The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, March 23, 1927, Page 3, Image 3

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    THE DAILY NEBB ASEAN
tCKMLtStStKg,
Winters) wJlw,u,D,a,wS w'
1 1 IV 3I9 50. I2T ST,
.XiK 1 iMfni.M. NEB.
LYRIC
ALL THIS
WEEK
THEATER
The Pierre Watkin Players
Present
"WHITE
COLLARS"
Mats. Tues. Thurs., Sat.
Next Week Pierre Watkin In
" "THE OLD SOAK"
Phone B-4S7S For Ticket
5IT
hy Razors S!
Sharper with Williams
TT THEN you lather up with Williams Shaving
V V Cream you do a real job of beard-softening.
For Williams lather is saturated with moisture
moisture which soaks the stubble so soft that razors
just Tide through. That's why there's no razor "pull"
with Williams, why all razors seem sharper. In 35c
and 50c tubes at all dealers,
Villiaiiis Shaving Cream
r v -
P
If You Live Within Fifty Miles of Lincoln Motor In
and Enjoy These Splendid -Programs
vaiAjevillk Kg
-whRI EVERYBODY -cots
MON.-TUES.-WED.
6-Big Vaudeville Acts-6
The Orphrutn Circuit Headliner
JIMMIE HUSSEY
In Hie Latest Offering
"UNEASY STREET"
Assisted by EDDIE HICKEY t
MUSIC LAND
A Symphonic Melanra with
THE FRENCH SISTERS
Different, Distinctive. Delifhtful
Europe', Moot Vers til. Artist.
Four Bradnas
, featurinf the
Girl on tha Flaming Table
Tabor & Green
Er'ffJ?' S,oni Funster.
TWO DARK KNIGHTS"
harry myna
Seymour & Cunard
VoIgast & Girlie
TrJP Plfarent Duo of
Iropical Entartainer Supreme
"AB1CH and tha ORCHESTRA
SHOWS AT-2:S0. 7:00, . 00
TS2Sc. NITE SOc. CA1 20c
COLONIAL
Ml
MILTON SILLS JN "PUPPETS"
AX-SQ GOOD COMEDY, NEWS AND TOPICAL PICTURES.
Syracuse, Neb., anticipates a snir-
ited fight over Sunday movies in their
spring election. Another contest that
promises to be of interest is that of
six candidates for the three vacancies
on the city council.
RIALTO now
CONWAY
TEARLE AND
MAE
MiinriAVi
itr j
a m. am I
ALI Alio?
On tha Sun
The Southern
Melody Trio
Alao:
New Fable
HARRY LANCDON
in
White Winr Bride
TODAY
A Brilliant Prorr. n of
Screen and Stag Attraction.
ON THE SCREEN
Pretty and Fascinating
LAURA
LA PLANTE
la a Fast Romantic Corildy
"THE
LOVE THRILL"
OTHER SCREEN NOVELTIES
ON THE ST ACE
The Joyou and Buoyant Artist
LYDIA HARRIS
America'
Daughter of Syncopation
Jacques Lafayette
Grace Delfino
Feahtrod Dancers ol '
Holly wo. 3ctten Production
Spring Style Revue
Presented by .
Lincoln' Leading Merrhanta
Latest Creations Displayed by
Selertcd Beauty Modal '
DEAVER and HIS GANG
- Featuring
"When Twilight Comes"
(I'm Thinking of You)
SHOWS AT 2:4S, 7:00, 9:00
MATS. 25c NITE SOc
mm
1IM
urn
Qrpheum
H jgCTlOM L ka . s.:.. ...,-
MONDAY TUESDAY WEDN ESDAY
A THRILLING ADVENTURE
Dr. Williams Urzcs Thai Students
Bo Trained At Home In Health Habits
"Four Types of Physical Unfitness
in the College," an article bv Wil
liam R. P. Emerson, M. D.. atweared
in a recent number of the Woman's
Home Companion. In his article Dr.
Williams urges that every student
should be trained and prepared in
health habits in the home, before he
is sent to college.
, "Perhaps nowhere do we find r
better demonstration of the effects
of low standards of health and law
health intelligence than among stuT
dents entering college," was the as
tounding statement of the writer of
the article. He declared that half of
the students entering the colleges
were below par in weight, and thirtv
percent of the rest showed unmistak
able signs of being in very poor phys
ical condition.
Because of this condition young
men and womin enter the greatest
O'Malley and Trumbley
HUSKER INN
239 No. 14th
One block south ol Ellen Smith Hall
A NEW AND BETTER
HAMBURGER SHOP
HOT TAMALES FRESH PASTRY
"The Best of Coffee"
AddpheMenjou and GietaNissen
In the Paramount Picture
Blonde ox Brunette
COMING THURSDAY
I
I F Y 0 U
WANT
TO INSERT A
WAN
IN
The Daily
JUST CALL B6891 AND ASK FOR THE
BUSINESS OFFICE
OR
BRING YOUR AD TO THE OFFICES IN
- -
THE BASEMENT OF "U HALL"
opportunity of their life seriously
handicapped both mentally and uhvs-
ically. This state of affairs prevents
them from achieving the highest aims
of their parents and even bars suc
cess after leaving the college. .This
condition, declares Dr. Emerson, in
the cause of low grades and keens the
student from being able to concen
trate to the fullest extent. It is this
that causes the so-called "off days"
when students cannot recite or keep
their minds on their work.
Being so handicapped at the begin
ning of their college career, it often
happens that they are subiect to n
nervous breakdown before their work
is finished. They cannot stand the
strain of the examinations, and the
daily work proves too much for them.
Ihey never feel well and are always
complaining and having bad colds.
The same applies to the athletes, and
is responsible for the fact that so
very few ever excell in both athletics
and scholarship. "The man who would
excell in mental achievement must
sacrifice his body, while the athlete
cannot hope for honofs in both the
physical and mental fields without
danger."
In classifying college unfitness.
Dr. Emerson divides the unfitness in
to four principal groups. First is
what he calls the obese student, or
the student with his weight more than
twenty percent higher than it should
be in accordance with his height. This
class he says shows the greatest
amount of failures and the lowest
average of high college marks. These
men are generally free from common
physical defects.
In the second class he groups the
men who are suffering from serious
physical defects. Such ailments as
Greeting Cards
AND
Mottos
FOR EVERYDAY
IN THE YEAR
AND EVERY
OCCASION
LATSCH
BROTHERS
School Supplies 1118 O
TAD
Nebraskan
Significance of Curious Medallions
Is Related by Curator Blackman
A country boy was driving home the
cows thirty years ago near Tekama.
Loitering near a railroad track, he
picked up a strange soft rock which
he smashed against a tie. Out came
a small clay medaljion, a pretty cur
iosity for his amateur museum. ,
Jogging through the same town a
few years later in a camping wagon,
Mr. E. E. Blackman, curator of the
Nebraska State Historical Society,
met Mr. J. P. Latta, the young dis
coverer's father, who recounted the
story of his son's freak treasure.
Thus was uncovered a strange re
minder of the days of the Jesuit mis
sionary generations before the mid
west was settled.
A plaster cast of the original is
fastened to a board of choice relics
in the state Historical Society mu
seum. Encased in a shell is the finely
carved figure of a child in kilts hold
ing a staff. Its hardness leads Mr.
Blackman to believe that it is com
posed of Wedgewood, a material from
which apothecaries make .morters to
mix drugs.
Such exquisite art work must have
been fashioned in some art center of
Europe according to Mr. Blackman.
"Never was any work like that," said
he, "done anywhere in America." ,
Wondering how such an object
happened to be found near Tekama,
Mr. Blackman, on a second journey,
went to the exact spot where the boy
picked up the stone.
High above the railroad protruding
from the cliff cut for the railway
were weather beaten bones; another
ftiifinnt burial ground and the source
of the quaint medallion.
In the art gallery of Mr. G. W. Lin
inger, critic and collector of a valu
able museum in Omaha, was uncov
ered another clue as to the origin of
the mysterious image. An original
painting of Raphaeal, a Renaissance
artist, showed Saint John in kilts giv
ing a friend water from a shell. An
other representation of Saint John
by the same artist was of the sacred
character under a shell in a rain
storm.
The peculiar coincidence of shells
in all these instances makes me think
there was some close connection be
tween thi3 artist's conception of Saint
John and the shells," said Mr. Black-
man. "Without a doubt this relic is
a representation of Raphaeal's- idea
of Saint John."
Saint John is the patron saint of
the Iowa Indians who lived across
the river from where this was found.
Since Jesuit missionaries often gave
like images as talismans to converted
inflammatory conditions of the naso
pharynx and sinus trouble are the
most common, resulting in frequent
colds.
The third class comprises men suf
fering from "low health intelli-
gencei" or men who do not know how
to govern and regulate their habits.
This is the result of ignorance on the
part of the student and can easilv be
corrected if the one afflicted is of a
mind to.
The last division comprises the men
which he terms "spoiled children
grown older," and he is of the opin
ion that this group offers more nrob-
lems than any other. These men are
the ones who fail to maintain proper
physical fitness because of pure lack
of self-control. These are the men
who regulate their program accord
ing to their ripnirog and pleasures
This group comprises the ones that
are not good college material and
should either change their habits or
leave the school because it will do
them no good to stay in.
In a series of experiments to de
termine to what extent different men
were able to pick up weight, it was
found that the ones who kept late
hours gained one hundred percent
less than the average for all the mem
bers of the class; and that the men
who did not use tobacco gained fiftv
percent better than those who did use
it. Fifty men under class supervision
gained four times as much as fifty
unselected underweight men who
were not under class supervision,
Consult
MISS ELIZABETH SHIELDS
Personal Representative of
ELIZABETH ARDEN
gHE will advise you in the care of your skin.. The daily round of school, studylate hours, that col
T 6 fu'0! flre certaln t0 take their Ml in skin beauty and freshness of apnearance With
s'uftfi IKefA Sur6 SS Ardcn tl areuc"ce?TeedSnh
Thre. nee..rr preparation.
VENETIAN CLEANSING
CREAM
which melts into the pores,
rids them of all impurities
and keeps the skin
smooth and supple.
Priced 1.00, 2.00, and 3.00
--TV
cv i
Indians, this seems to have been given
by a French missionary to the Indian
buried on the high cliff.
"So," Mr. Blackman smiled, "we
call this Little Saint John. The puz
zle, begun when the boy discovered
the image, was clarified."
After ten years, during1 which time
this information was pieced together,
a report came of a similar figure at
Plattsmouth. Again it was a boy who
discovered it. While swimming in the
Missouri he dove to the bottom and
brought up another Little Saint John
which was kept by his father for sev
eral years as an unknown curiosity.
As loans, both medallions were in'
the State Historical museum for sev
eral years until their owners recalled
them. Now there remains but a plas
ter cast of the gentle Saint John to
remind one of the zealous efforts of
the French missionaries to convert
the savage Indians.
SIX NAMES ARE
ADDED TO LIST
Number of Nominee For A. W. S.
Election It Increased
At Ma Meeting
Six names were added to the list
of A. W. S. nominees at a mass meet
ing Tuesday evening in Ellen Smith
Hall. Several women were nominated
from the floor and two from each
class -were chosen by ballot to be
added to the list of nominees made
DANCE
Don't forget that Wednesday nite special at the
LINDELL PARTY HOUSE
50c Per Couple
Revelers on the job every Wednesday night
30,qq. pga
in cash prizes y$f
J Delicious and IMreslunK j
Watch for Coca-Cola advertising, presenting the
$30,000 Coca-Cola prize contest beginning the
first week in May and continuing for three months.
la a number of leading national magazines, in
many newspapers, in posters, outdoor signs, soda
fountain and refreshment stand decorations.
You'll find this contest simple and interesting.
1st prize $10,005
2nd prize 5,000
3rd prize 2,500
4th prize 1,000
5th prize 500
10 tixth prizes (each) 100
20 eventh prizes (each) 50
200 eighth prize (each) 25
400 ninth prizes (each) 10
A total of 635 prizes, $30,000
o" Hu Coc-Coi Co Atlanta, Ou
,i,.t ,r. tU b(uif of fc treMnjeit
VENETIAN ARDENA
SKIN TONIC
which tones, firms and
whitens the skin.
Priced 85c, 2.00, and 3.75
CONSULTATION WITHOUT OBLIGATION
First floor
by the senior committee. The entire
lilt will be voted on at the elections
next Tuesday and Wednesday, March
29 and 30. A final list of nominees
and their qualifications will be pub
lished before the opening of the polls.
Those who were nominated for sen
ior membership are:
Ernestine McNeill Lincoln.
Grace Modlin Ulysses.
Since Evelyn Jack was nominated
after the nominations for senior
members were closed, the vote for
her was not counted.
Those nominated for junior mem
bership are:
Ruth Shallcross Bellevue.
Esther Heyne Wisner.
Those nominated for sophomore
membership are:
Edna Schrick St. Louis, Mo.
Gretchen Standeven Omaha.
The senior committee, consisting
of the senior members of the present
board, will be in charge of the polls
nert week. All University women may
vote because they have automatically
become members of the Associated
Women Students upon registration in
the University. The polls will be open
from nine until five o'clock in Social
Science.
Permanent Waves
THAT
WILL GIVE YOU THE
COMFORT OF NATUR
AL CURLY HAIR.
Gif fin Beaute Salon
B3273 1340 M
..."
vise arei
VENETIAN" ORANGE
SKIN FOOD
a tissue builder splendid
for thin faces.
Priced 1.00, 1.75, 2.75 and
4.25
ft
o
0
MATS. 10c NIGHT 20c