TtfM DAILY MBA ALL THIS WEEK fffwildMt, W. lri.it. MmI Wen r'lcf.rs ( All Turns AT 1. a. ft. 7. 9. M ATS 25c N1TE 0c. BOXES BOc ORPHEUM 2 D f ARTING FRIDAY v. 'EMBER 20 MA" ' ' n-ROAY PR USE NEWEST COITION BRINGING DP FATHER IN GAT N3W YORK CARTOON MUSICAL COMEDY mmtec f httv ravs ttASott fKiCES Matinee 25c 50c Any Seat E rvainc 50c A l-00 Phis Tax l?..w1ttlttlVlMlwi ALL THIS WEEK BIG VAUDEVILLE ROAD SHOW Aa tnr'rrwit (Juexerelled in Danc ing Act and AppeaJinc Beauty in creations from every land "A DANCE VOYAGE- CHAS. LEAH Farfe it Richard Producing THE LOCAL GIRL- MARY GORDON DeH 4t Bennett Saa a Youthful Sana Ro "CRINOLINE DAYS" BOB OLYETTE A P.nl Haft ntinf LIKE tin "AS YOU Lloyd Nevada Sc. Co. In Fascinating "MIRTH AND MYSTERY NEWS AND COMEDY PICTURE ADDED ATTRACTION MATINEE ONLY A Superb Featara Picture "THE PEOPLBJ VS. NANCY PRESTON" With An AH Star Cast FEATURE STARTS AT 2:40 SHARP BABICH ANPjrHEORCHESTRA SHOWS AT 2:30, 7:00 .sOO MATS. 35e" NITE 50c. GAL. 20c LYRIC 2 PreaaPjilpU Public Eearyaais whs tas seen thhj romance in a sxranse . "IZji-- ....... that it photoplay ever presented hi Lincoln. Sir Cewnn Doyle's Stupendous Story "THE LOST WORLD" with Bessie Lees. Lewis. Stone. Wallace Beery. Lloyd Hushes I IN,COLM - THEATRE x Shews 1, . S, 7, Mats. Sees Nlte SOct Chfl. 10e iimiiiiiiiimimiiimmiimmmiiiimiiiininiiiiiiiiBmiimiii" RIALTOThardrL oMllCURVOOD'S QQamnatQlctav' MAT. 20c NITE WRECKING CREWS HARD AT ' WORK ON UNIVERSITY HALL (Continued from Page Ons.) on it, khich state that it was made in 1871 by the Troy Bell Foundry of Troy, New York. On the opposite side it says "University of Nebras ka, organised February 1869." The design of the bell was patented in 1855, according to a prominent no tice on the top part of it. Future disposition of the bell has not been decided. One suggestion has been made to make it a part of the memorial to the building planned on the ground where U Hall now stands. Another plan suggested is to keep it in the University radio studio and broadcast its chimes as part of the University radio program. The old tower was in danger of collapsing only a few years after the building was completed. Wood en framework had to be built inside of it to keep it from falling down. Before the beams and supports were installed, the tower swayed notice ably in strong winds. There was a pronounced swaying even after the reinforcing timber was put up. The shaky old stairs now lead up to the top. In one part of the tower walls where the bricks seem to be especi ally soft, small tunnels have been gnawed by the big rats which abound in University Hall by the hundreds. There are visible two outlets to one of these burrows, which seem to come up into the tower from down below, and reaches up to the top. The wall may be hollow in parts by construc tion as it is on the third floor. The last boxes and faculty effects stored away in the attic were moved out yesterday afternoon. A box of soological and botanical specimens, labeled 'Herbarium Specimens" were taken out of one of the north attic rooms. There was a cigar box in the colection filled with birds eggs wrap ped in cotton. In the same place was uncovered a paper packing box full of miscel laneous old magazines among which I was a Review of Reviews from the year 1895. Some law books printed at the beginning of the present cen tury were also found up there. CORN HUSKERS WILL BE HONOR CONTENDERS (Continued from Page One.) with a bad muscle in his left leg, but showed up better yesterday eve ning. Searle has been bothered with his hip again lately. Four of the six runners will be running their last cross country race for Nebraska Saturday. They are I Paul Zimmerman, captain of last year, Lester Lawson, James Searle, (and Jack Ross. Injuries resulting j from a mid-summer operation will keep Captain Lewis out of the line up. The other two runners making 'the trip are Frank Hays and Carl i"Reller. COLONIAL wSk ZANE GREY Presents tfaa Thrilling Komanre Code tt West With a Great Cat of Favorites "SLIPPERY httl" Contin-iou Laurbter With BOBBY VERNON THfc ADVENTURES OF MAZIE" Fifth Eneitnif Story EXTRA THURS. FRL SAT. W -THE ACE of spades shows AT I. S. a, 1. raise! is the moat asl miuihiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii"1""""" e "ir i... mi, m 30o CHIL. .Oc University Hall There is no one to understand this place. Destroy it quickly, tear the powdered walls; Stop not to see the yellow fragments fall, Rebound in dust and quiver in the sun! Here is a body with the spirit fled, Hollow, forgotten. Don't pretend to grieve, You headlong and impious ones who swarm About it now! You're of another race. Where is the spirit of this barren place, This loyal, ruined, ill-made house of ours? Wherever keep the heroes of the plains, Wherever wait the hopes of driven years, Wherever rest the souls of pioneers. M. C. THOMAS. (Written for English 109 class in Poetics) The College Press j UNCLE SHYLOCK j In a day when the economic basis J of international relations is becoming fully recognized, the soundness of a , world court should be even more real ized than it was in the days when jwe naively believed nations went to jWar chiefly in the defense of great and humanitarian principles. The I complexity of economic problems re quires for their adjustment research statistics, interpretations, in short the patient work of experts. Such work requires a permanancy or organiza tion and personnel that is the very opposite in nature to the diplomatic conferences and prime minister's councils through which world prob lems are still commonly tackled. This permanency and expert nature is the principle upon which the world court is based. How much the world's political problems are economic problems and how futile the traditional diplamatic machinery is in meeting them has been illuistrated in the unsatisfactory operation of the treaty of Versailles provisions. It required a commission of financial and economic experts, the Dawes commission ,to patch up the numerous holes in the ship of pece after it came out of the hands of the Versailles shipmakers. We are not sure yet whether the business juimmiMiiiimiiiiHmuimmMHmiutmHiiiiuiHiimmimtHiiimmiimmnuwiimiim I University Players j I Opening m THE CHILDREN'S THEATER I . With 1 Marian Deforest's 1 "Little Women" 1 You have read Louise Alcott's famous novel, see the play. Matinee and Evening- Saturday, November 21 I Price 25c Temple Theater Seats on sale at the door f iimuwmmimimmimiitiinmmtwimmiiimttHimiiimtmimmmimHHniMi jiiuiiuiiiMiiiuiuliimiiiiiimiiiimimiiimMMimll iiiuhiiiiiiiiimiii ti We Must! lb N Dame TT We men have done a lasting job, but it appears to be more craftsman-like than the work of statesmen. The economics of the international situation is recognized in the sug gestion for an economic Washington conference. It is also apparent in the open fear of European countries of Wall street's stranglehold on the world finances. Talk of a "world pact" to insure America the financial hegemony of the nations of the world was sounded in the German newspa pers recently. The imperialism of America which the nations of the world wear is not the invasion of the weak countries by our marines to protect the "rights of Americans property abroad." The new imperialism is the tyranny of the creditor. It is the Shylock im perialism. And America for a large part of the world is uncle Shylock now. Floyd Robbins Will Play at Convocation The weekly music convocation will be at eleven o'clock on Thursday, November 19, in the Temple theatre. Floyd Robbins, pianist, will play the following selections: Waltz-Op. 64 No. 2; Waltz Op. 42; Etude-Op. 25 No. 3; and Etude-Op. 25 No. 9, all by Chopin. Amini's Oriental Sere nade, Cyril Scott's Lento, and Liszt's Campanella will also be played by Mr. Robbins. iiiiiiiiiiiiiii iiliitiiiwnmii mmiliniiiiiiuHiiiitiMiiiHillii Minimum AT ofxe wm FIND ANCIENT ATHLETIC AWARD IN "U" HALL ATTIC (Continued from Page One.) flat He scored 68 points. W. E. Andreson won the fence vault by go ing over 6 feet 3Vi inches. He was given 89 points. Mr. Andreson was also winner of the high jump, 6 feet 2V4 inches for 82 points. Only one award tablet was found from the second contest in 1897. It was to R. N. Brothers, who won third individual honors. He vaulted 8 feet and 10 inches, exceeding the first year's mark one and half inches. His high jump mark was 4 feet and 11 inches; 12-lb. shot put, 23 feet, 2 inches. He was the one who jumped a rope 63 times in 4 minutes. He received S59 points. The tablets may be put into the new field house as part of the ath letic historical collection. They are now in the office of R. B. Saxon of the physical plant department. Early I13f23 S.le.peopl. I . Jf SMART WEAR JL jia FOR WOMEN ..u S U Att..d.c 5KT,222.224 0 STREET to i i H Phoenix Hosiery in Wool Wonderful val offered in these Phoenix hose of fine silks and wools in four price grade At $1.50, $1.75, 1.85 and $1.95 - - - Lutsch EroB., .Tockcr L Clein, Colors a Silk ml Chiffon r i tTm' - . j$ 13 Rose. taupe. gunaMtai. at- 4 fS l t'tj Colors in Wool Cray. blue. B Q mospbera. blondinc aad(other w iSjgQTTjS tea. white and Scotch plaid. . M Lifetime Write it don't sin& The chances are that youll do a better job with F a "Lifetime" pen. Ana youll have the satisfac- M ticm of knowing, when you write to her, that you are working, with the "niftiest" instrument procurable. Of fcreen, jade-reen radite, a hand- 13 jtfgjhs some and irdestructible material, is the pen ?$M youTl love to hold. Its nib is guaranteed for a pQSjT lifetime. But what is more important, it is en in- ?Ly3 (ffiffift fallible performer. At better stores everywhere. Mca ril'r Price. $8.75 SatAtnl' tpedal, S7S0 Other lower 3 fcftxH "Lifetime" Titan overnze pencil to match. $425 J&r$?sQL (HhpQL Shraffat Sii in mrmmwtaink ami m mil neas nvae heme JiQSi 'IlipBx QHEAFFEP' xJpll SSi PENS' PENCILS' SKRI Pam fC'fi WJr V.ASHEAfTM-EJfOOKPAKT Z-V C6&S ill T CiTrDT ansiaaanmem ' Of, xJ-?' Exchanges One of the oldest traditions at Yale was recently broken when a student ballot revealed that senti ment was against compulsory chapel. The longest hike undertaken by the Hikers club of Louisana State Uni versity was from Baton Rouge to New Orleans, distance of eighty miles. Original names for dances appear ed in the Oregon University paper with announcements of a coming "Journalism Jam" and a "Junior Jazz Jinks.' Nineteen hundred sites of Indian culture, including remains of vil lages, camps, burial grounds, and the like, were reported in eastern Penn sylvania in a certain survey. Foottccar Shop Starting Wednesday and Continuing till Saturday A Pre-Thanksgiving Sale of 1000 Pairs FOOTWEAR A truly remarkable feature purchase from our reeu lar manufacturers, permits this greatest of all Serae son Hovland footwear sales. An opportunity yea should earerly (rasp. The season's smartest styled footwear that should sell regularly to $10; choice in sale 5 Styles for all occasions All the new leathers and satins All sices and widths High, low ad mili tary heels Here are values that should piampt the selection of aeverel purs. Augmenting this great purcsu are several hundred pairs frees ear regular atoch. You 11 be astonished at the wonderful values which await yea here Wednesday. aes are W have a fentnred al- Q et&T 1 m oe in the $1.50 grade, fr V packed i at tractive j2 ' J hones of three pairs. Qj rLi 3 pIr 5,-so quu S Prff itv in box for $4 (l For Ealw fcy Cc"cjo Esci Ctcre, C. Elisoa An exhibition of German children's artwork opened at Stanford univer sity recently. The collection was sent to the German department by the Smithsonian Institute at Washington. In his innugural speech. President Little of the University of Michigan declared that 85 per cent of college studenta are a drawback for the seri ous minded student. Curiosity There's only one place to get the essential informa tion on your "S. P." THE STUDENT DIRECTORY and Silk VLZIzt Co, Iftfrr Ir-i Ci. s r