The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, November 01, 1935, Page TWO, Image 2

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    TWO
THE DAILY NEBRASKAN
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 1, 1933.
Daily Nebraskan
Station A, Lincoln, Nabraska.
OFFICIAL STUDENT PUBLICATION
UNIVERSITY OF NEBRASKA
Thli paper la represented for general advertising by the
iNeoraiKa rreaa Association.
-mm DM i&jJt&XfMiSiSi lM aw
to which it is completely foreign. It is not a
question of something thnt is not and never
can be there ; it is rather the question cf some
thing which should have been created and fos
tered among the students of the' university but
which like many other matters of vital concern
to future welfare of the university, has been
doomed to failure before being born.
Class organization is not an impossibility
on the Nebraska campus. Given impetus and
something on which to nourish itself, class or
ganization could be instituted in the freshman
year and maintained through succeeding years
until a senior organization which was in a po
sition to wield its power effectively and to
beneficial ends would be realized four years
later.
Class organization is successfully instillec
in the hearts of freshmen in other schools and
universities right at the start of the school
year. They are. given some credit for being
adults and do things as a class for the school
and for themselves. They maintain this or
ganization throughout their college careers,
strengthening it each semester so that when
the senior year is reached they have been able
to accomplish something of merit and have
gained themselves many pleasant memories
and triendships.
Other schools have done this and rean the
reward of powerful sentiment among the stu
dent body toward the school through activi
ties of strong and interested alumni associa
tions and individual alumni who are attracted
back to the school and its activities in future
VearS. Whv KhOllliI not Kphrp.K'Irn VmiM nvk ifa
Election of junior and senior class presi- fortunes by strengthening its internal ortrani-
. 1 1 - - 1 : - 4 vt.iviH tha a: ' J - ... 1. . .. .
dents tnis wees again uniina iu '"" zauon ana ai me same lime giving every m-
jinfiont. nnestion of whether these worthies are dividual student a eh Alice in rnnlizp smut fop.
to be the 1935-36 replica of the well known ing of being a part of the xiniversity and its
ass ficureheads who do notning uecause activities instead of lust anolhpr ovnrlnnkpH
. . , I . v -
there is nothing much to do, or wnetner some customer?
degree ot class unity wiu ue acnieveu m mc
Entered aa econd-clae matter at the poatofflca In
Lincoln, Nebraaka, under act of congress. March 3. 1879,
and at special rata of postage provided for In action
1103, act of October S. 1817. authorized January 80. 122.
THIRTY-FOURTH YEAR.
Published Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday and
Sunday mornings during the academie year,
EDITORIAL STAFF
Jack Fischer Editor-in-chief
MANAGING EDITORS
Irwin Ryan Virginia Sallack
NEWS EDITORS
George Plpai Marylu Petersen
Arnold Levin Johnston Snipes
Dorothy Bentz
SOCIETY EDITORS
Dorothea Fulton Jana Walcott
Dick Kunzman Sports Editor
' BUSINESS STAFF
Truman Oberndorf Bualnesa Msnager
ASSISTANT BUSINESS MANAGERS
Bob Funk Bob Shellenberg Bob Wadhams
SUBSCRIPTION RATE .
. ei..i. rnnu a cnt 11.00 a aemeater
tain . Ear mailed H-M a semester mailed
Under direction of the Student Publication ttoara.
Editorial Off ice University Hall 4.
-illlnlvraltv Hall 4A.
Taleohonea Davi B6891 1 Nlghtl B6882. B333S (Journal).
OFFICIAL
BULLETIN
Organization
Needed. -
two upper classes as a result of their efforts,
The matter suggests itseii tne more naiu
rally because the past two years have seen the
most concerted effort on the part of the stu
dent body in the school's modern history to
achieve any degree of class organization in the
senior group, two years ago unaer an eagr r
and ambitious prexy, a skeleton senior week
Student politics will defeat the end, some
may say. what if there are some politics?
The goal that is sought is worth the bit of
petty political chicanery which mav be in
dulged in in class elections. The field is wide
open and fertile soil for student council action.
It is the only hope to achieve any class organi
zation that shall endure and be worthwhile. If
program was staged which had at least the ef- it shall not be tried, the student body should
feet of bringing the class together three or
four times at social functions beiore they linai
ly parted, to go their separate ways.
Last year the student council prodded a
lazy, disinterested president into action early
in the second semester and at his request sur
rendered the fate of class organization into
his hands, only to see senior organization flop
dismally in incompetent hands.
This year a new senior president will seek
to revive interest of seniors as a class in a
series of activities and rumor has it that at
tempts at junior class organization will also
be attempted. The student council appears to
be ready to again throw its full force behind
the movement and aid in securing the co-operation
of barb and Greek groups in putting the
program across.
In a school where there is no common
ground on which students of the same class
may meet, no mutual interests to bind them
together, no similarity of fortunes or ambi
tions, this is indeed an ambitious undertaking.
Still the difficulties which confront such a
program of unification are not impossible to
overcome. The Nebraskan hopes that at least
some semblance of unity in both senior and
junior classes will be realized before the year
is over and feels that this will probably be
done if all organizations and interested stu
dents co-operate.
The rub, however, comes from the fact
that Nebraska students are so utterly unedu
cated to anything that even faintly resembles
class organization and have gone through
school without any feeling of class conscious
ness for so long that it will be extremely dif
ficult to call forth this nebulous thing called
class spirit from the souls or hearts of students
abandon definitely and finally its attempts to
weld the classes together.
Alter all, freshmen, sophomores, and iun-
lors must have some interest in the university
or they would not be here. The universitv
should capitalize on this interest which if de
veloped among classes would also mutually
benefit each student individually. Why not
at least give it a new try?
STUDENT PULSE
Brief, concise contributlona pertinent to matters ot
student Ufa and tha university ar u.lrnm.H Ku thl
department, under the usual restrictlona of aound
newapaper practice, which excludea all libelous matter
and personal attacks. Letters must be signed, but
names will be withheld from publication If ao desired.
Lutheran Social.
Lutheran students will meet for
a social 8:30 Friday evening:, Nov.
1, In room 203 Temple building.
Teachers Hear Rosen lof.
Rural education will be the sub
ject of Dr. G. W. Rosenlof, pn'
fessor of secondary education,
when he speaks at Rualiville Fri
day. He will give fou r addresses
before the Sheridan County Teach
ers association.
Wesley Players.
Members of Wesley Players will
hold a scavanger hunt Friday eve
nlnar. The group will start from
the home of Mildred Kirkbrido at
8 o'clock.
Student Council.
Student Council will meet Wed
nesday, Nov. 6, In the Student
Council rooms, University hall. All
members must be present
and rhinoceri. Deposits gradually
filled the valleys of the older day
until a huge interior lake was
formed, and its bed became the al
most level land surface we now
have in the high plains region,
Now, the rivers are cutting again
into the land-level, and may at
some distant future date, Mr,
Smith says, change the high plains
into low plains.
But that time is far, far away.
Bring Back
The Decorations.
TO THE EDITOR:
Saturday, rov. 9. is Hoine-romim? dav
here at Nebraska. Everyone says the depres
sion is now on the run to the rear, so why not
lei us an neip it along by resumini? the old
time custom of again decorating the fraternity
houses for that day and again offering a prize
for the same. This always was a verv fine
thing and brought out keen rivalry between
the fraternities and sororities and the houses
were always the source of treat interest to all
homecomers. Last year thev said fmnnv nf
j 1 . .
inem we came m contact with) it did not seem
iiKe tne old. traditional days of long ago. So
let us revive these. Everyone of all the odd
sixty go into it with the rizht snirit this vnr
Even if necessary limit each one to actually
spena as low an amount as $lo or $20. Thou
sands of people come here iust to spp ihese
decorations, so let's go alter them again this
year by ail means. A FRAT MAN.
Professor Plans to Attend
Oklahoma Education
Conclave.
NORMAN, Okl., Oct. 31. D. A.
Worcester, chairman of the de
partment of educational psy
chology and measurements, has
been appointed official delegate to
represent the university at the
University of Oklahoma's South
western Conference on Higher
Education, Nov. 14-16.
Names of representatives from
Institutions of higher learning and
educational organization all over
the southwest are being mailed
dally to Dr. Charles M. Perry,
general chairman of the conference.
In addition to the official repre
sentatives, Dr. Frederick J. Kelly,
specialist in the United States of
fice of education, Washington, D.
C will be a special guest at the
three-day regional conference.
A leading educational figure for
more than thirty years, Dr. Kelly
has served as dean of administra
tion for the University of Minne
sota and as president of the Uni
versity of Idaho.
He has been chief of the division
of colleges and professional schools
Freshman Football
Men to Meet Friday
All freshman footballers will
b present at a meeting of the
frosh squad Friday afternoon
at 4 o'clock In tha east stadium
basement. Frosh Coach Etf
Weir urged that not only mem
bers of the rsgular string to
fea present, but also any fresh
men who have been out for
practical at any time this -an.
Main feature of tfta session,
which Weir hopes will see
every freshman capable of
wearing moleskins In atten
dance, will be an address by
Head Coach Bible. Assistant
Coach Schulte will also speak,
and pictures ef Husker games
will be shown.
in the office of education since
1931.
Educators and leaders all over
the southwest will gather to dis
cuss common educational prob
lems in observance of the closing
of President W. B. Bizzell's first
ten years' administration aa head
of the University of Oklahoma.
BAPTIST CHURCH GROUP
PLANS JJARVEST PARTY
Hay Ride, Entertainment
Listed on Friday
Program.
A harvest party, featuring an
early evening hay ride with games
and refreshments coming later,
will be held at 7:30 Friday night
by the university group of the
First Baptist church, 14th and K.
The hay ride will not be held if
the weather is bad, but other en
tertainment will be furnished. The
committee planning the affair is
in charge of Charles Adelseck, as
sisted by Delmer Reel, Margaret
Olson, Barbara Abbott, Mary
Provost, Robert Pinney, Dorothy
Thompson, Richard Goff, and Roy
Weber. All students and their
friends are cordially Invited.
INCREASE SEEN IN
LAUNDRY SHIPPING
The practice of sending laundry
home seems to be becoming a pop
ular fad thru out the country, ac
cording to a Railway Express re
port, which organization surveyed
over one hundred colleges recently,
located In every state in the union.
Realizing that many young men
and women student have a defi
nite Interest in "home laundered"
things, Railway Express, quick to
anticipate public requirements, de
veloped the business on a wide
spread scale. The prompt pickup
and delivery service provided for
the laundry, both outbound and in
bound, together with the extremely
reasonable rates, have been re
sponsible for the popularity ef the
idea. Laundry la now second only
in Importance to the baggage
business which the Railway Ex
press handles from colleges and
schools, said the local agent
Massachusetts Institute of Tech
nology has grouped those who con
tributed to its financial support
into an organization called Re
search Associates olM.LT.
K. U. Instructor
Discusses High
Plain Beginning
LAWRENCE, Kas., Oct. 31
How nature formed the high
plains, which center in western
Kansas, and extend over tens of
thousands of square miles, west
ward into Colorado, northward into
Nebraska, and southward even into
Texas, was told today over the
University of Kansas radio station,
KFKU by H. T. U. Smith, in
structor in geology at the university.
This vast era is so nearly level
that it rises only 1,500 feet in a
distance of 150 miles, and it is cut
by only a few river valleys, and
these are not deep only a few
hundred feet below the general
level ef the nigh plains.
The largest of these rivers is
the Arkansas, which rises in the
Rockies and flows serosa south
western Kansas, northeastern
Oklahoma, and Arkansas. South
of the Arkansas is the Cimarron,
which rises in the foothills of the
Rockies, and north r it are the
Smoky Hill and Republican, which
unite at Junction City to form the
Kansas, and north of these is the
Platte.
A hundred million years ago, or
so, this vast interior region was
under water, a branch of the Gulf
of Mexico, as experienced by the
layers of rock bearing sea fossils.
With the emergence of the land
from the sea, rivers much like
those of the present, cut their val
leys. These buried hills and val
leys can be traced by the geologist
who examines present outcrop
pings In new river valleys, and
from well borings.
Beginning some 50 million years
ago, these rivers began to leave
deposits of sand and gravel, lit
which today are found the fossil
remains of horses strange horses
with three toes camels, elephants.
WES FRY SEARCHES
FOR K-STATE TEAM
FIT MAY TULSA
Wildcat Coach Faced With
Problem of Eleven
Men Injured.
MANHATTAN, Kas., Oct 31.
A disastrous game out of the way,
Wesley Fry, the Kansas State head
coach, turned to the .task of
shaping up a new eleven to pit
against Tulsa's Golden Hurricane
in- Tulsa Saturday afternoon, No
vember 2.
When the Wildcat coach checked
the college hospital list Sunday
morning following the Kansas uni
versity game, he found nine of his
regular footballers registered
there, and before he left the ward
two more put in for treatment. The
injuries ranged all the way from
charley horses to twisted knees
and at least two of the latter prom
ised to put their wearers out for
the rest of the season.
Elder Out
These were on the legs of Mau
rice' (Red) Elder, star fullback,
and Riley Whearty, a guard and
line backer. Neither, in the opin
ion of Dr. Myron Husband, col
lege physician, will be of any use
to the team this season. Elder's
knee promises to require a month
to heal by which time the 1935 sea
son will be history. Whearty's knee
also is expected to require several
weeks to mend.
Others of Fry's regulars who
were hospitalized include Bob Kirk
Ted Warren, Leo Ayers, Augustus
Cardarelli, Ralph Churchill, Capt
Orin Griffing, Bill Hemphill, Joe
Zintnik, and Clayton Matney.
"That's a darned good eleven,"
Fry said, "even if they don't match
up in exactly correct positions."
With Elder and Whearty definitely
out, the outlook for a decent chance
against Tulsa was made still dark
er by the fact that Churchill, War
ren and Ayers almost certainly
could not get back into shape by
Saturday.
Churchill has a bad ankle that
Fry thinks will keep him out for
the next two games, while Ayers
and WaiTen both had ribs torn
slightly from the cartilages that
hold them in place. The other in
juries are not so serious but what
they may heal in a week or two
but will greatly hinder the prog
ress of team play.
New Eleven.
"It will be a completely revised
eleven that faces Tulsa," Fry de
clared. "Just how they will line
up we don't know. The spirit of
the squad, in spite of a lot of hard
luck, is remarkable."
Asked if he would suggest the
approximate lineup since the in
jury list reached such landslide
proportions, Fry named seven line
men: Hemphill, 1. e.; Fanning, 1. 1;
Cardarelli, 1. g.: Wassberg, c; Hol
land, r. g.; Flenthrope, r. t; Hays,
r. e.
That's seven men all right"
the coach remarked, "but it leaves
us without a linebacker with
Griffing and Whearty both out.
That's one of the things we'll have
to work out this week."
A possible starting backfield, be
said, would have Cleveland at
quarterback, Fleming or Klimek at
right half, Lander at left half and
Edwards or Douglass at full. Such
an eleven employs four or five
sophomores, and Fry Indicated
that a lot of other two-year-olds
would get their baptism of fire dur
ing the next two weeks.
1915 SOONER TEAM.
OF
IE,
gKETCHES
All-Victorious Eleven Built
Aerial Attack Feared
Thru Southwest.
NORMAN, Oct 31. When John
Fan reads that the Oklahoma foot
ball team of 1915 has been Invited
A lad whose name is spreading
over the country like oil on tne
pavement la Lloyd Cardwell, the
invincible. It is public conjecture
that he is an indispensable All
American. Whether the public be
wrong or right, he has made the
annelation. Wild Horse of the
Plains, a household expression,
The definition of speedy, lengthy
rains racked with power and elu
sion .is Cardwell or vice versa.
Among Cardy's souvenirs are
back to the homecoming day clash records incomparable , by Motber
here Saturday with Kansas, he'll '.rhooi comoe
probably yawn: "The Sooners of " r rihhnna
1915? Who were they?" and
thrust his sock feet further up on
the divan so he can enjoy the radio
more comfortably
tion he copped more blue ribbons
in track than Oiner iwo men.
Since matriculating In the school
of the Cornhuskers he has carved
more touchdown notches in his Deit
But if John Fan could look back on nt h,. mates. 'TIs
twenty years, when he was a kid, no doubti a fruitless task to tell of
ne a Know vnai mo au-vH-uHiuua njs awe inspiring runs of this sea
Sooner team of 1915 constituted in.,jng. na touchdown from
the most dreaded forward passing . .
attack ever developed In the south- . ; t about iened
west or Missouri Valley territory,
Opponents were powerless to stop
it or prevent Oklahoma from scor
ing at least two touchdowns per
game.
Passes Necessity.
Bennie Owen, its coach, operated
on the theory that "like the aix-
coaching duties since the peerless
Lloyd required no gridiron train
ing.
This wild nag of the prairie
is twenty-two, six two, eyes of
blue, but his weight won t rhyme
until he gains two pounds. He tips
shooter, the forward pass makes the beam at 190.
all football teams equal," and pos- Women to him are all right be-
sessing only light material at Ok- cause they are a necessary ingre
lahoma and realizing his foes were dient in the recipe of his hobby-
sure to score in nearly every game, dancing. Boiled shirts, however,
be suspended hoops on stakes and are far from his joy. Crowds, he
patiently taught his backs to thinks, are much more becoming
thread them with a football while girdled in the bleachers than dis
on the dead run. I pensed thru a party. After hear
The "Wild Bill" Hickok of the ing him only partially sanction the
tpam was its rancv stoop-shoul- weaker sex, we were reminded ot
dered fullback and captain, "Spot" the faint rumor of Cardwell's mat
Geyer. aff ectionately called "Hum- nmony 10 a aewara gin.
Concerning the Mizzou contest,
he predicts the Biblonians to come
forth victorious, in spite of expect
ed opposition.
After pondering over a most
brilliant array of incidents, he se
lected his line re-enforcuig in the
Ames skirmish na his mncnn.ni
Geyer was the greatest for- mous thrill of all time.
ward passer I ever saw,' owen He, like many of his mates of
snviv aumiis louny, x uuuui u. rne sod. wl 1 make flnnnp nl p-a n nf
there was a passer developed any- his ability by coaching. When the
where who equaled him and I've time comes for the brilliant back to
seen some good ones ngm nere in ci, ln hfs toga for tne fina
py" by his team mates. Geyer
was so accurate wiin a rooiDau
that given a wagon load of them
he could have piayea ".Boomer
Sooner" on a xylophone from a
distance of 30 yards and sounded
every note with a running inrow.
Geyer Great Passer.
TEN MUSE STUDENTS
GIVE TEMPLE RECITAL
Each Participant in Fifth
Convocation Protege of
Instructor.
With ten advanced school of mu
sic students playing selections, the
fifth music convocation waa re
cently presented In the Templa
theater. Each student was a pro
tcge of a different Instructor,
The convocation was opened by
Austin Garrels with the trombone
solo, "The Bride of the Waves" by
Clarke. Drawing considerable ap
plause from the student audience
were Miss June Goethe's rendition
of Chopin's "Polonaise in A flat,
Op 53" and Henry Brahlnsky'a
playing of "Concerto ln E minor''
by Mendelsshon.
The program was as rouows:
Clarke, The Bride of the Waves,
Austin Garrels. (Mr. Shlldneck,
instructor.)
DeBusy, Clouds;; Wolfe, Who'a
Gonna Morn for Me, Kermit Han.
sen (Mrs. Gutzmer).
Ravel, Sonatine, William uanc
(Mr. Harrison).
Handel, Where Ever Ye Walk
Tschaikowsky, Why ? James
Fitch (Miss Wagner.)
Chopin. Polonaise ln A flat. Op.
53, June Goethe ((Mr- Schmidt).
Kusteiner, Invocation to Eroa,
Elsie Mansfield (Mr. Kirkpatrick ).
Mendelssohn, Rec. and Air, it
With All Your Hearts, from
Elijah;" Glordanl, Caro MIo ben.
Russell Cummings (Mr. Thomas).
Mendelssohn, concerto in k
minor, Henry Brahinsky (Mr,
Wishnow).
Chopin, Scherzo In B flat minor.
Op. 31, Robert Burdick (Mrs.
Ross.)
Schumann, Faschlngsschwank,
Desta Ann Ward (Mr- Chenoweth.)
Charles Darwin spent eight
years dissecting over 10,000 barn
acles. He became interested ln the
structure of one species, and be
cause of erroneous knowledge
and lack of information proceeded
to do this great work.
our own territory in Ivan Grove
mt Kendall, Littlefield of Texas,
Swartz of Kansas State, Wright of
Oklahoma Aggies and Claude
Reeds of Oklahoma."
Oklahoma, in 1915, gained a mile
of ground on the forward pass
alone despite such common plains
weather vagaries as wind and mud
and the fact all opponenia played
a carefully planned defense
aeainst it. Against . Texas the
Sooners completed 10 of 27 passes
for 230 yards, against Missouri 16
of 33 for 260, against Kansas 11 of
24 for 288. Oklahoma's total that
year for forward passing only was
over 2,000 yards, much farther
than 19 out of 20 teams run now
days!
Running Attack Strong.
Owen's 1915 aggregation also
possessed two other complements
so vital to a great passing game,
a stiffish running attack built
around "Trim" Capshaw, a low-
running 138 pound halfback, to
draw the enemy defense up, and
six corking pass catchers in
"Hap" Johnson, Jesse Fields, Cap
shaw, Frank McCain, Howard
McCasland and. greatest ball
grabber of them all, Homer Mont
goraery, veteran right end.
Opponents frequently put two
defenders on Montgomery, who
had scored 14 touchdowns on Gey
er's passes in 1914, but Monty
knew how to slap a hand on a
foe's head or shoulder at the end
of a 50-yard sprint, vault into the
ozone, palm the ball with one
hand, and then fall into the ene
my's disgusted arms. And t fall
ing man has lots of e bows and
knees.
Team Now Scattered.
Naturally this famous team of
twenty years ago is now widely
scattered. Geyer, Fields and
George Anderson, big tackle, are
dead and Frank McCain's address
is not known. Willis Hott is in
Buffalo, N. Y., Cuiry Bell a doc
tor in St Paul, Minn., Montgom
ery a geologist in Mineral Wells,
Tex., and Johnson a rancher ln
the Texas panhandle. Swateck,
Lively and Meyer live at Okla
homa City, McCasland at Duncan,
Capshaw at Norman, Oliver Hott
is farming near Wakita and Leon
"Red" Phillips is the portly speak
er of the Oklahoma house of rep
resentatives.
The 1915 team's record:
Oklahoma ST. Klnrfltbtr 0.
Oklahoma 55, South emem 0.
Oklahoma, 102, Northm-MUra 0.
Oklahoma 3, Miuouri 0.
Oklahoma 14, Texas 13.
Oklahoma 23, Kanaaa 14.
Oklahoma 14, Kondall 13.
Oklahoma 24. Arkanaas 0.
Oklahoma 21, Kansas Btata 7.
Oklahoma 2, Okla. Akkim T.
Totala: Oklahoma 370 opponams 64.
his togs
time, the coaches will bid the emt
nent name Cardwell farewell, for
he Is the sole male hope of the
ramuy.
He has one more year to bring
fame to Nebraska and Sigma ChL
Journalism Fraternity Issues
Special Paper for Press
Association Meeting.
Plans for issuing a special edi
tion of the Daily Nebraskan for
the Nebraska State Press associa
tion convention and Homecoming
on Nov. 9 were made by members
of Sigma Delta Chi, journalism
fraternity, at a luncheon meeting
Thursday noon.
Jack Fischer, president of the
chapter, appointed Irwin Ryan to
assist in the editorial direction of
the special edition. George Pipal
is to head the advertising commit
tee.
Selection of new pledges was
deferred until the next meeting, to
be held Monday afternoon, Nov. 4,
Fischer announced.
Medico Pipes
Sold at
BOYDEN'S
PHARMACY
13th & P St
mm mm one
Y UaiaapUappjaaaj
Y m rafeiM t& Caa
v pb9 axtattos aaal
V V& ypo)'t;a aairrsaai
Unrt 1 UurlorkMpafaiaaa
shams V -JL 1 asaUataiFUla
kf W "JSi BBaiOtrtOafaPOOtaW
H monet V ifcljajpfovaa
cam BUT V Y theUsteaa
pnataat er mn ""Tt
ideal am j2
w 1
E
A decided swing against the
new in the last fifteen monins
among members of the Yale class
of '24 is reflected in a recent poll.
Sixty-nine per cent of the class
voted against the president while
fifteen months ago 68 percent fa
vored new deal policies.
Medico Pipes
Sold at
Uni. Drug
14th A S St.
t . . rt rr- i r rr-i, -, w.-iitJ jj
We Are Dyeing
Boucle and Knit
Garments
IS etc Fall Colon
Save 10 Cash & Cany
Modern Cleaners
loukus Wsatevar
Call F2377 Tot Seme
zz
Gasolene
Meter Oil
' Oal.
Heating1 03 6c Gallon
DOLUS "
aHONE B39M W
WEBER'S
ror jour mianue i-uncn
v . y
-or Also loon Lunchea snd TO
Short Orders
tP
147 So. 11th
CA Treat in Sweets
Complimentary Offer:
Introducing
"Tween-Bites"
an assortment of new confections"
blended for loveri of flna candy,
by "Th Houm of Bauer."
Friday and Saturday,
W include with tvery pound box
of Twaen-Bites" at Iti reamlar
prica 80c, a Complimentary on
pound box of B&uer'i Dixia Crisp.
Two Pounds of Bauer's Choic
Candies Friday and Saturday for
80c.
coxrrcTiON departmxnt
tirst rLooa