The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, October 13, 1926, Page 3, Image 3

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THREE DAYS ONLY
"The Speeding
Venus"
A Thriiih.f J-",11
nfftlf FIGHTIN MARINE"
M iuuh On. Tunnejr
eoN-t'KlB"ME,r
. , La ' I JUf
. ""DON'T KIO
Avalanche olLufh!L.
ALL THIS WEEK
A Story That Vibrate. , wUh
DV Uu.ht.r .nd Tear.
RICHARD
RiRIIIELME
mmm
mm
AJio Comsdr "d N. PlfM
STANLEY'S ORCHESTRA
Mr.. May M. Mill., Organist
SHOWS AT I, S, .
0,iction or L.M.CARMAN
ALL THIS WEEK
A bit eJnWJ ol fun. Uu.hter ui
Also Other Entertaining Pictures
un m .star
Harlequin Revue
A Superb Riot el
"SONG, DANCE AND MELODY
BEAVER'S NOVELTY ORCHESTRA
SHOWS AT 2:30, 7, .
0
it w .
.THIS
"WEEK
RIALTO
THIS
WEEK
FROM RAGS TO
SILK GOWNS
FROM THE SIDEWALK
TO A PALACE
DOROTHY
GISH
la
"NELL
GWYN"
A Paramount Picture
ADDED
LEOTA COMBES
Vocalist
NEWS COMEDY TOPICS
SHOWS AT 1, 3, 5, 7. .
MATS. 10c-25e EVE. 10c-35c
lMEVTRYB0WiOs.
MON TUES. WED.
Beautiful and Artistic
"HARMONIA
with
HUDNUT SISTERS
and
WEBSTER TAYLOR
Assisted by
THE PUCCINI TRIO
Ernesto Mulyic Jose
it
THE DELORTOS
California's Foremoftt
SPANISH DANCERS
Flo&Ollie Walters
A Duo of Charmlnr Artists In
"TELLING TALES"
Paramount . Trio
Versatile Entertainers In
TYPICAL TOPICAL TUNES"
Jim Penman and His Page
In the Comedy Oddity
"JOLLY MOMENTS"
NEWS and COMEDY PICTURES
BABICH and the ORCHESTRA
SHOWS AT 2:30, 7, 9.
Gigantic
IlJLSLrrrrJTn
Added
Carl Schaefer
. Lyric Taaor
rATME NEWS AESOP FABtXS
Lincoln Synpbany .Orcbeatra
Wilbur CLveaoxretb. Orgaaist
THIS
WEEK
Studio Assignments
Two mora ieti of assignments!
juniors and seniors to Ilauck's and
Townsend's studios for class pic
tures arc announced this morning; by
the editor of the 1927 book. They
should make their appointment on
the day assigned, or have the Corn
huBker staff make it for them. Infor
mation cards at the studio will fur
nish the exact copy for the class sec
tions, so it should be filled out care
fully by the upperclassmen.
To Hauck'a, Wednesday, October 13
Geraldine Fleming, Sara Jane
Floming, Gwendolyn Foote, Kather
ine Foote, Anna Ford, Christine
Forks, David Foster, Edward Foster,
Myrtha Foster, Leonidas Fowler,
Paul Fowler, Ralph Fowler, Carlton
Freous, Herbert Frederick, Mary
Louise Freeman, Dudley French,
Herbert French, Ruth French, Oscar
Fried, Anton Frolik, Louis Frost,
Harold Fulk, Harold Gleishery, Avan
Glover, Ruth Godfrey, Mina Goeh-
ring, La Rue Go IT, Elizabeth GohJey,
Jacob Goldman, Kate Goldstein,
James Good, Leroy Gore, Alfred
Gorman, Lloyd Gotcholl, Loretta
Granzer, Wayne B. Gratigny, Ira
Gilliland, Esther Gilmore, Edna Gin
gery, Dudley M. Gray.
To Town. end'., Wednesday,
October 13
Eugene W. Jacobson, Paul II.
Jacobs, Florence I. Jaeger, Edgar J.
Jallos, Irene A, Janauch, Enna C.
Jehlik, Helen L. Jenkins, Edward G.
Hennings, Jessie G. Kenning Araph
E. D. Jensen, Walter H. Jensen, Mar
tin C. Jessup, Clara B. Johnson, Elida
H. Johnson, Elmont T. Johnson, Min
nie I. Johnson, Minnie M. Johnson,
Ted Johnson, Edna Johnston, Marion
L. Johnston, Raymond S. Jolley,
Catherine W. Jones, Edwin Lloyd
Jones, Lawrence C. Jones, Mayme
Henryetta Jones, Joe Kadlecek, Nell
Kalskett, Eva Karpicek, Easter Kel-
log, Lloyd Kidwell, Alice Kiewitt,
Alta King, Dora King, Florence
King, Julian King.
To Hauck'a, Thursday, October 14.
Virginia Lee Green, Vance H.
Greenslit, Gerald E. Griffin, Sanford
Griffin, Ruth Grimmel, Otto Gross,
Grace F. Grosvenor, Geraldine N.
Grote, Bernice Marie Grunwald, Mil
dred Laura Grunwald, Millard Edwin
Gump, Freda G. Haase, Alfred L.
Hadwiger, Erma L. Hafer, Alma M.
Hahn, Marvin L. Haitle, John E.
Hale, Esther Hall, E. Sheldon Hal-
let, Eunice Hammer, Marion E.
Hampton, A. Frand Hanna, La Verne
E. Hans, Hazel Hansen, Helen Han
sen Helen Hansen, Lawrence Han
sen, Richard Hansen, Edmund R.
Harden, Virginia Claire Harman,
McGrew Harris, Beryl Harvey, Clare
Hastert, Minerva Hastings, Aleta
Hathaway, Daisy Hathaway, Arthur
Hauke, Chester Hawke, Glen Hawke,
Cloyd Hawley, Ralph Hawthorne.
To Townsend's, Thursday, October 14
Thelma King, Theodore King, Kris-
sie Kingsley, Martha Kirkpatrick,
Royal Kiser, Caroline Kivett, Hen
rietta Kivett, Alice Kleink, Merrit
Klcpser, Myrtle Kling, Theodore
Klose, Celia Klotz, Rosa Knope, Dor
othy Knapp, Targry Knudson, Wil
liam Koenig, Milan Kopac, Bernard
Kossek, Herko Koster, William Krut
ke, Walter Kriemelmeyer, Ira Kroese
Katherine Krotter, Lorraine Kuse,
Franklin Kyker, Helen Kyle, James
Lang, Marion La Bounty, Eliseo Lad
emora, William Lambert, Silvia Lam
son, Charles Lane, Helen Lang, Rob
ert Lang, Dollie Langdon, Mary
Langevin, Liel Lanyon, Mildred Lar
son, Neal Laubach, Mary Lawless.
Hardy Smith
BARBER SHOP
Clean towel used on each cus
tomer. 9 CHAIRS
116 No. 13th Street
The Hauck
Studio
Skoa gland
Photographer
Ex
I
rA
B-2991
EjgEJSEIHSISEISai
Standard
Rent-A-Ford Co.
1137 P street B-1644
New Place ' New Cars
Fords Buicks Cole 8
Lowest Rates. Court eou
Service. No Deposit
Required
THE DAILY NEBRASKA!
Better Crops Special" Described
In October Cornhusker Countryman
Description of the "Better Crops
Special," run last sumer bv the Col
lege of Agriculture, ia contained in
the October Cornhusker Countryman.
"The 'Better Crops Special' tour
covered the entire Union Pacific sys
tem in Nebraska," writes Glen Buck,
editor, and stops were made at more
than forty towns where large crowds
saw and listened to the programs.
The Univorsity of Nebraska Colletre
of Agriculture prepared the majority
or tho exhibits shown In this train
that toured the state.
The tour began at Lincoln and the
first stop was mado at Stromsburg,
The last program was sriven at Buah-
nollrf in the extreme western part of
the state.
E. G. Clay, assistant supervisor of
agriculture of the Union Pacific Rail
road, had charge of the proerams
and gave a short introductory talk
at most of the stops. Chris and Louis
Vomer, both of the agricultural de
partments of the Union Pacific, as
sisted in managing each of the pro
grams.
The apparatus for treatinir wheat
for smut by the copper carbonate
method caused considerable interest,
and D. L. Gross." aeronomsit at the
College of Agriculture explained how
the copper carbonate mixer could be
made at home, and remarked that no
wheat grower could afford to be
without one if his wheat was usually
infected with smut. "The loss to Ne
braska farmers from smut is more
than $2,000,000 annually," said Mr.
Gross in his talk from the special
train.
Five cars containing exhibitions
made up the train: The first car in
cluded exhibits showing tho develop
ment of different improved strains of
grains that have been worked out by
the Nebraska Experiment Station;
alfalfa and sweet clover seed were
shown in the second car with pictures
showing the effect of winterkilling;
the third car as equipped with ex
hibits from the Omaha Grain Ex
change, showing how all grain that
goes into the Omaha market is in
spected and graded; apparatus for
the treatment of wheat to prevent
smut was located on the fourth car;
and the final car held an exhibit of
radio equipment by the McGraw
Electric Company, from which music
was provided for all programs.
Two bushels of seed wheat were
awarded to each of two farmers who
were considered to be among the best
farmers in every community" where
the train stopped. This seed wheat
waS presented in behalf of Mr. Carl
Gray, president of tho Union Pacific,
and had been treated with the cop
per carbonate for smut.
Valuable First Editions Feature
Book Collection in Bessey Hall
Have you ever gone into a museum
and seen under a glass cover, pro
tected by lock and key, a page from
a rare first edition? In the private
collection of Prof. T. J. Fitzpatrick,
librarian at Bessey Hall, there are
hundreds of these volumes, all rare
and extremely valuable.
Professor Fitzpatrick's collection
includes over two hundred volumes
of Linneaus, the founder of modern
botany, who lived in the early eight
eenth century. His works are in
Swedish, Latin and French. The col
lection rivals that of the New York
Botanical Gardens, and the one in
St. Louis.
Most of the early volumes are re
ligious treatises. The oldest was
printed in 1475 in Venice. It is a
small, leather-bound book. The print
er had started to illuminate the capi
tals, but his work has been left un
finished, and one may see penciled
tracings for the unfinished letters.
Another volume, printed in 1487,
is a large book bound in vellum, with
a coat of arms stamped on the front
and back. It bears on the margin no
tations in the hand of some early
scholar. Another, printed in 1482,
shows the beginning of a thumb in
dex by small strips of leather fasten
ed to the pages. Its covers are of
wood, and it has a large iron clasp,
corners and decorations.
Flexement
Cementing Process
For those who care. We resole
your shoes so you cannot de
tect the splice in the sole.' We
use no tacks Give it a trial.
Capital Shoe Shop
and Shining Parlor
1236 "O" Phone L-8179
A very valuable book it Ptolemy's
Astronomy. The tables printed in this
book were recently reprinted by the
Carnegie Institute. The Boke of St.
Albans, by Dame Juliana Beiners, in
cluded treatises on hawking, hunting,
and cote armor. Pliny's great natural
history, printed in 1483, compiled all
the natural history known to the
world at that time. It was the work
of Pliny, the great Roman general,
who was later killed in an eruption
of Mount Vesuvius.
A volume celebrated through all
the Middle Ages was the Roman
father's Agricultural Work a col
lection of writings on rural affairs
by a number of Roman authors.
The volumes are all printed on
pure rag paper, which is very heavy
and rough. The capitals at the chap
ter headings are beautifully hand il
luminated, and the capitals through
out the text are decorated. There are
about thirty volumes in the collec
tion, which dates before 1500.
Leadership Training
Training in leadership of organ
ized summer camps was given sixty
five women at the University of Wis
consin last year.
PARTY FROC
of
TAFFETA, GEORGETTE, YELVET
$29
DAINTY, smart, dresses in unusually attractive
styles and fine materials at this low price.
There rfre sheer georgettes with ostrich trimming,
with brilliants, and with fine picoted ruffles in
panel effect, crisp .taffetas in changeable color
effects and two-tone combinations, velvets with
scalloped skirts, and soft silks with full tujle
flounced skirts.
Bouffant, draped and straight line styles in
light and dark colors.
LIPSTICK RED, BLACK. CERISE, FLESH,
PINK, ROSE, ORCHID, WHITE, PEACH, CREEN,
FLAME.
Second Floor
Mill! II I"'" '
,,, I-" nan m nam mmwmmmkmm m i mm ' 1 ''"' '""-' "'" mm
THIS IS THE UNIVERSITY
FURNITURE STORE
Security Mutual Barber Shop, 12&0
On Twelfth Street
3 Doors South of Temple
GRAVES
School Supplies
4io6t
jyy Remington Fortaole
f
The Recounted Leader ia
Soles and Popularity
THE RemtagtonPortable is almost
human in its adaptability to your
problems. Maybe you araon the track
team possibly you are out for crew
and yon need all the spare time you
can get. That's where the Reming
ton Portable shines. It speeds up
your work and gives yon more time
for other activities.
It is the handiest,fttStest,moet depend
able and simplest to operate of all
portables. It weighs only SH pounds,
net, and since the carrying case is
only 4 inches high, you can put It
away in a drawer when not needed.
Smallest, lightest, and most compact
of standard keyboard portables, ia it
any wonder it is the reoogaiMod
lot t" in e ancf popularity ?
2Vnna as low as $10 down
and 45 ptontbjy. '
- COLLEGE BOOK STORE
113S R Street
Lincoln, Nebr.
REMINGTON TYPEWRITER COMPANY
Room 101, Beakers' Life Isre Bldf.
Cor. N & 14th St.
Lincoln, Nebr.
iiiiiiMimiiiniiim miimiiimiiu iiuiiu iiiimiiiiiiiiiiiimHtiiiiiimimmi mini1
Visit Floor Four Now
:iimuiinmi imiiiiMiiiiiiiqiniiiiiiiiMimiiam uimniiiuimiuiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiitiiiiiiiiimiitii mmimiimiiiimiiMmiiiiiiiiiuimiiiinwi
i ' J
r fax" ' ' - :
j iirli - i a-fc nnin.inl.it i, i -
Foar-mila belt eonmyoi ha longett in thm world initmlhd In m Pannmylrania mine
tot transporting coal horn mines to tint bargaa. Elaotno moton oparata thia conveyor.
j
90,000 Wheelbarrows in one hand
A button is pressed. An electric motor goes
to work, followed by another and still others
until twenty sections of a belt conveyor
four miles long are in operation!
Through an abandoned mine runs this giant
wheelbarrow carrying nine thousand tons
of coal per day in a steady stream from the
miners to the coal barges on the Monon-
gahela River. One man controls it with no
more effort or concern than pressing a
switch button. Electricity pushes it
Not only conveyor belts of all sizes, shapes
and kinds, but also hoists, tractors, cranes,
elevators, stackers, locomotives, and other
material-handling equipment have gained
flexibility, dependability, and ease of control
through electric motorization.
Moving things in one way or another is the
educated man's work in life. And electricity,
ever at his command, is moving more and
still more of the things which move this
new world of ours.
' The General Electric Company
has devoted years of study to
material-handling and trans,
portation problems. In its own
vast plants the handling and
moving of materials and prod
ucts have been simplified to
the highest degree, thus provid
ing a daily demonstration f
the value of electricity.,
A series of O-E advertisements
showing what electricity ia
doing in many fields will be
sent on request. Ask for book,
let GEK-1.
7-SIDH
Ei V U l lJtar l-i far r S am am
SLECTEIC
A
Ot N K R A L
CHBNRCTADT NEW YOB.
SHOWS AT I, , B, 7, .
MATS. 10c-35c EVE. 10 -SO.
IlICTRIC COMPANY