THE DAILY NEBR ASK AN 3 LYRIC THEATER PIERRE WATKIN In "THE OLD SOAK" Popular Price Matin Tuss., Thurs, Sat. NEXT WEEK "IS ZAT SO" Claire Windsor William Haines AND Harry Carey IN "A LITTLE JOURNEY" A Metro Goldwya Pkhm RIALTO NOW At The Theatres CAPITOL SHOWING NOTE DOUBLE FEATURE trip EVELYN BRENT IN BROADWAY LADY NEWS COMEDY Tuesday, Wednesday Just a hunk of life, as is, that is the best way to describe "Love's Greatest Mistake," at the Lincoln the first half. This picturization of the Liberty Magazine story might well have been called "why traveling men travel," but it wasn't. The story is about a country v"steno" going to New York to see her sister and make a fortune. On the train she catches the fancy of a millionaire, who offers to show her the sights. She arrives and finds her sister in another man's arms; the sister's husband was a traveling man. The millionaire shows the country belle all the sights of the wicked city, including some night clubs, then writes some passionate letters and goes to Europe. In the meantime a band of blackmailers have been . watching the 'affair ard "r-"ut up" the young lady in order to F x the letters. The tabloids fea ' t ? story and the boy from home comes to the rescue, only he doesn't rescue. But after all, the story ends happily for all concerned. Anklet Preferred Poor girls working up in life, seem to be a popular theme on movie row this week for "Ankles Preferred," takes a young shop girl up to better things. Miss Bellamy starts as a wage earner in a metropolitan store and soon rises rapidly to better, things with Goldberg and McGuire, pro prietors of a fashionable modiste shop, and then faces the defeat and humiliation when she is given the position of entertainer of out-of-town buyers. Allan Forrest, as a shareholder in the firm is making life unbearable for Norah when her friend and protector, Barney steps in and attempts to ad just matters. This complicates things and results in misunderstanding and ends in a bitter fight for Norah's af fections. She wins happiness in the end, but is made to realize the peace of mind is won only as a result of earnest labor along legitimate lines. Today at Rector' 25c . Pimento CheM Tostetts Maple Walnut JeU Any Sc drink Hardy Smith BARBER SHOP CUaa towel ussd on each feasor. A CHAIRS 116 No. 13th Street You Are Looking for Recreation and Varied Entertainment, You Will Find It Here LINCOLN'S AMUSEMENT GUIDE EVERYBODY kxs MON.-TUES.-WED. ALL THIS WEEK Two Hour of Splendid ' A dollchtful two hour prarrass Vaudeville Entertainment of screen and sua attractions Tbe LovaMo Comedian ON THE SCREEN BILLY HOUSE MADGE And Hi. Versatile mAVlE ASSOCIATE PLAYERS DC I I A rLIV In the Musics! Corned? DE.1L11 I "RESOLUTIONS" i , ciitterinf Romanes Yodeling "ANKLES Troubadours Preferred" Tyrolean Artists In "ECHOES OF THE ALPS" " " Marion Gibney Mable Normand Popular Comedienne in In an Hilarious Comedy IMPERSONATIONS MTUBi -ANYTHING ONCE" rK10?1"1 ON THE STAGE VneS leigfl An Orpheura Circuit Feature nSSVSS&r- TAD TIEMAN JOLLY & WILD tunesmiths The Sinrh Funsters "OF J927" with 7-r ; . - t PINKIE DEES Chrissie & Daley '.UtiSd? Eccentric Entertainers Assisted by FRANK McCORMICK BABICH and his ORCHESTRA 11 snnuc . mm PERFECT ANKLE CONTEST SHOWS AT 2:30, 7:00, :0O Mts. 25c. Nit. SQc Cat 20c BEAVER and his BOYS Comln, THURS, FRL, SAT, !fiJ3?iP,liE-li AD SHOW SHOWS AT 2:48, 7:00, 9:00 iS ALL STAR ARTISTS SS Mats 25c. Nits 60c Tbe Old Soak Pierre Watkin in making his first bow to Lincoln theater goers this week. With him are several new members of the Pierre Watkin PlajN ers, who will also be introduced to Lyric patrons. "The Old Soak." is Don Mrnnia famous American play and gives them all a very good vehicle to shine in. Mr. Watkin stands out in the role of Clem Hawley, the lovable old toper. The New York notices on his performances last summer were verv good "An unparalled performance of this lovable old rapscallion." The play itself takes a hokelv lo cale and no small part of the comedy is furnished by a certain bootlegger named "Al." The phrase "Al's here." I will probably be as much of a by word as "so's your old man," for it tends to convulse the audiences at the Lyric, when that worthy is announ ced and he comes often to the Haw ley residence. The new players, who will be reg ular members of the comDanv are Alice Holcomb. Booth Hnwnrri Frances Gregg and William Amsdell. who is the new director. A Little Journey The producers are ever seekiner something new. "A Little Journey," at the Rialto the first half is an ex periment by Metro-Goldwyn, and not a bad attempt, at that. A common story, was made by a big director, Robert Z. Leonard, with Claire Wind sor, William Haines and Harry Carey in the leads. A young girl finds that she and her aunt are left penniless, so she must marry. A rich man proposes, but she refuse, another poor suitor pro poses, and she sends him to her aunt, who frowns on a penniless marriage. So she decides to marry the first wealthy man. On her way to the train, she meets a young man who infatuates her, only she won't show it, so he forces his attention, dictates telegrams to big butter an' egg men and all sorts of four-flushing meth ods. Claire Windsor and William Haines do more real cave man love making in 300 miles than Elinor Glyn had her characters do in ,'Three Weeks." But the little journey ends the way everyone wants it to, and then some. Old Love and New "Old Loves and New," with Lewis Stone is the Colonial's offering the first half. Lew Stone as a desert shiek is a wow. He is an Englishman, known to the Arabs as the desert healer. His wife runs off with another man, and he hides his grief in this manner. His wife is turned down by this new love and wanders. The heart breaker takes his latest fancy to the desert and she is captured by the Arabs. The desert Healer does his stuff, but is not recognized. The man ner in which he secures his revenge involves a war elephant and the hand of nature. Billy House is back again, at the Liberty the first half. This big com edian is always a ton of fun and his skit this year is no exception. Chrissie and Daley are a team of eccentric en tertainers. Jolly and Wild do song and patter. And so do Hilton and Chesleigh. While the Yodeling Trou badors do their stuff in a fashion that will make Swiss cheese crawl out of the show case. Marion Gibney is in impersonations, you won't recognize her, at first, but she's the same old Marion. OHIYERSITY NIGHT DISAPPOINTS FACULTY (Continued from Page One.) versity forbade its future publication and suspended the fraternity. Since then University Night has been gradually declining. Of late years there has been more and more emphasis on some of the more objec tionable features of student life which finally culminated in the per formance Monday night. Faculty Interest Declines In former years University Night was well attended by faculty mem bers. Up until this year there was al ways an advance sale of tickets to professors and instructors, who used to enjoy witnessing the show because there were often many witty takeoffs on them. In the last two or three years faculty interest has died down until Monday there were only six or seven present This is ascribed to the deletion of faculty references in the various skits. This year only two fac ulty members were mentioned. If the Committee on Student Or ganizations should decide to abolish University Night, the Y. M. C. A. will lose a large slice of its yearly income. The shows have made anywhere from six hundred to a thousand dollars each year, all of which went into the Y. M. C. A. treasury. COLONIAL MONDAY. TUESDAY AND WEDNESDAY y A THRILLING STORY OF ADVENTURE "OLD LOVES FOR NEW" Wits Lewis Stsne ssd Barbara Bcdfsri "OUR GANG" IN "SEEING THE WORLD" SHOWS AT I. S. S, 7, MATS. i NITT 20c ORPHEUM FRIDAY NIGHT MID-NIGHT SPRING FROLIC A Monster P roc run of Vaudeville and Music SEATS NOW ON SALE ALL SEATS RESERVED SOc PHI BETA KAPPA CHOOSESHEOBERS (Continued from Page Ona.) know the names of the persons they are considering. They decide upon two details before the voting actually takes place, first, the number to be elected, and second, the lowest aver age grade that will secure the coveted honor. Many Eligible for Honor Last year forty-five- persons were elected to the fraternity. The lowest average of this group- was 88.94 per cent, while the highest was 94.5 per cent Students graduating last July, August, January, or the coning June are eligible for election. About three oc-four hundred of the eight or nine hundred graduates are eligible. The following rules govern elec tion to the fraternity. 1. Candidates for graduation from any college in the University of Ne braska are eligible providing the group requirements for graduation from the College of Arts and Sciences have been fulfilled. 2. All grades made in the univer sity previous to the date of election shall be averaged with the, exception of shorthand, typewriting, and re quired work in physical education and military science. Must Hare Sixty-four Hours 3. No student shall be eligible who has less than sixty-four hours credit in this university, exclusive of the above named subjects, recorded in grade rer cent in the office of the Registrar on March 5, at least twenty-four hours of these credits being in the group requirements. 4. No student who is considered for membership at the time of the annual election, being eligible under the foregoing rules, shall again be considered for membership except as A. W. S. ELECTION WILLEND TODAY (Continued from Page One.) ior Prom committee. For Senior Members Helen Van . Gilder, Hastings Sil ver Serpent, secretary of A. W. S. board, Y. W. C. A. staff. Eloise Keefer, Lincoln Theta Sig ma Phi, junior member of A. W. S. board, chairman of Publicity commit tee, Y. W. C. A. cabinet. Bernice Welch, Omaha Dramatic Club, Tassel, Vesper Choir, Y. W. C. A. staff. Elva Erickson, Virginia Silver Serpent, Grace Coppock stac; Junior- Senior Prom committee. For Junior Members Pauline Bilon, Columbus Xi Del ta, Gamma Alpha Chi. Kuthryn Douglas, Omaha Xi Del ta, treasurer of the A. W. S. board, president of Vesper choir, Y. W. C. A. finance staff. Audrey Beales, Blair sophomore member of the A. W. S. board, sec retary of Vesper choir, Y. W. C. A Grace Coppock staff. Geraldine Heikes, Dakota City Xi Delta, Tassel, Big Sister Board, A. W. S. board. . Catherine Beekmann, Blair Xi Delta, Vesper choir, Y. W. C. A. staff. Ruth Shallcross, Bellevue Xi Del ta, Vespers committee. Esther Heyne, Wisner president of Xi Delta, Tassels. For Sophomore Members Helen Boose, Falls City Mystic Fish, Y. W. C. A. staff. Jane Glennin, Omaha Mystic Fish, Y. W. C. A. Harriet Willis, Lincoln. Vivian Fleetwood, Lincoln Mystic Fish, Y. W. C. A. Lois Haning, Lincoln. . Edna Schrick, St. Louis, Mo. W A. A., Y. W. C. A. staff. Gretchen Standeven, Omaha Mys tic Fish, Y. W. C. A. Botany Department Offers Attractive Summer Courses in Rocky, Mountains Nw Ideas Brought to Lincoln Only a big organization, like Hart, Schaffner & Marx, can scout the world for ideas, stylist, and eminent authority on what to wear, and when to wear it, has just completed a sur vey of all the big colleges of the United States, securing valuable data for Hart, Schaffner & Marx. This wealth of valuable information has been used in the modeling, styling and pattern weaving of the. clothes Hart, Schaffner & Marx are making for us for Fall. That the College men of the Uni versity of NebrasLa may be first to see the new models, Mr. Ben Wolfe, personal representative of Hart, Schaffner & Marx, will be at our Col lege Room Wednesday '& Thursday. Mr. Wolf & his assistants want every University man to see these new things try on the newer mod els revel in the specially woven fab rics and distinctive colorings. Wheth er you are interested in buying clothes or not you'll want to know what's what. Meet Mr. Wolf Wednesday or Thursday in our College Room. Ben Simon & Sons. Adv. The Handy Place To Buy SUPPLIES IS Graves Printing . Company Three doors south of Uni. Temple The Botany Department has ar ranged to continue the course in the Rocky Mountains during the first term of the 1927 summer session. The enthusiastic response of the course and the success of the class work in the mountains last year amp ly justify its continuation. The work this year will begin in Estes"Park, Colorado, on June 7, and will con tinue for the regular summer school period, closing -July 13. The work in the mountains is under the personal direction of Professor Raymond J. Pool, chairman of the department of botany. Dr. Pool has conducted these classes for several summers and is thoroughly familiar with the conditions and materials available for such work. Are Valuable to Teachers The courses given are of particular value to teachers of botany, biology, and nature study in the public schools and colleges, as well as to college stu dents who wish to supplement their training and broaden their acquain tance with the field. The course will be general and will utilize the wonderful varieties of natural sceneries of the surroundings to present to the student a broad view of modern biology with par ticular reference to flowering plants, forests, etc. It is necessary to limit the registration to thirty, because it is impossible to accomodate any larg er group under these conditions. Advanced Course Offered There will be an advanced course offered to anyone with considerable training in plant taxonomy or ecol ogy, and who will be able to work in dependently or with minimum guid ance. The limit in this course is ten. The camp this year will held at Camp Olympus in Estes Park. The managers have graciously placed their accommodations and equipment at the disposal of the class during the period. Camp Olympus is Attractive Camp Olympus is not a camp in the common sense of an unattractive group of dingy tents huddled togeth er in an unkempt and out-of-the-way mountain place. The camp is, in fact, a group of new attractive and com fortably equipped buildings which occupy one of the finest of all the magnificent sites of the Rocky Moun tain National Park region. The camp faces the beautiful Thompson mea dows, across from which is a full, broadside view of majestic Long's peak end the cnov.y summits of the Continental Divide. The Lodge, a fine, three-story building is the center of camp activ ities. This new building with its large fire-places and spacious two-storied veiauJa is the general uieeti.ig place of the Camp. It also affords ample sleeping and dining facilities. Several cottages are scattered about which provide class rooms and additional quarters. Dedicated to Teachers Camp Olympus is dedicated to the health and happiness of teachers and students. It furnishes an ideal place for the teacher or student who de sires wholesome recreation, rest, and study in a home-like atmosphere and under inspiring natural surroundings. Early reservation is necessary for those who are planning to register for the mountain courses because of the limited accommodations. Reserva tions will be filed in order of their receipt and those received after the maximum limits of courses have been reached will be returned promptly. It is desired that all reservations be In by May 15 in order that the final plans for the classes may be matured on a definite basis. Method of Registration Those who wish to take the general course will register for Botany 13c, and those who wish the advanced course will register for Botany 201c. Course 13c will give six semester hours credit to all who complete the course. Time and credit in course 201c must be arranged with the in structor. - Reservations for either course must he accompanied by $13.00, the reg ular fee for each course. This fee will be forwarded to the Unhrersity Extension Division, payable to the Finance Secretary of the University, at the time registration is completed. The formal completion of registra tion may be arranged at Lincoln on June 3 to 6, or after arrival at Camp Olympus. DEBATERS COMPLETE PREPARATORY WORK (Continued from Page One.) Lincoln, Archibald W. Storms, '28, Holdrege; and Charles F. Hansen, '27, Wolback. Frost was the negative speaker for Nebraska in the Lincoln debate with South Dakota. Storms and Hansen made the trip to South Dakota to speak at Vermillion at that time. Evert M. Hunt. '28, Lincoln; George Johnson, Law '29, Lincoln, and John P. McKnight, '29, Auburn. will be the Nebraska speakers at Omaha. Hunt has participated in de bates both on this subject and in those on the farm relief question. Johnson and Hunt debated in Lincoln while McKnight went to South Da kota in the first debate on parliamen tary government. This is the first forensic contest held between Nebraska and Creighton in recent years. Although no decision is to be given a large audience is an ticipated in Omaha. This will be the last chance to hear Nebraska's inter collegiate debaters here this season. LINDSAY SPEAKS HERE THURSDAY (Continued from Page One.) Mr. Lindsay may not be able to re main over Friday in Lincoln. The unexpected illness of Mr. Lindsay has deprived Lincoln of a longer visit and several addresses. Unless he has pressing engagements to fill Friday on his extended lecture tour, Mr. Lindsay probably can be persuaded to lengthen his short stay here. Is Making Tour of United State Mr. Lindsay is making this lecture tour of the United States under the auspices of the League for Industrial Democracy with headquarters at New York City. He has been ob tained for lectures in Lincoln through the efforts of the University Y. W. and Y. M. C. A. associations and the Federation of Church Workers. He is visiting a number of the prominent universities and colleges of the United States while on this tour. This is to be his second visit at the University of Nebraska, having been here in the-interests of the Workers' Educational Bureau follow ing a visit to America in 1922-23 with the Oxford Union Debating Team. He is a World War veteran and has been a student of Oxford University. We can make your Cornhusker nega tive into a big pic ture for Mother at a slight cost. Hauck's 1216 "O" B 2991 Colorado Women Will Represent School At Meet Fort Collins. March 29. Miss Dot Gier of Denver, president of the Col orado Aggie Women's Athletic As sociation, and Miss Marjorie Mayer of Fort Collins, past president, will represent Colorado Aggies at the na tional athletic conference of Amer ican college women, to be held at Cornell University, Ithaca, New York, April 21 to 24. Delegates from colleges throughout the nation which have membership in the national association will be pre sent. To teach the delegates how to incorporate into their own branches of the association better organization and a higher efficiency is the purpose of the annual convention. um m - shall I do with that CaU ff-ri-iriaf m JmZ vMsar BBa a VARSITY CLEANERS AND DtfERS iiiusaHMiwiiwMMiHiwmfflHWHifflHiwHHnimmiiinmimiw EAT RUDGE & GUENZEL CO. GROCERIES VISIT OUR 17 MODEL ROOMS B3214 STORE NEWS B3214 T)r)N Skin For extra dry skin, use Dorothy Gray's Special Mixture it gives the kin a correct supply of Otis to offset flakincss. AT OUR TOILET GOODS DEPARTMENT i n I Frocks For All Occasions Moderately Priced $39 Frocks for school, for dances, for the theater, for afternoon teas, for all the occasions that college life provides, are included in our groups at this low price. FINE GEORGETTES, LACES, FLAT CREPES, CREPE DE CHINES in both plain and printed patterns are here in tailored, semitailored and dressy styles. All the shades in both light and dark colors are available. BRITTANY, CIEL AND QUEEN BLUES, BOIS DE ROSE. AL MOND AND PALMETTO GREEN, BLACK AND WHITE, NAVY, ROSE, PINK, and other colors. Second floor d2 k Jy 11 HlluSlW: ' .