The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, October 29, 1924, Page 3, Image 3

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    0
,RPHEUM
1 THEATRE
TODAY MATINEE AND
1 TflNlfiHT
ttrrii rxTRAVAGANZA
UmiUI-IMIRlIC?!
MUSICAL HIT OF TW
31M0M
BRILLIANT)
COMPANY
m
aSf0RF0?5MtUN4GIRlS!
BfWllDcfcWG NOVELTIES
PRICES Nlfht! SIjOO, $1.80, $2.00 plus
t, M.tln.. Wednesday BOc to 91.00.
Seat Ml now t Orpheum
Mail and phone orders received
LIBERTY
MON. TUES. WED.
A Blf Bill of Orphoum Circuit
Attractions
Theodore Westman, Jr.
and Asaoclale Players in
"SO THIS IS DIVORCE"
By Bart Robinson
Rose Maura's Revue
Featuring;
Rosa Maura, Harbart Wobater
SCOTCHBACPIPE BAND
VIC ADELAIDE
Burns & Wilson
In a Comedy Oddity
"THE UNTRAINED NURSE"
EVA ' PAT
Esmond & Grant
"Just Two Kids"
RUTH BUDD
Gordon & Carlell
The Wyom'nf Duo In
"VARIETIES OF THE WEST" '
The Spat Family
In a Comedy of Laughs
NEWS A TOPICAL PICTURES
SHOWS START 2 30, 7:00, 9:00
R I ALTO
ALL THIS WEEK
On of th Season's
Biffttt Succmm
"The Seahawk"
A Romantic Creation with
MILTON SILLS
And an All-Star Supporting Cast
ATMOSPHERIC PROLOGUE
R1ALT0 SYMPHONY PLAYERS
SHOWS AT 1. 3, S, 7, 9.
LYRIC
THIS
WEEK
A BIG DOUBLE BILL
A Cyclone of Laughter
"Changing Husbands"
A Paramount Picture with
LEAT7ICE JOY
OTHFR Entertaining PICTURES
ON THE STACE
Roy Zermain & Co.
In a Dazzling Offering
A WHIRL OF SONG DANCE
CEOICE M. DAVIES
The Yodling Songster
LYRIC CONCERT ORCHESTRA
SHOWS AT I, 3, 8. 7. 9.
Colonial week
A Stirring Romance
"Unguarded Women"
A Paramount Picture with
Bebe DANIELS A R chard DIX
"The Go-Getters'.' v
Srcond Story Entitlrd
"IN KN1CKER TIME"
"WHITE WATER"
A Northern Tale with
NELL SHIPMAN
K1NOGRAMS OF INTEREST
SHOWS AT 1, 3, S, 7, 9.
ORPHEUM THEATRE
THURSDAY, Oct 30
Was. A Brady Presents
The Semaation of IM Age
oimon
Called Peter"
O. L. HaD, Chicago Eve. Jo irnal saidi
"A Forty-Horae Power Shcch."
Prices t 00, $1.80, $2 00 $3.80.
Seata Now On Sale.
Don't forget te look ever oar
Halloween
CANDY
Sugar Bowl
Johnson ft Kroll .
Bl31 18S2 O
Drake and Missouri Are in Lead
of Valley Conference Grid Race
THE DAILY NEBRASKAN
Garnet Last Week.
Nebraska, 14; Kansas, 7, at Law
rence.
Missouri, 14; Kansas Aggies, 7, at
Columbia.
Drake, 28; Oklahoma, 0, at Des
Moines.
Washington, 14; Rolla School of
Mines, 0, at St. Louis.
Games This Week.
Nebraska against Missouri, at Lin
coln. Kansas Aggies against Ames Ag
gies, at Manhattan.
Oklahoma against Oklahoma Ag
gies, at Stillwater.
Kansas against Washington, at St.
Louis.
Those Drake Bulldogs who have
recently smothered the championship
hopes of several Missouri Valley foot
ball aggregations and thus threaded
to the top of the Valley race in joint
conference leadership with Missouri,
last Saturday kicked a good share of
the proverbial juice from the dope
container by overwhelming Oklahoma
by a shutout score of 28 to 0. The
Drake victory was the feature of the
Valley grid race during the past week
since it was those same Indians that
downed the Comhuskers two weeks
ago to the tune of 14 to 7.
Missouri continued to run 6n even
terms with the Des Moines eleven in
the sprint for the mythical confer
ence crown by defeating the Kansas
Aggies 14 to 7. The Aggies were un
defeated until last week-end as was
Oklahoma. The titular honors now
remain in dispute between the Tigers
and Drake. These two Valley teams
do not meet this season, although
Drake authorities sought last winter
to book contests with both Missouri
and Nebraska.
The rumor that Drake has an easy
schedule is unfounded. The Bulldogs
have yet to meet the Kansas Jay
hawks and Ames Aggies in rounding
out the 1924 campaign, while Mis
souri must down such teams as Ne
braska, Kansas and Oklahoma . Pro
viding the Huskers trounce Missouri
this week, and Drake gets the scalps
of both Kansas and Ames, the Valley
gridiron title will likely rest undis
puted on the shouders of Drake' Uni
versity. Nebraska continued to win from
Kansas on southern sod as in -former
years by downing the Jays last week,
and already Coach Fred Dawson has
settled down to a tough week of prep
aration for the Tigers. Missouri will
probably be handicapped whe i it
meets Nebraska Saturday due tj the
absence of Coglizer who was injured
in the Aggie tussle last week. Cog
lizer is the Missouri triple-threat
performer whose educated toe beat
Chicago in the opener of the present
grid season. Doubtless the Husker
Tiger mix will hold the majority of
eyes in Valley circles this week. i
Kansas will have another chance
to take its first victory of the football
slate Saturday when the Hawks pour- j
ney to St. Louis to meet Washington, I
which won from Rolla School of
Mines last week. Oklahoma meets
a non-conference eleven, the Okla
homa Aggies, this week-end, while
the Kansas Aggies and Ames Aggies
come together at Manhattan. Rivalry
insures a tough scramble on the
southern grid.
The final lap of the Missouri Val
ley football struggle has all the
markings of a spirited race although
things may quiet down a bit should
Missouri be dusted from the fence
by the Husker crew in Saturdaf's
contest.
Members of Industrial Experiment Group
Say Work Monotonous and Hard
"Jobs were hard to find in Chi
cago this summer, and when we did
find work in factories, we found that
work ' monotonous and hard," de
clared Grace Dobish and Rose Fay
tinger, who worked for six weeks this
summer in factories as members of
the industrial experiment group of
the Y. W. C. A., in telling of their ex
periences at Vespers Tuesday eve
ning in Ellen Smith Hall.
Miss Dobish, in relating how she
worked in a bindery where the Montgomery-Ward
catalog was being as
sembled, said, "I began work at 6:45
in the evening and worked till 4:45
in the morning with a half hour off
for lunch at midnight. The work was
extremely tiring and monotonous,
and two nights of it was all I could
endure." Miss Dobish' second job
was in the twine factory of the Inter
national Harvester company. "The
work here was hard, but the sanitary
conditions were good, we had plenty
of fresh air, and we were well treat
ed," she said.
Most of the employees at this place
according to the speaker, were
foreigners who were unable to speak
English. When, upon quitting her
job, Miss Dobish was forced to admit
that she was a member of the inuds
trial experiment, her employers were
very eager to know her opinion of the
nature of the work and the conditions
in their factory. ' -
Miss Faytinger, who worked in a
radio factory, had the best-paid and
least monotonous work of all the
membprs of the industrial group. "I
think I deserved the good job after
tramping as far and as long as I did
to secure it, Miss Fay tinge' added.
Margaret Williams presided at
Vespers, and Harriett Taylor fur
nished special vocal music.
Aff Engineers to Give
Demonstration Services
The Nebraska chapter of the
American Society of Agricultural
Engineers has planned to give a series
of demonstrations at several high
schools in the near vicinity of Lin
coln. The time of these demonstra
tions has not been definitely decided
yet, but will probably be in the sec
ond week of November. They will
include soldering, the adjusting of
a binder knotter, saw filing and set
ting, valve timing, and a demonstra
tion in the care of magnetos.
A lecture will also be given by one
of the members of Alpha Zeta. The
hic-h school students will be told of
the facilities of the College of Agri
culture and of the advantages they
can gain, by attending it.
LaFollette-Wheeler
Club Hears Schoenfeld
. The LaFollette-Wheeler Club of
the University will hold a luncheon at
ttia Grand Hotel Thursday noon at
which Hon. F. W. Schoenfeld, chief
clerk of the senate in Wisconsin, and
nal friend of Robert M. LaFol-
lette, will speak. Tickets may be pur
chased of Roy Youngman who will De
; f ha Temnle buildinr during the
noon hour today. Other members of
the committee who will make reserva-
riftna are President J. J. McCarthy
Agnes Kessler and Secretary Camp
bell.
Episcopalian Club
Meets at Grand Hotel
A dinner at the Grand Hotel fal
lowed by a business meeting and
dancing took up the time of the first
meeting of the year of the Episcopal
club, Tuesday evening. Officers were
elected and plans for a party this
month discussed. Committees will be
announced later. The following are
the new officers: Jack Wimble,
president; Henry Eller, vice-president;
Ethel Bundy, secretary; John
Paul Bennett, treasurer.
TOWNSEND Portraits. "Pre
serve the present for the future."
Adv.
Three comfortable, steam-heated
rooms, open Monday, Y. M. C. A.
B6515. Adv
Thp student chanter of the Ameri
can Institute of Electrical Engineers
ar to insnect the Lincoln Gas and
Electrical Companys plant at ten
o'clock Saturday morning. Mr. am,
of the company, has
prepared guides for the visitors. This
plant has many modern improve
ments. It helongs to the Continental
!a and Electric Co., of Omaha.
ntKar" onm'neers and those inter
ested in modern electrical and gas
olants may make the trip with the
Electrical engineers The inspection
party will meet at 10 o'clock on the
Street viaduct. Saturday mornm.
wnrnn nilT COMPANY. 1120 P
Street announces that it is doubling
. i-of f rned cars, new models,
or We will appreci-
outfits? ,OiJ J
maHarnor St, h .gJ
WANT ADS
330 NO. 13 ST., L-4087, FOR RENT
Front room on ground floor.
Can accommodate 2-3. One other
room for two, also a boy wants a
roommate. All rooms very reasonable.
ROOMS FOR RENT Steam-heated,
newly furnished rooms for Uni.
girls. 2 blocks from campus, 611
' North 16th.
LOST Physiology Note Book 112 in
Mechanical Arts. Return to Daily
Nebraskan office. '
Dancing School
Learn to dance for $5.00
Free lessons if yon fail.
Franzmathes Academy
1018 N St.
Phone B6054.
LOST Black fur piece on campus.
Return to Nebraskan office. Reward.
LOST Gold pencil marked H.
Cochrane. Reward. F2606.
LOST Alpha Sigma Phi fraternity
pin. Finder call B4511.
7ENUS
V PENCILS
Skins mU QmSlg
jnTiaflw wrid
T70R the student or prot, the
A superb VENUS ont-rivals
all for perfect pencil work.
17 black degrees '3 copying.
American Lead
Pencil Co.
WO Fifth Are.
NewYesk
1 115V
r$5 vn
booklet on
Pencil! and
Venus Everpointso
MadMoieai Paneite
"We're Handy"
Stop in on your way home from
school. '
The
ogul
Barbers
(10 chairs)
127 No. 12th St.
M
This afternoon, after classed
try our
WAFFLES!!
YOU'LL FIND THEM DELICIOUS.
Crisp, golden brown, served piping hot, with
plenty of butter, and pure Vermont maple pC
syrup. With coffee, afciUV
BASEMENT LUNCHEONETTE.
SAN FORDS
FOUNTAIN PEN INK
Will Improve the Action
of Any
Fountain
Pen
ALL
COLORS
"The Ink That Made
The Fountain Pen Possible"
)
!
4 .
ft
J
Scene from "Simon Called Peter," Orpheum Theater, Thursday, Oct. 30
savis - -
Tramp.Tramp, Tramp
The Girls Are
Marching
Marching along the by
ways and the highways
in Gotham Gold Stripe
Silk Stockings.
Hard wear Gothams
give them and long
wear they get.
Not legions, not arm
ies, not multitudes
throughout U. S. A. but
hosts of women are
wearing Gothams.
They wear them be
cause they like them,
and Rudge & Guenzel's
like to sell them.
Gothams are so satis
factory. Just try a pair.
And
And
You'll come back for
other pairs for other
occasions and in other
colors.
Costs nothing to look
at them.
Costa only $1.85,
. $2.50 or $3 to buy a
pair.
Street Floor, Rudge
& Guenzel Co. .
f
V
PublhktJi
tit httrett ef EUc
Meal Divihhmtmt A
en Inttitntion tiat will
ever ktlpt the
Mtstry.
are you sure
you deserve it?
"Give me a log with Mark Hopkins at one end
of it and myself at the other," said, in effect,
Tresident Garfield, "and I would not want a
better college."
Hut if Mark Hopkins was an inspired teacher, it
is just as true that James A.Garfield was an inspir
ing student.
Sometimes Garfield's praise of his professor is
quoted in disparagement of present day faculties
the assumption being that we as listeners are
sympathetic, all that we ought to be and that
it is the teacher who has lost his vision.
Is this often the case?
It is the recollection of one graduate at least
that he did not give his professors a chance. Cold to
their enthusiasms, he was prone to regard those
men more in the light of animated text-books
than as human beings able and eager to expound
their art or to go beyond it into the realm of his
own personal problems.
This is a man to man proposition. Each has to go
halfway. Remember, there are two ends to the log.
wterti Electric Company
Whtreoer peopU leak to electricity for ths
comforts and conveniences of lift today, tie
Western Electric Company offers a service es
broad as the functions tf electricity itself.
ft mm W IS tf a
your continued patronage.
sic
OT
phona B6819. .