THURSDAY. DECKMRKH 7, vm. FOUR THE DAILY NEBKASKAN CAWPISOCIETY 1 ol the real Uuuy. but it II be quite im pressive tr'iidny night. And several old romances seem to have lieen revived, not to mention new ones which have sprung up re cently, if anything: can he deduced from an examination of the list of couples who will take part in the big parade. Statements made by the girls indicate that gowns worn that nighl will be in every color of the rainbow, witli black and red the most popu lar hues. It'll be a sight worth seeing to watch the grand inarch Fridav night, even if all of you can't be in if. AND AS FOR corsages, accord-i ins to Lincoln florists, gardenias, red and white roses, and sweet peas are the most popular choice of flowers. Gardenias go particu larly well with jet black and red powns, while roses and sweet peas grace white dresses the best. Shoulder and wrist corsages are most popular BECAUSE THEY won second place in the scholarship ratings, the actives of Phi Omega Pi are Lincoln Floral Co. CORSAGES Reasonable prices. 75c and up Shop 1040 "O" St. Greenhouse 5218 "O" B46;7 M26i4 For the First Time in Years . . . HENDRIK IBSEN'S 'A Doll's House' in a Modem Version by the Omaha Community Playhouse O Special Students' Matinee Saturday, Dec. 9, 230 p. m. Reserved Seats 50 Cents II you are coming to the Tlbbett concert In Oman that evening, come early and e Omaha'e favo rite stare give this great play. For reserved seats, phone Glendale 0800 or write to the Community Playhouse 4004 Davenport, Omaha America's favorite SHORT CUT, LONG DISTANCE Miles shrink when you turn to Long Distance telephone service. You can get "there and back" in record time. Improvements are constantly fitting the service more and more closely to the public's needs. Faster connections, higher quality transmission, "bargain hours" after 8:30 P. M. Business today finds Long Distance a reliable and economical short cut to sales. You'll find it a pleasant short cut back home. BELL SYSTEM WHY NOT SAY "HF.l.LO" TO MOTHFR AND DAD? - RATES ARE LOWEST AI TER 8:30 P. M. THE FIRST REHEARSAL OF llu- high spot ill I lie id ii i t a i v ball, the gruiid iniircli, in the coliseum I;is1 night was quite an event in uiure ways than one. Of course the variety of attires and the lack of uni forms did not give the practice the color being honored hi a 6:30 dinner to night at the house, which is given by the alumnae. About thirty-five are expected. W WINTER TIME is waffle time, and the Gamma Phis are making the most of the season by schedul ing a waffle breakfast at' the chap ter house for next Saturday morn ing between 10 and 12. Dancing and cards will furnish the morn ing's entertainment, and the house will be decorated as a bar-room, with reil ami white checkered table cloths carrying out the school colors Tickets are being sold by members of the sorority. NOW THAT Elizabeth Pan- coast has announced her engage ment, parties for her are starting in earnest, on Dec. 16, Mary Elizabeth Proudfit will entertain at a tea from 3 until 5 o'clock at her home, and will have as her guests the active Thetas. The decorations will be in Christmas colors. Mary Edwards Sumner will be the maid of honor at the wedd ing and Mary Updike and Willa McHenry have been chosen to be bridesmaids. Elizabeth is marrying Henry Phyfe of New York City on Dec. 28 at St. Barnabas church in Omaha, and gossip has it that she will leave behind her a trail of broken hearts on the Nebraska campus. AND WITH another Omaha belle planning to be married dur ing the holidays, it looks as if Christmas vacation in that city will be a busy one for both debs and sub-debs. Harriet Love flew to Chicago over Thanksgiving vaca tion to see her fiance, James Harden, to whom she will be mar ried on the 27th of this month at Trinity cathedral. A miscellaneous shower will be given at the Kappa house for her next Monday eve ning, to which both the actives and pledges will be invited. THE FALL initiation of Omi cron Nu, national home economics honorary, was held last Monday 7 rt WHAT'S DOING Thursday. Delta Zeta Mother's club, 1 o'clock covered dish luncheon at the house. Sigma Chi Mothers club, 1 o'clock lucheon at the home of Mrs. Mary Kobel. Alpha O Founders day ban quet, 6 o'clock at the chapter house. Phi Gam Mothers club, meet ing with Mrs. C. A. Blanchard. Alpha Delta Theta Mothers club, covered dish luncheon. Military ball practice. Friday. Sig Ep auxiliary, 1 o'clock lucheon at the home of Mrs. E. T. Hoffman. A. T. O. Auxiliary, 1 o'clock luncheon at the home of Mrs. E. Gerald Carpender. Alpha Xi Delta Mother's club, 1 o'clock at the chapter house. Phi Omega Pi Mothers club, 2 o'clock at the chapter house. Theta Chi formal dinner at the Cornhusker hotel at 7 p. m. MILITARY BALL. Saturday. Pi Phi alumnae, 12 o'clock at the chapter house. Miss Frances Morgan, shower for Miss Ruth Holmes, 1 o'clock lucheon at the Cornhusker ho tel. Delta Gamma alumnae, 12:30 luncheon at the home of Miss Roma Ridnour. Beta Mothers club, 7:45 p. m. at the chapter house. Phi Kappa Tau, dinner at the Cornhusker hotel. Kappa Delta, house party. . Phi Psi formal, Cornhusker hotel. in the parlors of the Home Eco nomics building on the Ag cam pus. Helen Smrha of Grand Island, and Lorraine Brake and Mary Frances Kingley of Lincoln are the new initiates. Miss Bess Steele presented a talk and Miss Eloise Perry played a group of piano se lections. Those in charge were Miss Florence Corbin, Mrs. Town send Smith, Mrs. J. E. Alexi and Miss Edith Carse. LAST NIGHT at the Cornhusker hotel, pledges of Beta Gamma Sigma, honorary commercial or ganization, were initiated in a ceremony preceding a six-thirty banquet, which about forty at tended. J. Edward Kilgore, presi dent,, presided, and Prof. J. E. Kirshman spoke. Mrs. Florence Benson, former national treasurer, was a guest. IF IT ISN'T bridge it's some sort of sewing, and with the Alpha Xi Delt Mothers it's quilting, for during their regular business meet ings they are working on a quilt for the housemother. Mrs. W. E. McNeil and Mrs. Shaw will be the hostesses at the 1:30 desert lun cheon at the house tomorrow, which about sixteen will attend. ALUMS ARE being honored at the Phi Omega Pi Mothers club Christmas party at 2:30 tomorrow afternoon. Mrs. Charles Mohrman, Mrs. W. H. Strjhecker and Mrs. Arthur Tehmiller are in charge of the affair, which about forty are expected to attend. The decora tions will be in a Christmas theme. IN LINCOLN for the week end will be Miss Arta Kocken, of Minneapolis, national inspector of Chi Omega as a guest of the local chapter. She will be enter tained at a formal dinner at the house Saturday evening given by both the actives and alumnae. Miss Kocken will speak at the din ner, which is being arranged by Mary Gilmore. Table appointments will be in cardinal and straw, the sorority colors. AND CHRISTMAS plans will be discussed at the meeting of the Phi Gam Mothers club this afternoon at 2:30 at the home of Mrs. C. A. Blanchard. A COVERED dish luncheon will be given at the chapter house to day by the Alpha Delta Theta Mothers club. AFTER A six months stay in Europe. Faith Arnold, Theta, is back in Lincoln. - 7 Ihk&t tmf Mnflnttaiiry LBaiiDD Featuring Art Kassel and his Kassels in the Air Coming direct from Hotel Bismark in Chicago to plav for the first and biggest event of the formal season, the Military Ball. 9 O'clock This Friday Nighl Ticlsels$2.00 Basic Uniform $1.25 Spectators 35c CHRISTMAS SPIRIT MUST EXIST THRUOUT THE SEASON WITH SOCIAL CASE WORKER ; SENIORS IN COURSE GETTING EX PERIENCE. (Continued from Page 1.) anticipate the use of trained field workers, and that county public relief will tend to follow the stand ards for training set by the federal government. Must Find Better Workers. "Our problem today is to find better social workers," says Dr. Williams. "Investigations as they are now carried on are, for the moat part, superficial. There is no program of treatment, and the help given is an opiate, rather than a cure. County and private boards, too often, look for hard-hearted, or soft-hearted workers, instead of seeking those who are understand ing. Out of such confusion and ineffectual treatment, chronic cases cannot help but develop." Because of these things, training for social work, as it is given at the university, aims at teaching the students to make a social diag nosis of each case. They are taught to find what the difficulty is, what the chances for recovery are, and to follow out the course of social treatment decided upon. One of the difficulties in carrying on the instruction is the demand by universities and professional schools for class A social agencies in which to do field work. One standard family welfare agency, at least, must be available within the community. Special cases of various types are provided for the senior majors at the university thru the Lincoln social welfare society, which is a private family agency of standard grade. People who are in need or in trouble are interviewed by the student and perhaps by the in structor. The problems presented range from child training to wbts and property troubles. Usually the matters are very serious before the family has applied to the agency. As examples of cases that appear: A man, head o fthe family is very ill, and his wife and children are without food or money. Perhaps there is no furniture or bedding in the house. Another family fears being without a home because rent is long overdue. It may be that the income is large enough, but is wrongly budgeted, so that help is needed in doing that. Workers on such cases plan with the person, and try to help from the available resources. It may mean finding means of paying the rent: it may mean bringing an angry husband or wife back to the home: it may mean bringing in a doctor; a nurse, or an employer to offer a job. After seeing what the persons can do to help themselves, the students and Instructor go over the case, trying to arrive at the right solution. Always such work requires tact, and a lot of lain common sense and judgment. Without permitting the troubled families to lose their ideals and self respect, it is neces sary that the workers attempt to help them work out of the difficul ties for themselves. "Most encouraging among the traits of human beings." said Miss Powell, who conducts the field work, "is that they have such mar velous resistance to trouble and hardship. Whatever we do is near ly always gratefully received, and apparently it takes a lot to keep men from coming back with fight. Human nature can meet bad condi tions and is slow to crack. We only hope that aid can be given I to all needv persons in time, so that they may not lose their spirit and hope." KIRSHMAN SPEAKS AT BETA GAMMA SIGMA INITIATION (Continued from Page 1.) both to the consumers and to the business enterprise. The new members taken into the organization were Mary Cathern Albin. Lincoln: Agnes M. Capek, Milligan: Alice M. Geddes, Grand Island; Wilbur Haegen, Lincoln, Waldemar C. Hansen, Upland; Howard N. Houston, Lead, S. D.; Bernard Jennings, Lincoln: Otto Kotouc, Humboldt; Chester Rowe, Lincoln; William H. Schroeder. Lincoln: and Helen S. Selwyn. To peka, Kas. HEALTH REPORT SHOWS INCREASE OF DISEASE Scarlet Fever Heads List; Director Bartholomew Makes Report. StHtistii-s from the report of State Health Director Bartholo mew show that contagious dis eases in Nebraska increased dur ing the month of November over the previous month and over the same period last year. Heading the list is scarlet fever with 175 new cases in wovemrxr, compared with 68 in October and 153 in November, WAi. Diphtheria Decreased. Next on the list is diphtheria, with 39 cases for November of this year as against 119 for the same period a year ago. There were 17 cased reDorted in October. Influenza during November this vear claimed a count of il wnn only 8 during October and but case in November of last year. There were 24 and 297 suffer ers from smallpox and chickenpox, rpsnectivelv. in the state last month, with 1 and 48 in October. A vear ntro the records show 13 and' fi8. Other diseases on record for the month of November are: Measles, 32: tuberculosis, 18; and poliom yelitis, 5. No. cases of menigitis were reported. Smallpox in Omaha. Twenty-one of the twenty-four smaMpox cases were in Omaha and two in Lincoln, where there were 10 cases of scarlet fever and some of diphtheria while Omaha had bi of scarlet fever and 8 of diph theria. YWCA WILL HOLD CONTEST Publicity Staff Sponsors News Writing Class for Members. At a special meeting held last Thursday at 5 o'clock the publicity staff of the Y. W. C. A., in charge of Violet Cross, decided to change its time of meeting from Monday at 5 o'clock to Thursday at 5 o'clock. Besides its regular business the staff will also conduct news writ ing classes and news writing con tests, the prize being printing of the winning story in the Daily Ne braskan. Anvone interested in the work of the staff is urged to attend the meeting this Thursday at 5 o clock in Ellen Smith hall. WILL GIVE ADDRESS AT ENGINEERS MEET Mr. R. A. Kirkpatrick of tLe ad vertising department of the Union Pacific railroad will give an illus trated lecture on recent develop ments at Boulder Dam at the Engineers' Convocation to be held Wednesday evening, Dec. 13. in M. E. 206. The Sigma Tau fresh man award will be presented at the meeting. Driving without a license, ob structing traffic, operating with out a franchise, and further in vestigation were the charges filed rgainst students of Colorado Kchool of Mines, arrested while driving a street car plastered with signs as an advertisment of their impending game with Denver. Colonel H. Erlmond Bullis, ex ecutive secretary of the national committee for mental hygiene be lieves that thousands of jobless graduates of colleges and uni versities are becoming a menace to the present order of American so ciety because of the discontent rife among them. MILITARY BALL TICKETS ON SALE HERE Distinctive Clothes TUXEDOS Correct formal attire . . . coat and trousers are of a very fine black unfinished worsted . . . regulars, lims, shorts and stouts, coat and trousers... $20 The !ew Dull finUh Calf thin Formal OXFORDS ere smart . . . economical, too They ha-. plmn fairly rm-row tne.v lipht m-eipht, dull ralf tippfM. llelit weipht melt Mis. tap leather herln. 55 GOLD S-Wn Store 11th St. G(D0.DC(D. Kiibdi A(Mr'frs Omaha Camera Clul Wrtlnondaj Dwight Kirsch, chairman of the department of fine arts, delivered an exchange lecture before the Omaha Camera club, Wednesday evening, during which he presented colored photographs which he took of the Century of Progress. HOME EC GROUP WILL HOLD ANNUAL DINNER (Continued from Page 1.) at Ellen Smith hall on December 9 at 6:15. Helen Smrha, president ot the campus association, will be toast mistress at the dinner. Margaret Fcdde will speak on the life of El len H. Richard. Virginia Keim will give a toast for the freshman girls, Janice Campbell for the sophomores. The junior toast will be given by Ardith Van Hau sen and the senior toast by Mary Frances Kingsley. Miss Bess Steele, advisor of the association, will also speak. A musical pro-o-rom has been arranged for the evening, and group singing will be led by Florence uuxnian. Tickets for the dinner may be SECURITY MUTUAL BARBERS "The Shop for Mehraka .Wen" 12th A O Basement Military Ball Tickets On Sale Dress Up Fo vma Coming Your Way! J Values You'll Talk About to come in this Unusual Fur Coats Silver inusk.au, back 1 69 muskrais, north seals trimmed ermine, fitch, badcer. caraculs, all smart! styled Others Include: ar.ituls Hudson Seals MUMirat Starrer Full Length Coats $79, $89 up to $495 GOLD obtained from any momhi rs ill n1(. association for 40 cents. All jiils taking home economics courses uninvited. YOUR DRUG STORE Kemeniliei tlinse tumour nonti lunches at our fount hIii. CALL US FOR RUSH ORDERS The OWL PHARMACY 148 No. 14th A. P BI0W SILK OR WOOL DRESSES Straightline ONE or TWO PIECE dresses (without frills, etc.) CLEANED & DELIV 95' ERED for N. Ii. A. Code hixrs All Cleaning Friers Let Our Experts Work fur You. 1 on '(iy A Mnrr, nfARSITY 7 CLEANERS B3367 Joe Tucker 221 No. 14th Roy Wythers 2 at Stamp Desk Street Hour. for Winter lities yOU'D never dream so much elegance could be produced at budget prices. There are long sleeved dinner types and sophis ticated formal ones (some wiih jackets). Satin glea m s softly. Beads Sparkle! F;;r lends a rich luxurious air. Brieht shades vie with pastels. . .whi-e black stands out with a dignified air.... in this group of Formal Frocks Chifton and satin as used in Paris bv the truly great. Stunning in black, .touched with a bit of color, .very low backs... high front necklines that hug the throat. Long sleeved dinner gowns w ith low cut backs. Velvet and satin . . pebbly crepe, a fashion favorite . sheer crepes, .trunmed wiili sequins, lace, contrasting colors... all very new all very smart.... and 19.50 GOLD S Third Hoof Formal Gloves Black or while, 16 hu"on length kid or suede .. 5.95 Formal Bags 8quin Pouches, French Bud Bagi, pastei 2.95 Velvet! Formal Shoes . . Dyed the color of your frock . mrtins. moire crcpe 3.95 & 4,9o GOLD'S 8treet Floor for necks Group of fr'? "A Nubian Seals Trial. 8 Third Floor 'ft 1 io 1 1 48 5 7