..Aur FC DEPARTMENT 11 WILL HAVE DISPLAY jh Horn Economics department hajs mad arrangements to have an hlblt of Historic silks and costumes ? November. This exhibit will In- dude ilk nJ ctume" from the Renaissance to Dlrectoire Period. They are loaned to the department by the Chemis Brothers Silk firm. -a- IV 1 in ON THE STAGE Lea and HI Tan Madcap Al.o Harriet Cruia, Kenuar, Ermawalla Wadlow Son,, al Scotland, "Inaid Dopa" Sportlit. Nawa. Fabla. Show I, 3, B, T LINCOLN a a 10lC3Bl NIM lOo-BOe. THIS WEEK tx IBIS WEEK MON-TUES WED. Three Dya Only A Thrilling Photoplay "Shipwrecked" romantic adventure with SEENA OWEN AND JOSEPH 3CHILDK RAUT sHONEYMOOfrHoSPlTAE" Continuoui Laughter 'iTHEFiCllTINCrMATlTOE With Can Tunney SHOWS AT I, 3, 8, T, mmm Dramatic, Alluring, Thrilllnr with JOBYNA RALSTON AMD LOUISE DRESSER A Naw Van Bibbar Comedy with EARLE FOXE Newa and Screen "THE Noveltie STAGE RICHARD LOWE Chinaa Barltana STANLEY'S ORCHESl Mn. May M. Mill., Orr.nlit NoTE LfiwER PRICES MATS. 20c, NITE 30c, CHIL. 10c vaiiDKVII.LK (iZM VRYB0CrriOcs. THURS., FRI., SAT. A Joyful BiU ol Varied Entertainment Betty & Jerry Browne "SONGS THINGS LIKE THAT Grant Gardner "KING OF HOKUM" Ray Shannon & Co. In "JUNE AND BUCKEYES" Julaa Chaa. Howard & Harris Aaaiated By HELEN LE ROY In "FLASHES FROM LIFE" Alio news comedy BABtCH and tha ORCHESTRA SHOWS AT 2:30, 7:00, : 00 oiCf'ON or L.M. CARMAN I ALL THIS WEEK STEP LIVELY Here' a Picture Warm Aa Lif. with Laughter, Thrill and Adventure THE DAILY NEBRASKAN 8 Studio Assignments Junior to Hauck', Thursday, October 21 Jacob Nackenoff, Verna Nash, Lan dta Nealy, Doll Neben, Blanche Neeley, Howard Nehrbaa, Claborm Nelson, Dewey Nemetz, Clalra Nes tor, Russel Nettleton, Herbert Neve leff, George Newburn, Helen New comer Raymond Nicholson, Zelma Nickola, Raymond Nledcrhaus, Mar garet Nielsen, Caroline Nienhueser, Jane Noble, Eleanor Noh, Patrick Freshman Initiation in Old Days Makes Present Seem Child's Play (New York City by New Student Service) In the bold bad colleire days of yore, the present-day fresh man Initiation ceremonies would be sneered at as mere child's playj an! as ror the tendency to do away with stunU of all aorta that , would be looked upon as nothing- less than stark madness. In those days the best minds of the campus were enlisted In the invention of DToteiimia anrl Noora. Louis Nore. Oscar Norllnc. terHfvlno- itnot J "' t' Dorothr Nf' What wer, these initiation, like! erick Nye. Veronica O'Brien, Lee in Four Yeara at Yale, L. H. Bagga Ockman, Thelm. Olmsted Charles describes auch a ceremo It P Olmsted. Myron Olseen Gl.dy. 01- ceeded somewhat in this fashion: own, vuer vruway, ran urr, mar- Th fre.r.n,n I. 1a tha Osthoff, Herman Otte, Raymond folded from hi room tA Otto, Beah Overcash, Harold Ober houser. Senior to Towniend's, Thuraday, October 21 Winefred Sain, Donald Sampson, forth blind a mysterious place of pitch darkness. Someone blows a horn in his ear; an inner door opens and a hoarse voice calls out his name. He ia pushed roughly forward by a red devil assisted by a Alice Sanderson, Margaret Saunders, living skeleton that gleams phosphor Kenneth Sawyer, Ethel Saxton, Ted escently. He ia spirited upward in Schiefen, Frances Schenbeck, Alma the voice. Reaching what appears an Schlichting, Leland Schmidt, Elmer! elevation of several hundred feet he Schmitt, Theodore Schole, Helen is assured by the increasing noise Schrader, John Schroyer, Clara that he has finally reached the in- LYIMC! ALL THIS WEEK Not for Many Moon. Hava W Oifarad Such a Splandid Pro gram DOROTHY MACKAILL JACK MULHA1X and CHARLES MURRAY ON THE STAGE "Dance-O-Mania" A Preteatleea Offering with CECELIA BLAIR Marie Meckel! CaicafV Radio Favorite CONAWAY BEAVER and BOYS Oh, What Aa Orcheetral SHOYS AT 1:301 TiOO, t OO. MATS. Sac. NITE KOc, CHIL. 10 Schuebel, Alice Schultz, Elsie Schu macher, John Seidell, Alma Selk, Rozell Semler, Mary Sard, Emmett Settle, Elizabeth Shepherd, Sherrard, Wilbur Sherrard, Shields, Paul Shildneck, Wilbur Shrader, Hazel Shrum, Mrs. Erea Sievera, Neola Skala, Cleo Slagel, Clark Smaha, Louise Smetana, Fred Smidt, Irvin Smit, Cyrena Smith, Laurence Smith, Rudolph Smith, Em ma Snapp, Esther Srethen, Iola Sol. so, Lucille Sorenson, Glen Spahn, John Speer, Richard Spohn. quisitorial chamber. Someone jostles against him, and down he goes, down, down, until he strikes an awaiting Wayne , blanket Lester Paul Good Talks To World Forum Group (Continued from Page One.) ity. In eliminating the Bible as authority he stated that the Bible had not stood the test of history or of reason when read literally. Then he said that he did not believe man kind was required to give its con science over to any organization, in eliminating the Roman Catholic church as authority. He proceeded to show the establishment of the Holy Church and its perpetuation as described in the Bible and pointed to the work of its early councils in which much of the Christian reli gion was formulated. He denied the right of any individual or branch of the church to speak for the whole church and pointed out that since the unfortunate division of the church there had been no more def initions of Christian faith. "I believe that the main defense of the church rests in an undivided church," Mr. Good declared. "The function of the church is to guide people. The Christian religion is es sentially a religion to be lived. But it is also a reason for living. A sympathetic understanding of it is necessary." Smoking Allowed in Colorado Smoking which had been prohib ited for 15 years on the campus of the Colorado Agricultural college is now permissable. The ruling was tern porarily lifted during the war and ever since it has been difficult to en force the rule. As a result the present taction has been taken. Have You Noticed That unsightly complex ion and uncut hair never accompany a man on the road to success in the good old U. S. A. Liberty Barber Shop E. A. WARD, Lib. Th. Bid. Tosed in Air Like Sancho Panza at the Inn he is tossed into the air again and again, amid shrieks of "Go it Freshie," "Well done Sub," "Shake him up," until a new candidate demands the attention of the tossers. Then he is sufficiously told to rest himself in a chair, the seat of which lets him into a pail of water, though a large sponge usually saves him from a bad wetting; his head and hands are thrust through a pillory and he is reviled in that ignoble pose. He is rolled in a huge squirrel's wheel, a noose is thrown around his neck, and he is placed under the guillotine. Then the bandage is whisked from his eyes, and he sees above the glit tering knife of block tin, which falls within a foot of his throat and can not possibly go further. Being thus executed he is thrust into a coffin, which is hammered upon with such energy that he is at length brought to life, pulled out again, and made to wear his coat with the inside out wards as an indication that the ordeal is over. There is of course the less cheer ful side of hazing; which has not yet been entirely done away wilh. In Salt, Charles Norris describes such an affair in a tense and graphic pas sage that has all the earmarks of autobiography. It happened in a shambling adolescent state univer sity in the west where men were un mistakably He. Griffith Adams along with other candidates to a fraternity had been led blindfolded to a wooded spot several miles from the sity. univer- Flailing Encountered An uproarious din prevailed around a huge Are. The men were told to bend over. -'The blows were given mercilessly, ruthlessly; behind them were all the strength of young arms." When this flailing had progressed for some time they were ordered to form a line behind a wagon loaded with beer and upper classmen. They marched along and broad paddles were wielded as they went, and some times those paddled fell over and had to be tossed up into the wagon. The effect is beBt conveyed by Nor ris' own words. "From the feel of the heavy construction of the part of the wagon to which he clung,' the sound of the alow grinding wheels the frequent shouts of the driver Griffith gathered that the big truck was drawn up a steep rutty hill by four struggling horses. In the wagon to which he was obliged to struggle to retain his grip, there were many cases of beer. With every heavy jolt he could hear the clink of bottles. Sophomores, juniors and seniors con stantly clambered upon the tail board before him, swinging themselves into the swaying truck and helping them selves. A little later, after he had lost his place at the head of the line and dropped farther down its length, Griffith saw that some of those with sticks in their hands had become be' fuddled with what they had drunk. One blow, aimed at his legs, crashed across his wrist and knuckles; an other hit him at the point of the knee cap. frequently as the halting march progressed, beer was squirted in his face and poured over his neck; it was sticky ana coia ana the smell nauseating. He became dizzy and sick, presently, with pain and fatigue. He lost his sense of time and place and held only to the thought that sooner or later the ordeal must cease, the fearful agony of blows upon his bruised and mangled thighs come to an end. On and on he stumbled; swaying biinaiy irom siae to siae, staggering and reeling, clutching tightly to the beer-soaked coat of the boy before him." j Learn to DANCE In Classy Studio Luella G. Williams Guarantee's to teach you in six lessons. Toddle and all late steps. Reductions to students. Call for appointment. B4258 I220 D St- Pharmacy Graduate Takes Big Position Joseph G. Noh, graduated from the college of pharmacy In 1923, was recently appointed secretary and treasurer of tha Pennsylvania Phar macutlcal association. His head quarters are at Harrisburg, Pennsyl vania. Last year Mr. Noh was instructor in Pharmacy at Purdue university at Lafayette, but accepted this position with the Pharmacutical association at Harrisburg, because he felt that there were greater opportunities for constructive work there. He is, in reality the Business Man ager of the Pennsylvania association, and devotes all of his time to that work. Among other things he has started is the "Pennsylvania Phar maceutical", a monthly journal re presenting the interests of that state. ship demanda the exercise of atten tion which cuta off the individual from his fellows. This solitude of mind is Incompatible with the gre garious instinct. "Tha habit of smoking devitalizes ambition. "That same poison or poisons in the smoke acting upon the central nervous system produces a deterior ation of nervous tissue leading di rectly to a lower mental output." The New Student. Nearly one thousand football fans accompanied the Kansas Jayhawkers to Manhattan last Saturday for the K. U.-Aggie game. More than 800 school and college newspapers were entered in tha sixth annual All-American newspaper con test of the Central Ir.teracholaatie Press association at the University of Wisconsin. Students from every state in the Union except Delaware attended tha summer session at the university of Wisconsin last year. MMTf-S . - ' CaplalbgiarcgCo. 'a 1 9 SOL I2TV 5T. LINCOLN. NEB. x f VZ e 3 Off t Lawr.no! Don't for rt to at thoaa clotbaa ia .hap. bafora you fa. Better five youreelf plenty of lima J P VARSITY CLEANERS Roy Wyther, Mgr. B3367 316 No. 12 St, New Nebraska Uni Stationery See it at Graves 3 W south of Tempi 1-4 1 mW:,P& v JhJ rJarararaavk. J. - I irm e a gZLl Tailored At Rfidiesier And fresh daily-almost like your favorite fruit. Braeburn is forever sending us new things-the very last word in original ideas-until the next one arrives: Professor Concludes Smoking but "Social Habit'AHer Study Do not inhale. It is injurious to scholarship. That is the conclusion Dr. J. Rosslyn Erp of Antioch Col lege arrives at in his book, "Tho Stu dent who Smokes," based on a statis tical study of the problem. These general conclusions are drawn from his study: "The smoker smokes because it is a social habit. He has a low scholar ship because he is sociable. Scholar- You Will Need Gifts some time. Come in now and pick them out. A small payment will se cure them for you. Diamonds, Watches, Clocks, Silverware, Pens and pencils. Fenton B. Fleming Jeweler 1143 "O" St. Know Transfer X? This is the LIQUID for transferring WALL PAPER DESIGNS upon cloth. Transfer X is now sold in our Wall Paper Department on Floor Four where free demonstrations are going on every day. RAYOLA A Myriad of Uses For This Lustrous Fabric Rayola is so popular priced and practical that you can now make up any number of the most delightful things to wear and for the home at very little cost. It has a brilliant sheen because of the pure tussah silk, and is extra durable because of the finish Egyp tian cotton used. The fabric is Satinized and that gives it its per manent finish. Rayola is the ideal fabric to work with. It does not cling nor curl, and may be used wherever all silk pongee, tub silk, radium or changeable taffeta is used. Rayola is rich in ap pearance and will delight you ; its strength will sur- prise you. Forty shades to choose from, used for J ft slips, draperies, dresses, pajamas, hats, linings, m blouses, kiddies wear, lamp shades, bloomers, pil V na lows, and bed spreads. Ask to see this satinized silk and cotton fabric. 36 in. wide yard. Wash Goods Section Street Floor. ST! ti elz Mioes Crowded With Style And Big Values At $6 to $10 So outspoken are the values, so convincing the style in Selz 6hoes that it is no wonder hundreds of Lincoln men are changing their shoe maker. Selz $6 Oxford-Sclz Royal Blue $8 You can make it pay by coming to Simon's and being fitted with a pair of Selz shoes. You will be assured of comfort, satis faction, good looks, long service and the world's greatest shoe value. Selz Shoes $6 to $10 i I