. ination. Great numbers of the clubs, societies, or ganizations, fraternities, associations, councils, boards, and so on, are seen to be little more than skeletons, with large pmpo es writ boldly on the skulls. Unfortunately their only achievement is evidently consummated in a Cornhusker picture, and ings have claimed her attention, they oniy serve to Cutter and confuse. KtWnllSJ Other groups, with purposes equally unwieldy and bi?fcre ,ong ..j ,ike to g0 shopping invariably presuming to a kind of high-minded no- in Hudson's big department store," bilitv revolve in very limited circles. These are the she writes. passional organization, whose members are in- j JJ- J . -tent upon their own particular brands of schoias- international pIace. There is a girl ticism. Even the general confusion fails to intrude trom Sweden, one from Roumania, unnn their risrorous introspection. Tney go on auu- ana mey are expei-img . ing to the organization uproar, but it is on a remote plane; their activity is unleavened by vision. And then, at the top of a clawing heap of em bryo politicians, are two great organizations that serve as magnets for many. They make a tremen dous racket and a great show of benign aepousm 1st. Dr. McCollum. For a week Muriel worked in the nursery school with a Miss Stanley who has just come back from two years of study in En gland. She has also taken several tield trips to the city health de- Murie also visited the Henry Ford hospital, where the nurses' home and the education building cost a million dollars .one-tenth of the whole cost of the hospital. The Geneial Motors and Fisher build- Campus Watson Detects Camouflage; Students Assume Names Under False Pretenses; Directory Gives Facts To your clasanintes, you might be a good egg. Those who know you better might class you a vege table, fruit or a rake. To your mother you might qualify as the apple of her eye but that is off the subject this subject. Are you what you are or aren't you. Here's proof 'in the list of Nebraskan stu dents who arc parading under false pretenses. Take for example the bird fam ily on the campus, from the stu dent directory. Members of the Piper, Robbins, Teale, Crane, Mar tin, Crowe. Stork, Swift, Snipes and Thrasher groups have just cause to flock together. In the genus Pisces, are only three, a Mr. Fish. Pike and Bass. In the animal kingdom, however, there is one Buck, three Bullocks a Beaver, Fox and a Koon. Now suppose we turn from urban to rural for we have a Camp. The Grubb listed calls for a Frye. A Frankforter and a Frankfurt need Griess be fore being edible while Candy comes Inter as docs the Grone. Should you choose to picture student life by nomenclature. It might appear like this: A Moore, Marsh and Bogg in the foreground. Further away a Marron a Hill. Reeds, Berrvs and Moss lend color to the Pool" in the Wood. While a Dale ana ail IS located near me Roses ending In Husbands and Boll i e Is. Make It a triangle plot and introduce Clinchard some where. Watch things get Wilder finally culminating in a Darrow and De Vorss. Where there are Sellers, it is natural to find Hicks and Byers. We did. Besides the common gold digger, there are several Miners' Cole and with Steele as chief products. Cole on the other hnnd Is used to Cook eventually being Chard to Klinkers. The only chemical discovered was Iselin. j The University has a definite, Yenne about which there are two, Doubts. No II Dure but a Ruth Duce. There is a Fairchild with a Lightbody and likewise a Long man. Three comcmnts on spinach were listed in a row, Saner, Sandv and Savery. Many Keys can be found to the situation, in fact one Tukey. all of which makes it Koans, for those seeking a solu tion. Scientists might be Interest ed to knew 1 that there are two Goths here In the institution which might have some relationship with the Spear and Pierce also in cluded. Emotion is expressed in the names Goodie, Datum, Grone and Jov. while Biblicly speaking, there is' a Bible and a Cross. Ne braska has just cause to be proud of Virtue and Justice, the only Whether the title v as cliotCii for its alliterative qualities, or lo calise the authoi himself happen to be a Piinceton iindergrmluut is not known. However, one tintl(!' is certain, Lardner, jr., who g1VM promise of following the long ana rapid strides made by his uiu ti'iuiia father, and who sincerely wishes he had a name of his own, has contributed an Interesting comment on college life as mote thno a social and educational n. tetlude. In a style. Individually his own. and only naturally reminiscent of the late' Lardner, sr., the article i principally in detense of the col lege man's activities as a normal and entirely necessary function in a well rounded existence. HOM1: ECT DtEMTES RETURN Thr ricmbers Department "'.tend Dietetics Meeting. Hill If Heather were used in the Downs, it would be necessary to -nes she has. add MacDougal or Macintosh to; Topics in brief finish this pipe the scene. It might Rain and if it; dream. A Panek came in f n .r did the atmosphere would most ! Omaha. There is a Garryson and likely be Rainey. . Gates even provided with a Sar- Amone the trades and vocations' gent. Instead of Popeye there is a IV. I'.obokah Gibbons with Mi., Martha Park, and Miss Mathilda Peters, all of the home economics department, returned Thursday from the annual national conven tion of the American Dietetics ,s. socintion in Chicago held from Oct. 9 to 11. The services of the asst.i mtiun were enlisted by the federal guv. ernment to aid in solving the nutn tion problems arising from the ro. lief program of the national g n-. ernment. This work of the associ i. tion will be done thru state organ izations. Fifteen hundred peonle. representing all the fields affect-d by dietetics, attended the meetings held in the Palmer house. DUTSTATERS VISIT MUSEUM from Japan who will study at Merrill Palmer. The other two girls have their doctor's degrees. Alice McDermott. graduate in home economics at Nebraska la-t year, is doing nursery school work in Detroit, and Muriel reports see ing her Muriel, we feel sure, is They are the senior honoranes. and the members navinjf a grand time and we know- thereof, intolerant of Fancy, cast stones at ner ana she must flee. chosen by the students judging from the directory were: Barbers, a Knight, several Millers, a Weav er or two. a Hooper, Baker. Bark er, Carpenter. Bishop, Butcher, Butler, Waggoner, Wheeler. Ma son, Spader, Turner, Shoemaker and a Stoker. Using these names, follow the sequence of events to their con clusion. Folk. Beers, Gass, Fling. Poneirs. What's the difference? Of, the several Marx brothers, only one is in school. The following names for business houses might be possible: Pearl and Ruby; Short and Stout and Pabst and; Morrill hall museum at the fp.l Kingsbury. The last would be an versitv of Nebraska has enter- Several High School Classes Shown Thru Building During Week. amalgamation. Black, White and Gray is the color scheme trimmed with Bunt ing. So Fordyce. Kain and Aspirin. An-'enough, don't blame me. The only other such example begins with 1 Witte person in the entire school Harts, proceeds to Diamonds and i is a woman! CO much for the first adventure with Fancy on a Sunday. The report of her wandering hasn't been nearly as' graceful as she herself is. but then it is seiricm that trrace frequents editorial columns. ..v...,.., .he masthead to which they cling. There nights. is indeed, a tendency for Fancy, this time, to pre sent her vagaries in a way that is heavy, instead of v.himiscal: yet, in spite of that, she is an amusing little creature. The essence of her charm is most subtle, and al tho attempts to imprison it in words have never met with anv pronounced success, we suggest just one term that comes very near, in our estimation, to defining her attraction. Irony is the word, and its application in the editorial view-or any other v.ew saves some gallons of tragic teims. Take a peek at yourself, ironically. Discover a world. But be careful, or you'll find yourself asking. "Is it only fancy?" that she is doing justice to rse- braska as our representative. j L. R. T. WHY NOT SING? There is a class on the Ag col-. lege campus that comes at 5:00 and 7:00 o'clock on Monday nights and at 7:00 o'clock on Wednesday It is peculiar in several j iwavs: no student nas ever oeen , The Student Pulse Brteft conrlM rontrfbatlotn pmt-ne-at u cnaitert of ttudrat life and the oniTeriiy r wrlcomed by t h department, wider the nsuaJ r-trtc-Uinm of sound newspaper practice, which exrlodm all libetoiM matter and personal attack. Letter man b signed, but name will be with held from publication it M desired. Contemporary Comment ESQUIRE IKES DEBUT STRESS MEN'S FASHION New Magazine Is Published Strictly for Masculine Consumption. An event of particular interest to college men. is marked by the debut of "Ksquire" this week, a new candidate for recognition in the '-Class" field, designed exclus ively for masculine consumption. In aiming its editorial guns at the nation's men. Ksquire has re sorted to subject matter and con tributors best known to the mas culine reader with only one dash The thing thf.t makes Mrs. Tul-! of femininity in the person of Au- lis' course a suoject for discussion j drey urdeman. Miss v urdeman here is that it is one course that I is a ranking poetess, protege of everv student should at one time ! George Sterling and is said to be tained high school classes from To cumseh Genoa, Callaway and thr e from Teachers College high school if this squib isn't clever during the past week. Fifty traf fic patrol boys from the Saratoga school at Omaha made up another group to visit the museum. Stiff members showed visitors thru the hall and gave them talks on the interesting features. and : flunked from the class; no one has ever studied for the course, or at least I don't think anyone ever has: the more noise the students make in the class, the better the instructor likes it that is. if it is the right kind of a noise; and best of all. practically every' student that ever took the course insists that it is all play and no work. The course I mean (of course, no one has the least idea I is the chorus class. Director: Mrs. Al tinas Tullis. Perhaps !e would rot agree with all I have just written about her course, but what I said was from a student's point of view Hello. Politicus! TO THE EDITOR: With the annual fall elections , 0f enthusiastic applause from those scheduled for the 24th of this i wno took him too seriously, mgnc The Passing Of Mencken. Champion of cynicism, high priest of invectives, master of half truth, Henry L. Mencken passes at last from his rostrum, the Ameri can Murcury. There will be shouts provoked healthy self-examination. Mencken was rarely right. Like Bernard Shaw, he was too fond of the picturesque half truth, too wedded to superficiality. But how j or another take. And since up perclassmen have so many eve nings filled up with meetings and other important business, fresh men and sophomores are the most eligible prospects for the class. An hour after dinner on Mon day and Wednesday evenings de voted to singing with a gang of of the month there comes the usual amount of "ballyhoo" accompany ing the event. Both campus politi cal parties will issue platforms, serenade sorority houses and gen erally make a big fuss. Each fra- teraitv man is moved bv the need lv. his retirement to a respeciame o"lci age should be accompanied by low music, with a certain amount of appreciation for one who not' only served a function but was darned amusjr.g as well. The function he served was to he rnuld roar! iipn's usefulness ended with the advent of the depression and fellows and girls is one of the the setting in of prohibition's death . things that Ag students will re agonv. The one event proved to be I member. It's a safe bet that a a far greater jolt to complacency j good many students can recall than Mercken and the other re- some of those songs, and some of moved one of the most fertile the things that were said and done i uel Komroff, r,f Qon-iTier ami rnmnaifns with I fi!T-nish Tieriodic iults to compla fire in his eves. This can be ex-, cencv. Wht-n he was riding high cused in freshmen.) The candidates are duly nomi nated and voted upon and after that college life continues in the back in the dim. distant twenties, we were, on the whole, a smug lot. We were satisfied and sleek. Menc ken, with a magnificent command same manner until elections the of language and absolutely no i re following year. Even-one except I spect for conventions, flung Uter- the victors themselves forgets who ary mud pies ai us wim the class presidents are. And what accuracy. A substitute for what we a thrill the officials must get out j were he did not offer. Of course of planting the Ivy each spring: ! not. His criticism was purely ae- Campaigning is well and good if , structive. '-i w h v,nw- goou. II was ci luci.-ui "". - . , i : . J .In,... , .k. ..Anwa bAa. f.A V.Q..A simultaneously. Mencken's trade 1 forgotten the" chemical formula for tric ks began to pall. We began to j everything but water, or the age tire of his flamboyant language at I of some kind of Chinese pottery, the same time we came to realize or whether twelve factors enter that Mencken was somehow clear into the high cost of ice in Ice out of contact with the grim real- land, or nlv eleven, or most ar.y- of 1P03. The great youth toi- thing else that thev learned in which was always ; college the great granddaughter immortal Shelloy. Ernest Hemingway. Nicholas Murray Butler, Gilbert Seldes. Charles Hanson Tonne and Ring Lardner, jr.. the latter, as son of the late humorist and a Prince ton undergraduate, appear in the first issue as writers of non-fiction. Fiction of the sterner sort, is authored by a group of contempo rary writers that includes John Dos Passos. Wililam McFee, Man- Morley Calaghan. met, Douglas Fairbanks, jr. incent Starret. i i DorjDv jones, tjene i uiuiev, ' l- j j ,-. 1 Tl i Denny Leonara miu iiitrie ru dock, are the sporting bloods turned writers, who ccntribute ar ticles on the fields hest known to them, the golf course, the ring and j npsota the cinder track. Humor, an inevitable dish on the male reading menu, has as its exponents in the first issue of Es 'lire; George Ado, Montague .lass. George S. Chappell, Harry Hershfield, Robert Buckner and David Munroe. In its pictorial aspect, C, Alajalov, William Steig, ' E. Simms Campbell, John Grcth, George Petty. Nat Karson and Ty Mahon wield brush, pen, litho graphic crayon and even oil. in 1 varied treatments of humorous il lustration. Particular Stress is made on I men s fashions, a hitherto ne glected subject of growing impor tance. A strong English influence ! adapted to American needs, with convenience and sanity its key-! note, is illustrated in more than a dozen drawings in full color with i comments representing the con- j sensus of foremost authorities on men's wear. j "Princeton Panorama" a treat-; ise on college life by Ring Lard- ( ner, jr. is here worthy of mention. . Beer and football must not mix is the opinion of I'niversity of Minnesota officials who refused to sanction radio broadcasts of Mm- football games if spon sored by brewery concerns. TRUNK HAULING Cornhusker Transfer Co. 233 No. 11th St. Phone B3737 Rf 35 Erskino Caldwell, Dashiell Ham- LOOK AT YOUR KAT! Does It Need Cleaning? Men's Felts . . 75c Ladies' Felts . 50c TYPEWRITERS All tlanaiird makes for rent. Sjrerinl rate tor long term. Reronriinnnwl ma chines oti easv terms. Nebraska Typewriter Co. 130 No 18 St. B2157 Modern Cleaners SOUKUP i WESTOVER Call F2377 For Senice . nt't'lred ever it rousen our angn v our self esteem, did stimulate us into enraged denial, and thereby ltie lowtnsr. too. Mencken's most important support. has been slipping. He didn't seem to catch the fancy of today's soph omores as he did of yester day's. So the Mercury fell off gradually and we settled down to wait for some thing new. Now we have it. Mencken is And I'll wager that not one of them will ever forget how to say. "Yes. Mrs. Tullis." Singing in the Ag college chorus is worthwhile for the practice in sing-ing. for the contacts with other students, and for the actual fun of sitting in the class. Every student should have a trv at it. i it leads to any goal. One would think that after years and years of the same "tommy-rot" someone would get wise and do something. Eut not so unless this year is an exception. After the middle of No vember the whole thing will have blown over. Girls will still have to crme in at 12:30 and antiquated rules will still remain on the , books. ; Unless the parties expect to put ' their premises into practice, it would be wise to do away with them. Why go to the bother of creating a lot of excitement just VYHEN I asked Tennyson for his ' J'0" roinir to v rite a bo. k of advice to voune men. ttnd a voung man. Hen- ly HazUtt. is gomg to edit the j SEPTEMBER IS BUSY Mercurv. We welcome bom. ine Omaha World-Herald. MO.TH TOR DOCTORS Interviews With . . Ghosts . . by .Maurice Johnson for the fun? As for the honorary colonel, she probably gets more out of the elec tion than anyone else when results are totaled. Her character isn't aired quite so much as her fellow rlassman's who aspires to be pres ident of the class. After the mili tary ball the colonel gets the boots he wore and a lot of publicity. Tenple quote her and usually she gets her picture in the Awgwan and always in the Cornhusker. idea of a university, he began subjects ?" 1 inquired. 'Probably." he said. "After all. the man who teaches youth is more important than what he may teach. He should be a genius, im parting his personality like sweet music into the minds of his bear ers. He should be a genius, aa I sav. and so in my case ' Yes." I told him. "I think you i would make an ideal instructor. me more about your univer- First Part of School Year Is Busy One for School Physicians. "Alas." some of his head sadly. "But surely there ! graduates pre still lovely women even tho it be in an artificial way?" I conceded that that might be the case. "But what about your There are men in both the Blue Shirt and Yellow Jacket factions who realize that there are plenty of things to be done. There is much talk at present about the aho'i jon of certain rules regard ing observance of Sunday. If either p :y really cares to accom- ynsu fjmeming, mis wouia be a (dea of a model university? I re good place to begin. Here is some- ! minded him. thing that needs correction and "Wei," he said. "I would teach with campus parties actively sup- that : porting it, the already started , Tis only noble to be rood. Kind hearts are more than cor onets. And simple faith than Norman blood." "But how would the school be organized?" I asked. "I think." said Tennyson, 'that mv students would convene in the sitv." I "it would have an earnest moral I purpose." he said gravely. "In it r ....... ,4 Pn,.n v,a KnHHincr rne of LDHl ; , . J U n ntDiHan f t)n'iiH 6 j from the uglv thoughts of realism. I would fill my students with thoughts of beauty. "But what about their bread and beef -steaks?" 1 asked. Tennyson pulled his beard at that, and he appeared to be deep : fc. --. TKi.fi Via caiH' Tenr.yson sighed. "And . , " ' veRn to tell my very best lines are' - t quoting poetry. "Ah. sweet girl graduate with golden hair." he said, closing his eyes dreamily-. I m afraid. I told him. since you died, the sweet ; graduate has become extinct." I He was appalled. "And as to her hair." I said "she uses golden srlint on it. and ! mascara on her eyelashes. Your sentimental Victorian princess is i no more." ELECT YW FROSH OFFICERS movement would have much more weight. FEMININE SKEPTIC Dr. Korh Addresses Iowa State Teachers Institute 1. H. C Koch, chairman of the , out-of-doors, shadowed bv foliag-e. Four Freshman Commissions Select Presidents and Secretaries. Four of the six T. W. C. A. freshman commissions have elected officers for the year. The newly chosen president and secretaries are: Monday. 5 o clock: Dorothy Kline and Lawana Kelley. Wednesday. 11 o'clock: Eva University of Nebraska doctors have been busy during the first month of school according to their i official report. The university stu- i dent health department has taken ! care of 2.967 students, according ' to a report given out by Dr. P.. A. Lyman, director of the student health service at the university. A large share of these patients have I called for physical examinations rather than treatment. with j the records 8 bowing 696 women ; and 740 men examined New stu- 1 dents entering the university are required to have this examination. More men than women ha-e , called for treatment in September, , the reports showing 330 to 197. ! Doctors in the department have , examined 380 students for swim- ming. permits, and 290 for intra- 1 mural sports. They have filled 109 , prescriptions, and made twenty- j three house calls. There have been forty-three hospital days spent by students at the infirmary. secondary educa- and cooled with breezes. L myse If. j Pearl Adams and Dorothy Pease. HOLD AG VESPERS TUESDAY Helen Noyes Will Speak on 'CoHeg-e Ideals ft Noon Service. "College Ideals" will be the topic discussed by Miss Helen Noyes at Ag college vespers Tuesday noon, Oct. 17. in the Home Economic I parlors. Phi Upsilon Omicron, hon- charge of arrangements for the service. Both students and faculty artment of addressed the Southeastern i would lecture to them unon the Wednesday. 5 o'clock: Murial va State Teachers Bilsnrifltinn at tx a rtf life snri t Via nf Unnlr onrt .lane Keefer. C meeting held in Council ! nature." Thursday. 5 o'clock: Catherine members are invited to this meet for the classroom for horse-back or rum ble seat riding for the stadium for hiking or for ing golf- These ' DUDE RANCHER" JACKETS Hnf rrrru i,t) 'r jml.'t rjd vn4 t:rdat a i'vi Etc They're of what is known as "Natuisuade' whxh means they're washable! You can get them in Erown. Cocoa. Green or Blue, sizea frot". 12 to 42: Kudge A. Guenzel Co. FLor Two. r Here's Lastex in Your Favorite Hosiery -GORDONS! 1.65 A PAIR NE-FLEX stockings, beautifully sheer with tne durability, comfort and economy you have learned to value in your LASTEX corsets, girdles and underwear! NTLEX, u'th the LASTEX knitted into the J' and with two-way stretch to absorb I knee strains that lead to so many runs. rnding or reaching is too much for NE y. . . . and the longer you wear them th er you like them. In all the smart, fall colors'. P.urtee ft Gti't.zel Co. Street Fi" r. A. f on Thursdgv ar Friday, j "And would those be your only i Cranccr and Mary Ann Martin, ling. i v-