The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, November 18, 1914, Image 3

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

    THE DAILY NEBRASKAN
THEATRES
Oliver Theatre
TODAY 2:30 TONIGHT 8:15
TRAIL OF THE LONESOME PINE
Prices You Should Appreciate
Nights, $1.50 to 50c; Mat., $1 to 50c
Thursday Night, Nov. 19
MY BEST GIRL
With Victor Morley
WED., NOV. 18 ONLY
"THE STORY OF THE
BLOOD RED ROSE"
A Beautiful Mediaeval
Drama and Other
Features
MON., TUE., WED.
Nov. 16, 17, 18
"LITTLE LORD
ROBERT"
BARBOUR &
JACKSON
PHOTO PLAYS
"The Pines of Lorey"
Lord Cecil Keeps His Word"
10 "The Beloved Adventurer"
HEARST-SELIG NEWS
No
University Jeweler and
Optician
C. A. TUCKER
JEWELER
S. S. SHEAN
OPTICIAN
1123 O St. Yellow Front
Your Patronage Solicited
Ambrosia's Chocolate Fnpped Creams
"food for th Cod"
SUIN DRUG CO.
0r Hth & If New Telephone Bldg.
-Ask Your Physician About Us"
WHITMAN'S GLASSY CANDY
MEIER DRUG CO.
13th and O STREETS
Modern Dances Taught
Private .Uni. Class
STARTS SATURDAY, NOV. 21
New Beginners 2 to 3 P. M.
New Dances and Matinee
3 to 5 P. M.
LINCOLN DANCING ACADEMY
C. E. Bullard, U. of N. "02"
Manager
L5477 1124 N ST.
nraiiiKwiMiii i
Society
Lortru L Blxby
Cvn&t
Ruth Anderson of Wahoo, former
student, is now quarantined for small
pox In Denver.
Russell Mayne, a student in the
University, has returned from Harlan,
la., where he went to be usher at the
wedding of his brother, Winfield, to
Misa Helen Swift the last of the week.
Mr. Mayne also visited at his home In
Council lBuffs while away.
Miv and Mrs. J. 11. Haydcn of Long
Deach, Cal., have announced the mar
riage of their daughter, Zeta, to Lloyd
C. Kempton on November 11. Mr.
and Mrs. Kempton attended the Uni
versity of Nebraska and Mrs. Kemp
ton was a member of Chi Omega.
They will make their home at Long
Deach. " .
The following alumni and visitors
were entertained by the Tri Delts last
week-end: Effle Miller, Kearney; Ger
trude Sturm, Nehawka; Nancy Haze,
Ann Hermansen, Mrs. Ralph Van Ors
del, Omaha; Hazel Rowland and
Edith Abrahamson, Holdrege; Mar
garet McDougal and Mary Wright,
Tecumseh; Mary Boyd, Auburn; Lu
cile Galloway, Columbus, and Mary
Kastmann, Broken Bow.
The Omaha alumnae of Kappa
Alpha Theta met for luncheon at the
University Club in Omaha. Monday,
to meet Mrs. Hazel Allison Ford of
Kansas. Mrs. Ford is president of the
mid-west district of the national so
rority. Among those present were
Mrs. John K. Morrison, Mrs. Glenn D.
Bennett, Mrs. Herbert Owen, Mrs.
Webb Mills, Mrs. Arthur Pancoast,
Mrs. Guy Cox and Ella Wirt. Mrs.
Ford is making a tour of inspection
of the chapters in the mid-west dis
trict. R. V. Kaupal and Glenn Ruby will
leave Thursday for Atlanta, Ga., where
they will attend the biennial national
conclave of the Sigma Phi Epsilon
fraternity. The conclave will be held
November 23, 24 and 25. The dele
gates from western and central Ne
braska will meet at Kansas City.
where they will secure -special cars
for the rest of their trip. The fra
ternity has chapters in thirty-four
Scana from "The TRAIL
f
1
v ' a. ' te-'
At THE OLIVER Tonight, Wednesday and Wednesday Mat.
Coluihn
LeydA
Dorothy EJswHA
universities and colleges. The two
Nebraska delegates will return in
about ten days.
Out-of-town guests at tjie Alpha Tau
Omega house for the eighteenth an
nual banquet, football game and dance
Saturday night at the Lincoln Hotel
fere: Will Ross, Alfred Kennedy of
Omaha, C. H. Parks of Council Bluffs,
Jesse Caley of Genoa, Colo.; Verne
Sprague. Goodland, Kan.; W. F. Zoell
ner, Guy WaTOo", E. W. Wingart, K. C.
Dodderidge, L. P. Rathfon of Law
rence, Kan.; E. S. Munson of Aurora,
Judge CaufaL David City; Harold
Noble, Kansas City; R. E. Weaverling,
North Bend; Fred Laird, Fremont;
R. H. Graham, Mendota, S. D.; "Harry
Coffee, Chadron, and Will Wenstrand,
Wahoo.
Mr. and Mrs. M. T. Maze have is
sued invitations to the marriage of
their daughter, Nellie Mabel, '14, to
Dr. Henry J. Broderson, '09. The mar
riage will take place at the home of
the bride, 827 North Thirty-third
street, on the evening of November 25.
A reception will be held from 8:30
p. m. to 10 p. m. After receiving his
degree at Nebraska, Dr. Broderson did
graduate work in chemistry at the
University of Kansas and received his
Ph. D. at Cornell. He is now an in
structor in chemistry in the Univer
sity of Illinois. He is a member of
Alpha Chi Sigma and Sigma Xi. Dr.
and Mrs. Broderson wil be at home at
Urbana, 111., after December 15.
The Nebraska Alpha chapter of
Alpha' Omega Alpha was formally in
stalled at the University Club in
Omaha, Saturday, November 14, 1914.
The chapter membership consists of
the following members of the College
of Medicine: Dr. William O. Bridges,
dean; Dr. Oscar T. Schultz, Dr.
Charles' W. McCorkle Poynter, Dr.
Irving S. Cutter, Dr. Palmer Findley
of Illinois Beta, who becomes a mem
ber of Alpha Omega Alpha; Dr. James
Douglas Pilcher of Ohio Alpha (West
ern Reserve), Dr. Chester H. Waters
of New York Beta (Cornell), Dr.
Blaine A. Young, who was formally
elected to receive the honor as repre
sentative of the class of 1914. Alpha
Omega Alpha is a non-secret fourth-
of the LONESOME PINE"
1 jVXK&r
year medical honorary society, mem
bership in which is based entirely
upon scholarship and scientific attain
ments. It was organized in 1903 by
Dr. William W. Root, who is at pres
ent secretary and treasurer of the
grand . council. The society occupies
the same place in colleges of medicine
that Thi Beta Kappa occupies in col
leges of arts. Election to membership
will occur from the senior class
shortly before commencement. No
more than one-sixth of the member
ship of any class will be elected.
The Cedar Rapids (la.) Republic of
November 8 has the following notice
of the death of a former instructor In
the University:
"Schuyler William Miller was born
in Bushnell, 111., in 1868, and grew to
manhood on a farm near Hastings,
Nebr. He received an A. B. in 1890,
and later an M. A. from the University
of Nebraska. He was a member of
the Sigma Chi fraternity. Following
his University career, he was princi
pal of the high school at Schuyler,
Nebr., where he remained three years.
He then became a teacher of English
in the English department of the Uni
versity of Nebraska, where he taught
for four years. After a year of. study
and travel in Europe, he returned to
Lincoln, Nebr., where he was asso
ciated with the Aetna Life Insurance
Company for three years. About 1904
he began his work for the Interna
tional Correspondence Schools. He
worked for the school in Colorado for
two years. He was then made divi
sion superintendent of eastern Kansas
for seven years, then he located in
Des Moines, where he remained for a
vear. and then came to Cedar Rapids,
where he had lived two years, and-f
where he has been manager of the
local branch of the International Cor
respondence Schools.
"Mr. Miller had been in very good
health for a number of months until
about two weeks ago, when he was
operated upon last Saturday, and did
not recover from the shock. He
passed away Sunday, November 8.
He is survived by a wife and one son,
three sisters and three brothers. He
was married to Gertrude Risley of
Lawrence, Kas., April 11. 1911. Dr.
E. E. Miller of Surprise, Nebr., and
Miss Hattie Miller of I.vid City,
Nebr., are here to attend the short
services which will be conducted at
Beatty's undertaking parlors tonight
by the Rev. Joseph Fort Newton. The
interment will be at Hastings, Nebr."
FROSH MEET SCRUBS
(Continued from Page One)
play that culminated in a thirty-yard
forward pass, Hawkins to Caley,
which put them in striking distance
of the freshman goal. A moment later
Hawkins charged through the line for
a touchdown.
The yearlings then took the ball
and, on straight football, scored a
second touchdown. The famous Iowa
spread play was not used much by
the freshmen, seeming to indicate
that Coaet. Hawley of the Hawkeyes
has rather jost faith in it since the
Cornhuskers mussed it so thoroughly
last year. Most of the plays used by
the freshmen were off-tackle or around
the ends, with an occasional forward
pass.
The scrubs came right back and
scored again themselves, principally
by the use of forward passes to Caley,
who proved a wizard at the receiving
end. The scrubs gp.ined' close to one
hundred yards by the air route alone
in the half hour of play. The varsity
men, who watched the game from the
sidelines, are due to meet the fresh
men today.
PHARMACEUTICAL GARDEN.
Only Garden of Its Kind in West Will
Have an Aquatic Pool Thirty
Feet Wide.
The University of Nebraska will
now have a Pharmaceutical garc-n
illiliiliiiriiiilli!ii:!i:ii.ii..l v5 9
il
Every Weight of
Underwear for Men
Is found in the Lewis Union Suit
for Fall and Winter; cotton,
cashmere, cotton and worsted,
silk and worsted and Sea Island
Cotton Mercerized. You can get
light, medium or heavy weight
H
LEW!
ONION SUITS
For Men, $1.50 to $6.00
For Boys, 75c to $2.00
We display and sell these famous Lew
is Union Suits and want you to examine
the different weigrhts and materials and
note the big consumer-value.
Many seasons of satisfaction in thl
comfort underwear.
which is being started by the School
of Pharmacy. It is the only one of its
kind in the west and in fact the only
one in this climate. It is laid off in
rectangular beds with spacious paths
and there will contain an aquatic pool
in the center 30 feet wide.
Thornburg's Orchestra, B2556.
A. U. Schembeck
PIANIST
Appointments made for Teas.
Dinners. Formal and Informal
evening affairs receive my personal
supervision.
Phones: B-3715, after 6 p. m.,
L-9378.
Positively Lincoln's authority on
the "Late Dance Dope."
"CHARHPS"
Y O U Football
W E School Supplies
The Book Shop
1212 O Street
W. A. Getty, Pres.
G. E. Vennum, Mgr.
Cut Flowers
We extend you a cordial in
vitation to call.
Unique floral arrangements
for all social occasions.
Corsage Boquets a Specialty
Griswold Seed Co.-
Floral Dept., 1042 O St.
II littUIUlUllllllliiliilJlili!;!!
lililiWlii
. j