THE DAILY NEBRASKAIt Oliver Theater Friday Night, October 27th MITZI In "POM POM" Price, $2.00 to 50o Sat. Mat. A Night, Oct. 28th FISK O'HARA COMING ONE ENTIRE WEEK Commencing MONDAY, NOVEMBER 6TH 3 Time Dally 2:30, 7:30 and 9( (Except Thursday Night) The Film That the Chicago Coun cil Refused to Revoke its Permit. A Photo Play of Vice "The Little Girl tioxl Door" mam Two Performances Daily THE FAMOUS "JERSEY LILY" MRS. LANGTRY (Lady De Bathe) In a One-Act Play Entitled "ASHES" LYDELL A HIGGINS DANCING KENNEDYS JOSEPH NEWMAN THE SHARROCKS PARI'ES & CONWAY BROOKS & LORELLA PRICES 25c, 50c, 75c MAJESTIC WEDNESDAY AND THURSDAY -MANHATTAN MADNESS" Also a Keystone Comedy and HANS AND FRITZ FRIDAY AND SATURDAY "THE DEVIL AT HIS ELBOW" TIME 1:30, 3:15, 7:15, 9:00 p.m. ADULTS 10c. CHILDREN 5c Schombeck's Orchestral and CabaretService Banjoes Too HOME STYLE MALTED MILK . FILLERS' RESCRIPTION HARMACY "SPA" Get your Lunches at the City Y. M. C. A, Cafeteria Plan 13TH AND P Start Right- Let us take care of your gar ments when they need a thor ough cleaning or pressing. Our service is A-l must be we operate the largest clean ing plant in Lincoln. "We clean and block hats. LINCOLN CLEANING & DYE WORKS 326 S. 11th Lincoln, Neb. LEO SOUKUP, Mgr. Rent an L C. Smith & Bros. Typewriter $8.00 per four months. It will enable you to get more out of your college course. L C. Smith & Bro. Typewriter Co. LINCOLN, NEBE. SOCIETY SOCIAL CALENDAR October 27 Kappa Alpha Theta dance Rose wilde. Mixer Armory. Fl Kappa Fhl dinner dance Chap ter house. October 28 Delia Delta Delta dance Lincoln. Engineers' Hop Rosewllde. Iron Sphinx dance Alpha SU'.un Phi bouse. Farm House dance. Alpha Delta Fl dance Chapter house. . Bushuell Guild party House. Delta Zeta dance Chapter house. Sigma Alpha Epsilon dance Chap ter house. Alice Sheehy, '20, lias returned from Omaha. Doris Scroggin, '17, has been visit ing at her home In Oak, Neb. Fred W. Clark. '18, will spend the week end at his home in Stamford. Jerome Burnett, '16, has been a COVERT NAMES CADET COMMITTEE Ball Will Be held January 19 Major Hadley, Chairman Mixer Committee Committees for the military ball and regimental mixer have been appointed by Lieut. Col. A. J. Covert, acting colonel. The military ball, scheduled for January 19, will be the first dinner dance ever given by the military de partment Major Howard Hadley heads the committee in charge. Lieut. John B. Stoddard will bo master of ceremonies, Capt, Harold F. Holtz and Byron F. Rohrbough are the other members of the committee. CaDt. A. W. Ackerman is chairman of the annual regimental mixer, as sisted by Capts. Adolph Blunk and C. E. Campbell. The date has not been announced. The mixer was started last year, occupying a unique position on the University social calendar. The committee in charge of the mili tary ball are planning a distinctive dance for the other social event on the program of the military depart ment. In scheduling a dinner dance Chairman Hadley and the committee have decided to make a new departure from military balls of the pasL DDflC MA DTI M Til I i HIHMIIIl iu ' STUDENT TREASURERS ..ill Talk to Business Managers of Classes and Organizations Today at 11:30 A meeting of all the treasurers of classes and organizations, and man agers of University publications has been called for 11:30 this mornin In S-102 in the basement of the Armory. Professor Martin of the department f vinnmirs. who has been investi gating the working system employed in the office of student activities, will talk on the present efficiency of the office and suggest improvements. It ia m, nninion of Professor Martin that I practical all of the red tape con- The College World Call Him "Father Boys when you speak of your father don't call him "the old man." Of course you are older now than when you were taught to call him father. You are much smarter than you were then you are much more manly look . ' it, fit tou better, your ing, jour u hat has a modern shape and your hair is combed differently. In short "flyer" than you were then. vo a last year's coat, a . UW lauitr u ,wo-yearold hat and. a Test of still i older pattern. He can't write such an I elegant note as you can and all that, but don't cail him the "old man." Call guest at the Acacia house. Mr. Bur nett is employed by a large oil com pany in Oklahoma. Carl Graff, '18, and Arch Blinker, '18, spent the week end in Beatrice Eda Behling, ex-'lS, of York, is visit ing at the Kappa Kappa Gamma house. Betty Crawford, '18, will go to Oma ha today to spend the week end at her home. Miss Ruth Curtis, an assistant in structor at the state farm, will spend the week end in Omaha. John Selleck. '11, of Chicago, was in Lincoln yesterday. Mr. Selleck is a member of Delta Upsilon. Lenore Burkett, '18, is entertaining as her house guest, Miss Marie Can navan from Washington, D. C. R. S. Weeks, ex-'15, who is taking charge of the State Oil company is staying at the Sigma Nu house this week, awaiting the arrival of his household goods. He is moving here from Dayton, O. DALE AND JOHNSON ADDRESS PRE-MEDIGS Society Favors Plan of Including Hospital Corps in Cadet Regiment A vivid description of the work of royal army medical corps behind the British front in France was given over 100 medics at pre-medic smoker at the Beta Theta Fl house last evening. Dr. Phil M. Dale, '09, just returned from Europe, where he served with the Chi cago unit of the Royal Medical army corps chosen by the late Dr. Murphy of Chicago. Dr. A. A. Johnson, a graduate of Western Reserve, now affiliated with the department of pathology, Univer sity of Nebraska, college of medicine at Omaha, described the progress made by the Xebraska college sfhee its establishment and said that at the present time it was one of the largest and best medical colleges in the mid dle west. More new men have been added to its faculty in the last five years than to any other, and today Xebraska has the largest number of faculty men devoting their time ex clusively to instruction. A report from the military science department in regard to a hospital corps to be composed entirely of pre niedics was given, in which Command ant Parker was quoted as saying that he would request the war department to grant a hospital corps at Xebraska if the men were favorable. The prop osition was approved practically unan imously. The date for the annual pre-medic dance was set for Xovember 24 at Rosewilde. nected with handling of accounts can be eliminated and the business expe dited to a great extent. The assembled treasurers will dis cuss a proposed permanent organiza tion of University treasurers which would be formed for mutual benefit. It would then be possible for the treas urers to meet at definite times for dis cussion, and a series of instructive talks cn accounting and organization could be arranged. him father. For years he has been rustling around to get things togeth er. He has been held to the thorny path of uphill industry and the bright est half of life has gone from him forever. But he loves you, though he goes along without saying much about it. Therefore be not so ungrateful. Spokane Sportman Review. Texas Uni Educational Branch The University of Texas has been 8igelly honored by the United States bureau of education by being made a laboratory branch of the bureau. Dr. A. C. Ellis, who has been working as Party Slippers Here are the Newest, the Latest, Lasts, Leathers and Fabrics in Pumps Every Pair Means Party Economy WHITE KlD PUMPS (perfectly plain), with bountiful French eovero.t heels. .Priced $5 SILVER CLOTH PUMPS, with all the now gnu-eful linos. Every pair putirnntoo.1. Priced $G SILVER CLOTH PUMPS with Gold Leather Covered Heels. Tho season's newest idea. Priced $7.50 WHITE KID PUMPS with Good Leather Covered Heels. A beautiful combination. Priced $7 BEADED KID PUMPS. Four very now ideas. Priced $4 to $6 Don't buy your footwear until you've soon what we have to offer. LADIES' NEW HOSE. Embroidered figures $1. to $3 a special collaborator for the govern ment, received notification of his ap pointment to the head of the branch recently. The appointment was sent by United States Commissioner P. P. Claxton. Columbia university and George Peabody institute for teachers are two other schools working with the gov ernment. Each institution has a rank ing privilege in the performing of lab oratory experiments In education. Ex. Students and Money Dr. Ray Lyman Wilbur, president of Stanford university, believes in the simple life. He has notified parents of prospective students that, if they insist on endowing their hopeful sons and daughters with more money than may be needed for simple living, Stan ford university would rather have them go elsewhere to spend it. The learned doctor, in a letter which he has addressed to parents, ventures the statement that "it takes time to run an automobile and It often leads to life off the campus, e extrav agance and much foolishness," and he adds that "the student w ho cannot be content to lead the clean, simple, in dustrious life expected on the Stan ford campus should go elsewhere." Experience has shown, the writer ex plains, that the poor boy has, on the whole, made a better record, both as a student and afterward, than the young man or woman with too much I money to spend. Many are in Oregon, some with the silver beginning to creep into their hair, to whose minds the words of Dr. ilLur will bring back dimming mem ories of "quad" and "camp." They can tell the names of those whose records prove the truth of Dr. Wil bur's contention, for Oregon has men familiar to the progress of the state who used to learn their economics be hind the handle of Dr. Jordan's lawn mower or while waiting on table In the Encina dining room. Discount Sale 25 This Week ON FELT GOODS Five 25c and 50c Poster for $1.00, Wednesday and Thursday Only WATCH FOBS 20 DISCOUNT Do Not Miss This Sale University Book Store 340 no. nth st. 4W Daylight Giol A big bankrool does not, ordinarily, j coax its young possessor to worship at the shrine of Minerva so ardently as at some other shrines. A pciket full of money Is more apt to stuit the stomach with pleasure than th- head j wiih knowledge. And this applies not at Stanford alone, but everywhere. Oregon Journal. Michigan's engineering students have taken to th traditional cordu roy trousers again and the brown and gray "jeens" adorn the campus iu flocks now. Ex. Fraternity rushing rules at Cornell are very similar to those governing the sorority rushing at Illinois. Writ ten date cards and invitations are Isent out at a designated time by all the fraternities. Activity has already started along that line. Ex. Mead Memorial Chapel Presented with " Chimes Chimes, practically the same as those in the chimes tower at the Uni versity of Washington, have just been installed in the Mead memorial chapel of Middlebury college. Mlddlebury, Conn. They were presented to the college by John Abner and Mary Sher man Mead. Five programs were given on the chimes. On dedication Sunday a sacred concert was given, and on five other days programs were given with selections varying from grand opera to rollicking melodies which sa vored slightly of ragtime Ex. Inspired Youth One of the questions in an exam ination on stock raising was "Name four different kinds of sheep." An Ag student at Stockbridge answered Black sheep, white sheep, Mary's lit tle lamb and the hydraulic ram. Ex. Frosh Lose Hair Following the annual rush at Ari zona in which the sophs were victor ious the sophs tied up most of the inn LLV JL EL fvosh left. With the aid of a handy pair of clippers they then relieved them of their hair and so that they shouldn't catch cold they covered with an excellent quality of green pa:nt. Ex. "Spike" Poor Frosh If a fraternity or sorority at Do Pauw wants anyone they are "spiked' instead of being rushed. Fraternities are allowed to "spike" with the open ing of the school, but all sororities must wait until tho second week. Ex. Costly Initiation Fielding J- Graham, a student in the University of Missouri, lost a foot as result of a fraternity initiation re cently. Graham was ordered io steal a ride on a train-and in carrying out the order fell' beneath the cars. It was necessary to amputate his left foot. Ex. The state college of Washington of fered a handsome monogram blanket ito the student winning In their yell j contest Veil Leader Moss wanted one 'iiundred new yells submitted. Ex. DUTCH CAFE 234 No. 11th Street EAT AT 77