The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, February 12, 1917, Image 3

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    I
C. ROY MILLER, For Foot Comfort
Adjustment of Fallen Arches, re-
410 Ganter moral of Corns and Ingrowing Nails Phone
and the relief of Bunions.
Building comfort shoes B3781
Oliver Theater
tonight at 8:15
MAY ROBSON
In her new comedy, "The Making
Over of Mrs. Matt"
Prices, $1-50 to 50 cents
MONDAY- TUE8DA Y.WEDNESDAY
5 Acts Western Vaudeville 3 8how
Matinees 2:30 Evenings 7:00 and 9
LEW FITZGIBBON
Master of the Xylophone
HOWARD'S BEARS
Featuring the Wrestling Bear
ANITA ARLI88 A CO.
i In a Singing Skit
SILBER 4 NORTH
The Bashful Man and the Maid
ISABELLE MILLER & CO.
I In "The New Boarder"
By James Horan
"THE MYSTERIES OF MYRA"
Travel Weekly
Orpheum Orchestra
MATINEE 15c NIGHTS 25c
MONDA Y.TUESDAY-WEDNESDAY
CHAS. A. HENDRIX & CO.
In
"THE SCHOOLMASTER"
"PEARL OF THE ARMY"
Episode No. 3 "The Silent Menace"
His Ticklish Job" Fox Comedy
News Weekly and Cartoons
THE HANLEY GIRL8
Singing and Dancing Diversion
f. TIME 2:00, 7:00, 8:00
Matinee 10c Nights 15c
MAJESTIC
Two Changes Monday and Thursday
Three Shows Dally 2:15-7:15-9:00
Fox Reilly'a Famous
"GLOBE TROTTERS"
In Tabloid Musical Comedies
Starting Monday Matinee
"THE FORTUNE HUNTERS"
Introducing
16 CLEVER PEOPLE 16
Many of whom have already made
personal successes the past week
THE FMPIRF OIIABTFTTC
Harmonists Supreme
ERNEST LINWOOD
The Ebony Hued Comedian
HAROLD PATE
The Boy with the Big Voice and the
Chorus, selected for ability to please.
Prices Balcony, 10c all shows
Lower Floor Mats., 15c; Nights, 25c
i ne tmverary 01 tmcago
h i M , . .
E 3 T T !
I EOjel
STUDY formation iddmi 'XlLjM
Qulek rvlee
Opf at All Time
Orpheum Cafe
pedal Attention to University
ttudants
GET YOUR
Gym, Basketball
and Athletic Goods at
LAWLOR'S
1423 O Stdeet
The Only Real Sporting Goods
Store In Lincoln
"SPA"
Get your Lunches t the
City Y. M. C. A., Cafeteria Plan
13TH AND P
Local EYE trou
bles are in 88 per
cent of all cases,
caused by eye
detects which may be corrected
with my proper made to order
lenses.
DR. MARTIN Standard Scien
tific eye examiner. Courtesy always.
1234 O 81 Opposite Miller A Palne's
Whitebreast Coal &
Lumber Co.
WE WANT YOUR ORDERS
Satisfaction Guaranteed
Phone B3228
107 N. 11th
TIGERS TRAMPLE
HUSKER HOPES
(Continued from Page One)
Substitutes: Nebraska Jackson for
Rlddell; Missouri Shlrkey for Vogt;
Shephard for Campbell.
Goals from field Flothow 3, Nel
son 2, Wertz 2, Williams 3, Viner 2,
Shlrkey 1.
Free throws H. Campbell 2, Wil
liams 6.
Referee Forest Allen.
The second game was a thriller
from start to finish, with the Mis
sourians producing the larger share
of the thrills. Captain Williams of
the Tigers was again the star with
twelve points, the same number as
on Friday night.
Nebraska got away to a poor start,
being unable to locate the basket.
The jinx followed them throughout
the game and was the one great fac
tor in the defeat.
The teamwork of the Nebraskans
was better than on the previous night
and on several occasions the ball
was carried almost the length of the
floor without losing it.
Too much can not 1)6 said of the
kind of basketball displayed by the
Mlssourians. Theirs was a fast, clean
and accurate game. They handled
the ball with speed and were ex
tremely clever in eluding their op
ponents when in possession of the
ball.
Captain Williams of the Tigers will
long be remembered as one of the
most dangerous men ever seen on
the Nebraska floor.
The lineup follows:
Missouri 18 Nebraska 7
Shirley f Flothow
Campbell f.. II. Campbell (C)
Williams (C) ....c Nelson
Viner g Wertz
Slusher 8 Rlddell
Substitutes Jackson for Nelson;
Pickett for Rlddell; Shephard for
Williams; Vogt for Campbell; Church
for Viner.
Field goals Williams 5, Viner,
Campbell, Shephard, Wertz, Flothow
2.
Freo throws Williams 2, Campbell
1.
Referee Allen.
MAY
Who Plays at
V
if .. !
. :
ALUMNI NEWS
"Jim Harvey of York, captain of
the 1908 Cornhuskers, and toastmaster
at the last Cornhusker banquet, was
on the campus Saturday.
Alvin Eugene Pope, '98, was mar
ried January 2 to Miss Marie Van
Patten Leason of Chicago. Mr. Pope
was head of the departments of edu
cation and social economy at the Panama-Pacific
exposition and with Prof.
Grove E. Barber there acted on the
jury that met to discuss higher edu
cation. His present address is 649
West 113th street, New York city.
MEETING OF
ENGINEERS
IS POSTPONED
The regular meeting of the student
section of the American society of
mechanical engineers scheduled for
Tuesday evening, February 6, has
been postponed until Tuesday' even
ing, February 13. L. M. Saltan, a
student in the college of engineering,
who has had practical experience, will
give an illustrated lecture on flood
lighting.
MISS VIRGINIA
ZIMMER'S MOTHER
DIED THURSDAY
Mrs. Virginia Zimmer, mother of
Miss Virginia Zimmer, instructor of
mathematics in the school of agricul
ture, died last Thursday morning at
her home at Forty-second and Hold
rege streets. The funeral was held
Sunday afternoon.
Junior Law Hop
Financial statement of the unior
law hop, which was held at the Rose
wilde party house, Saturday evening
January 30, 1917, is as follows:
Tcu; receipts,-$112.50.
Total expenditures Rental hall and
refreshments, $50; music, $37.50; dec
orations, $12; printing, $10.25; door
keeper, $2. Total, $111.75. Profit, $.75.
The complimentary list is as follows:
Max Miller, Carlisle Jones, W. M.
Folsom, I. F. Smith, Henry Pascale,
Roy Doyle, J. C. Wright, S. II. Brown.
Spencer Flint, Orris Pothast, Jack
Kramer, L. L. Dunn, Don Yale, S.
Grant, H. M. Carson, E. L. Randall,
C. C. Thompson. J. L. Caley, E. C.
Monohan, Ted Lonam, William Taylor,
William Sehoonmakor, J. B. Stoddart.
W. M. Folsom chairman. Audited,
January 30. 1917. T. A. Williams,
agent student activities.
Harvard. Not less than 3,000 per
sons will take part In the Cambridge
pageant to be held In the Harvard
stadium next June, and a brass band
of seventy pieces will bo secured to
furnishe the music required. The ex
tensive plan on which the pageant
is to be conducted Is also made man
ifest by the fact that $15,000 is the
sum required for preliminary expenses
alone. Ex.
i, .
1.
- X V,-. 1
it
6
EOBSON
the OUver Tonight
FLING TO TALK TO
MID-WINTER GRADS
(Continued from Page One)
Irvln Samuel Ulrich, Helen Ida White,
Gladys Bernice Wilkinson, Mary
Edith Woodburu.
Bachelor of Science
Donald Benedict Dow.
TEACHERS' COLLEGE
Teachers' College Diploma and Uni-
verslty Teachers Certificate
Florence Dunn, Bernice Celestine'
Keefe, Margaret Stuart Lewis, Ida
Kathryn Roberts, Helen Ida White.
First Grade Clty-S ate Certificate
Agnes Pauline Bartlett, Clyde Wm.
Lehman, Ralph Merton Marrs, Ger
hard John Naher, Helen Louise
Schwab, Gertrude M. Suess.
COLLEGE OF AGRICULTURE
Bacelor of Science in Agriculture
James William Boggs, Thomas Ger
maine Egan, Clarence Elmer Hagelin,
Henry Herman Heltman, Edward
Heltman, Edward Lowell Liebendorf
er, Leonard Owen Vose,
COLLEGE OF LAW
Bachelor of Laws
Harry Hiram Ellis, George Worth
ington Irwin, Victor Martin Spirk.
PROFESSOR BERNARD
TO ADDRESS THE
WORLD POLITY CLUB
Prof. L. L. Bernard, of the depart
ment of sociology of Missouri uni
versity, will address the World Polity
club on "Can We End War?" Tues
day evening at 7:30 in the political
science seminar room.
This is the first of a series of
meetings at which, it is hoped, na
tionally famous men will speak. Dr.
John Mez, the founder of the World
Polity clubs, will address the club
Hnmetimt. '."' fM month
a oa vwar-
MISS DODGE WILL
SPEAK AT VESPERS
TUESDAY EVENING
Miss Adelia Dodge, secretary of the
national board for colleges of the north
central field of the Y. W. C. A. will
speak at Vespers tomorrow evening.
Miss Dodge has charge of the Y. W. j
C. A, association in North and South
Dakota, Minnesota, Iowa and Nebras
ka and makes her headquarters at
Minneapolis. Florence Bishop will
preside over the meeting and Mildred
Glllilan will sing.
Buy Your
Bradley at
. i.j,kLinnimi.Miiiiiin ii i ii i.i 11 "" -"'"" "
n j!1 Laude"
SwciSitcrs 11
"fj Funny how ubiquitous a sweater is. From matricula-
' ,f '!. ' -T tion to graduation its uses are multitudinous, its paths de-
; I r vious. And how nomadic too. The athlete's luxurious shaker,
ij. I proudly alphabetted, migrates from "stude" to co-ed, from frat house I
J to girl's dorm. If it's a Bradley, it abides there. L
' -m' 1 Ask for them at the beat thopi. Write for the Bradley Style Booklet
.' I BRADLEY KNITTING CO., Delavan, Wis. 1 '
Li ,7. .."' j i'ttto.fco ! V . i
---- M $ c r
j- 1 ' '
4
TO
FACULTY
Let us know what books
use an(j we will be sure
and second hand copies
students call for them.
YOU KNOW WHAT THIS WILL MEAN
Less Delay, less Confusion, no Excuses that "I
couldn't get the book."
Do you not believe that
CO-OPERATION MEANS INCREASED
EFFICIENCY?
College
FACING
THE
Telephone B2311
333 North 12th 81
Lwuh
CHAPIN BROS- 127 So. 13th St
3f lOWeVg all the time
L
THE
your classes are going to
to have on hand both new
of these texts when your
CAMPUS
Gleaners, Pressers, Dyars
For the "Work and Service that
Please." - ?
equipped Dry Cleaning fiau.' r-'5?n.
West. One day service if ne'eded.
Reasonable Prices, good work, prompt
service. Repairs to men's garments
carefully made.
Book
Store
Clothes for
CollegeMen