The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, May 03, 1927, Page 3, Image 3

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    -mniled Btatistics ehow
.nearly 100,000 students are
or Part of their .way
n.h American college and Uni
ities. Of this number, about 40
p'"ent are entirely self-supporting.
Dr. E. M. Cramb. U. of N., '99,
Osteopath. 'Burlington Blk.. 13 and
0 Street. Adv. -
THURS.-FRI.-SAT.
TW0 Hour ol Dsliihtiul
Entsrtainmsnt
Dorothy Byton ,
SIX DANCING GIRLS
"Snappy SUppart"
Loring-Lessig & Co.
. a Comedr of Surprise .
"THE HERMIT
HARRY JOHNNY
PERRY & M AHER
Ths SInrinf Funsters, In
COMEDY CHARACTERIZATION
Sorrentino Four
A Mixed Quartetts. Offarina;
"A VOCAL COCKTAIL"
Gus Thalero
&Gang
Presenting a Fast
VAUDEVILLE NOVELTY .
"Chin He Loved to Touch,r
A Rollicking CnMO
Alto
NEWS and TOPICAL PICTURES
BAUIC1I and Um ORCHESTRA
Election Returns Tuesday Nit
SHOWS AT 2:30, 7:00 and 9:00
THE DAILY NEBR ASK AN
Wendell Speaks to Lutheran.
The Rev. C. A. Wendell, Lutheran
student pastor at the University of
Minnesota, will speak on "Calvary
nd the Acropolis," at an all Luther
an dinner to be held Saturday eve
ning. May 7, at the Grand hotel. A
musical program has also been pre
pared. The Lutheran Club of the Univer
sity is sponsoring this dinner which
"ill be of particular interest to the
Lutheran students and their friends.
Tickets are 75 cents, and may be
secured from members of the Luther.
an Club or at Temple 101. The Rev.
Wendell will address a Union meet
ing Sunday eveninsr. May 8. at the
First Lutheran church.
SUN
Always a
Good Show
TODAY
DOUGLAS
FAIRBANKS
-in-
"The Thief of Bagdad"
No Advance in Prices
MON. TUES. WED.
On of the gTtest pictures ever
produced. If you have seen it you 11
want to see it a fain. If you have
never seen it It bow
WAY
DOWN
EAST
SHOWS AT 1.
MAT. 10c
7 ahd 9
NITE 20c
WE DARE YOU-
to see "Movies 30 years ago" and not laugh long and
hearty!
This is but one of-the big features on the Lincoln
program the first half.
Including
HAROLD LLOYD &
BEBE DANIELS
- in
, "Are Crooks Honest?" .
"Romance in a Streetcar"
"The Great Train Robbery"
and other early pictures
CHUCK WILES
Playing Xylophone and Vibraphone
NORMA SHEARER
"THE DEMI-BRIDE"
A M C M PICTURE
CAPUT
TODAY AND ALL WEEK
Today
at
3, 7:30
and 9:30.
l. M.
DONT MISS
THIS GREAT
SENSATION
HE
HAS THE
WHOLE TOWN
TALKING
PRINCE ALI
"THE HINDU PROPHET"
New Photo Play Show '
"THOSE WHO
JUDGE"
PATSY RUTH MILLER
and
LOU TELLEGEN
-He THRILL OF A
LIFE TIME!
yout Don't ml., this wonder shov
,n" has Inkra the tows by storm there's
no tin, lik. th. pnt,nU Con toi.r.
. Attend the Matinees to Avoid the Niht Crowds
NO ADVANCE IN PRICES
ii
ROSS GIYES JUNIOR RECITAL
Studcat lu Class or Vera Upton and
Edith Rosa Presents Program
Miss Cleopatra Ross, of the class
of Vera Augusta Upton, voice, and,
Edith Burlingim Ross( organ, gave a
junior recital, Monday evening, May
2, at the University School of Music.
She was accompanied by Elaine Mac
beth. Her program was as follows:
Neymphs and Sheperds Purcell.
Bind auf dein Haar Haydn.
L'Anneau d'Argent Chaminade.
Je Veux Vivre Dans ce Reve
from Romeo and Juliet Gounod.
Preludio Allesrro maestoso e onn
fuoco Guilmat (from Third Sonata
in C Minor Op. 66.)
Lagoon Friml.
March in B Flat Faulkes.
On Wings of Music Mendelssohn.
Today Huerter.
The Robin Sings in the Apple Tree
MacDowell.
Take Joy Home Basset
ENGINEERS' WEEK
HAS "ANY DISPLAYS
ALL THIS
WEEK
LYRIC
THEATER
The Pierre Watkin Players
NINETEENTH SUCCESSFUL WEEK
Present
"NICE PEOPLE"
Rachel Crothers
Satirical Comedy
Next Week
"SQUARE CROOKS"
RIALTO-nou
I j Lj a in II Ji t J."J !Dfi ifeWU W ' aj
A Metro-Goldwyn Picture
with
Renee Adoree
Conrad Nagel
Comedy Topics News
Election Returns Tuesday Nite
Norma Shearer
WITH LEW CODY
"THE
DEMI-BRIDE
99
HAROLD LLOYD AND
BEBE- DANIELS IN
"ARE CROOKS DISHONEST?"
CHUCK WILES, Xjrlophonist
NOW
NOW
A
l Tain h .rjnatmr r
ALL THIS WEEK
A aorani of screen and stafe
attractions you'll enjoy
ON THE SCREEN
n n
i n 3
Jack Mulhall
A Bi( Comedy Roundup
-ALSO
ft
"THE VISION
Mysterious, Fascinating, Cripplnf
Year's Prizr Winning Short Story.
ON THE STAGE
"The Night Club
A Melange of
SONG DANCE MUSIC
with
MAE. HELEN MURRAY
Singers of Syncopation
LEON LAVARDE
Eccentric Dancer
Beaver and his Boys
Election Returns Tuesday Night
SHOWS AT 2:45, 7:00, and 9:00
C YU shall 1 do
V-f5 with
:j?yy that q
Call
(Continued from Page One.)
basement and Rex Haase and his
mechanical engineers will have the
rest of Hid building.
The physics display, under the di
rection of McCartney will be in Brace
laboratory.
The week's program will close Fri
day night with the banqquet at the
University Club. T. O. Blaschke,
banqet chairman, has arranged a very
good program for the banquet. Din
ner will be served at 6:30 o'clock.
Dean A. A. Potter of Purdue Uni
versity, will address the group on
"Taking Stock and Looking Ahead."
At this time the "Sledge,- official
scandal sheet of the engineers, will
be distributed and the editor will be
announced.
Tickets are being sold to engineers
for the various events of the week.
A special committee consisting of one
or two men from each department
has been selected for this purpose.
Ribbons are selling for fifteen cents,
Field day tickets for thirty-five cents
and banquet tickets for one dollar.
Iowa State plans to use $150,000
general improvement appropriation
granted by the legislature to build
four minor buildings and to buy a
generator.
Permanent Waves
THAT
WILL GIVE YOU THE
COMFORT OF NATUR
AL CURLY HAIR.
Gif fin Beaute Salon
B3273 1340 M
GRADUATION
WATCHES
Dependable
Good-Looking
White Gold
15.00 and up
We have been selling
graduation watches to
U of N students for over
50 years
Many are still running
HALLETT'S
UNIVERSITY JEWELERS
Estab. 1871 117-19 So. 12th
Nebraska Has
jl caiuic nauv
Team in 1909
(Continued from Pag One.)
nell College.
But this chapter on track cannot
be closed without saying something
of the one man at Nebraska who had
done more for the Husker schoql in
the past seven years to put Cornhus
ker track athletes upon the high
plane that they occupy today Dr.
R. G. Clapp.
Clapp Held Pol. Vault Record
Dr. Clapp graduated from Yale in
1898 and for five years held the
world's record in the pole vault. He
came to Nebraska in 1902 as physical
director of the athletic department
and coach, and from that year until
the present time Dr. Clapp has held
the position at the University of Ne
braska as physical director. Dr. Clapp
took charge of the Husker trackmen
when main rivals of the Huskers
were Lincoln high school and the
small colleges of the state.
The varsity track team of 1909
was made up of the following men:
Captain Dale McDonald, George,
Asbery, Hammond, Reed, C. C. Col
lins, Campbell, Gable, Perry, Hum
mel, Hamel, Burke, Amberson, Rus
sel, S. Collins, Wildmar.
Football Was on Slump
Nebraska football was again on the
downhill slide and the year 1909 was
only partially successful. A look at
football in the past at Nebraska
shows a diagram that looks like a
road through the Ozark mountains.
It is full of ups and downs and it
seems that this year Nebraska was
going on one of the downhill slides.
South Dakota was the first game on
the Husker schedule and the Corn-
husker team was finally whipped to
gether and saved Nebraska from de
feat at the hands of the Dakotans.
TODAY AT
RECTOR'S
25c
Meat Loaf Tostette
Fresh Strawberry Jello
Any 5c drink
nw strawberry special tomorrow
Have You
Noticed
That unsightly complexion 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. Bldg.
If
GET it alL Don't miss
any of it, the dizzy
lights and party 'colored
frocks; stepping to the
frenzied blare of saxo
phones; senses tingling
with being alive and in
the midst of it all. And
next day instructors who
are likable but exacting.
To get the most out of college you must be
full of vitality, must have every nerve and
muscle working full time. Right food is the
key to it, The Shredded Wheat habit will
help you to make mind and body alert and
throw off the poisons that bring sluggish
ness. You'll like it, too. It's appetizing
eaten half a hundred ways; smothered in
fruit and cream or toasted with butter
and hot milk are just two of them.
THE SHREDDED WHEAT COMPANY
Niagara Falls, N. Y.
9 w t 9 ESEirJff.. E 3 f- a -i I ft ft H
tt "l n 1 . ' H V. I - W K TTJ I J D i n ..
iniinUijUJ
w - I
E i t i
urn
m t i v 4
M A B .1 t, .
U rnU
UZr L- si-"
A?
L mm
Knox was the next number on the
Scarlet and Cream program and the
Huskers managed to set the pace in
this gae fr the Knox eleven.
The reputation of the season de
pended upon the Kansas game and
all plans were laid to defeat the an
cient Jayhawker. But the Nebraska
eleven could not cope with the Kan
sas team and were one the short end
of the 6 to 0 score. The Nebraska
team ended the season with three
victories, three defeats, and two tie
games.
Line Played .Good Defense
The Cornhusker line from end to
end played one of the best defensive
games ever seen in the youthful Mis.
souri Valley conference, but the Hus
ker backfield wa3 the weak end of
Coach "King" Cole's gridiron ma
chine and was the cause of many of
the turnbacks during the season.
The team consisted of Captain
Oren Beltzer, Louis Harte, Leroy
Temple, W. F. Chauner, H. Rath
bone, S. V. Shonka, Louis Magor, V.
C. Hascall, Orlando Bentley, E. B.
Elliott, A. Sturzenegger, Harry
Ewing.
The basketball season of 1909 and
1910 was not a success, the Corn
husker quintet winning but 6 games
out of the scheduled 16 that season.
When Coach Hewitt, head basketball
coach at Nebraska-issued the initial
call for basket ball practice in No
vember about fifty men reported for
the Varsity squad. Among them were
some of the letterm&l from the sea
son before and also a great quantity
of new and untried material.
The first game of the season was
with the Kansas State Agricultural
College and the Husker basketballers
took a drubbing from the Kansas
farmers 27 to 16. From Manhattan
the Husker quintet went to Law
rence for a two game series with the
Kansas Jayhawkers. Both games were
turned in on the lost column f
Coach Hewitt's Scarlet and Cream
basketeers. The Kansas school which
was turning out good basketball
teams every year won the champion
ship of the Missouri Valley confer
ence the year of 1909 and 1910.
The Nebraska tennis team of 1910
went through a most successful sea
son and the court game was rapidly
taking its place at the Husker school
among the other intercollegiate
sports.
(To be continued.)
Field Geology
Class to Study
In Four States
The class in Field Geology under
the direction of Prof. E. F. Schramm
will leave Lincoln on or about June
7 for a fiVld study of the important
mining camps and old fields of South
Dakota, Wyoming, Montana, and
Utah. Special attention will be given
to a study of the mines, mills and
ore deposits of the northern Black
Hills and the Butte district, Montana,
to the coal and oil fields of Wyoming
and the mining; districts of Utah.
One division of the field class will
make a detailed topographic, strati
graphic and structural map of the
Chadron anticline area, which rep
resents a part of the southeast por
tion of the Black Hills uplift Con
siderable attention will be given to
a study of glaciation in the eastern
part of South Dakota and to the Big
Bad Lands located east of the Black
Hills.
The famous spodumene and feld
spar mines of the Keystone district
will be studied and mapped. Six
hours credit will be given in this
course on final completion of maps,
and reports.
The University of Indiana has a
"blues" department whose purpose is
to lend mental aid and encourage
ment to despondent students.
vve can iiiaK-e yuur
Cornhusker nega
tive into a big pic
ture for Mother at a
slight cost.
Hauck's
1216 "O
B-2991
S2
Lunchea
Candy
Meala
Drink
At
LITTLE
SUNSHINE
LUNCH
1227 R
lat Door East of Temple
Summer Camps
Make Plans to
Train 3,500 Men
Taller by 290 feet of added sta
ture, heavier by 80 tons of new mus
cle and deeper of chest by 646 feet
of extra capacity these giant-like
proportions are physical gains which
will be shared by 35,000 young
Americans as a result of spending a
month in the open air at Citizens
Military Training Camps this sum
mer, according to statistics received
from the War Department today by
Lieutenant Colonel Frank F. Jewett
of the Military Science Department.
This tremendous enrollment has
been attracted to the camps, as a
result of the important place given
to athletics in the camp programs.
In no other country in the world have
young men greater devotion to sports
and games than in the United States.
Many of the training camps are
located on the sea-shore or on inland
lakes and rivers, which give oppor
tunity for bathing and water sports.
At the les3 favored spots, the govern
ment has established hygienic and at
tractive swimming pools. The Red
Cross has arranged systematic
courses of instruction which lead
successful students to final credit as
life guards.
Baseball diamonds and tenis courts,
with excellent equipment, have been
provided everywhere. Boxing is
taught for students of all weights.
Volley ball, push ball, and fencing
are included in the cativities.
Each year, high school, normal
school, and college football teams,
often with their own coaches, find
increasing advantages in the Sum
mer Citizens Camps for preliminary
training. Track teams enroll from
many schools and share in the ex
ceptional training in running, jump
ing, pole vaulting, shot putting, and
javelin and discus throwing, under
the instruction of expert coaches.
BJ78
' 7
Capital fcjiyir 3 Co.
'3S SO. I2T ST.
LINCOLN. NEB.
outstanding
Tourist .
THIRD CABIN SCEVlCe
to
ROUND TRIP
$170 (up)
atf95(up)
In our fleets you have the choice of
L The only ships in the world devoted exclusively
to this type oi travel no other passengers carried.
Minrukahda, Minnesota, Winifreaian. Devoni
an. You have the freedom oi all decks, public
rooms, etc
2. The world's largest ship. Majestic, and the world's
largest twin-screw steamer Homeric
3 The largest ships carrying Touriut Third Cabin pas
. sengers to the ports ol England, Ireland, France or
Belgium.
The largest ships carrying this class from and to
Montreal.
5 The largest number of "Tourist" sailings ofiered
by any Une? or group ol lines.
These are but the tangible evidences of the merit of a service
which has delighted thousands of college men and women
In recent years. , -
EaTly reservation of space is vecommended.
ft r r -
A. Hi. Disney, Mgr., 127 80. State St.; Chicago; or any authoriz
ed steamshin acenr..- '