TTIRiX Tntv. ocTonrn 1. m. THK D4II.Y NHUUSKAN ' ha launl fcv a n.tta aa& kiM ad Ik It la act intended that this -''' jT'TTJi Chi Ome&a in New Home Near Campus diti.al aecunty. Jive rrcetil in- 1 fund shall pay a stuJmt a enure j Ur-t. tn two year M I esponare. but aimply b!p bl over ! lowing graduation will t barged. ' the biU i Tbe iniereat fno the miy I Kaned to the studmta will go to IMdll Arr .Maui for Wauh for the "a-Ad. 1 ad s'y ef tht Alumal aaiMX'iaUoo Just aa Jauir Iiiuptiraliin Rent Care We Uf far -f all makft at4 lffcfrition for rciit.u to u Jenta We rtu car t raK.uM rnce Sre u at t'I.C. Arcade Garage ion n st. rhent b:m; y after- . ... w former! v. The 1.410 are oiade under the . k . . . . f It' now nu dirctu of a aecrrt com ml! ire ,kA"n",m,7",7 ,7.", n, n anvKint of the laa he de- 'tS'',.1! jf-T'lS p.ted wuh the tr,a,4rer ..f th. of Herman Jarnea of the fund and can be withdrawn bv the .wverarty Iah row 1 ....A-n.. . -,-.....ni r rmim..n I -an. are r.. w nr, s hoy '..3 ,Ml,rt- .UdJr.y " , . " roade for the tr. f iratif f.f . . e v. . . . i . t a jm t tnl and " .kTik 0' lm"y rlair-; -nivrr. tv of NVtratka faulty at . . Ill "'" I ,.. V.n. V iM..:i eye " ,r..t. lie ... a . ih rvi:.tr in frn.l.Ain VV 3 the crtur.trj in Vern.J" J tt.Vi ::b rrej. do ar(ur.i Tnai iro pifirm:ng a iWfin;! -rire in aiit ir.p r.r-Oy m.nii hn ni.fM otherwise find it imp.iihi to aecure their univeraitv e.bir- w i - - . . , .4 1. il.. a.!l ft . I I ..I V V'Vr svsiem r fia.hi.ij it- ;aid humor i 1 lbirf"'l-n',,'c n",v' rrU,C A ;t-v,r tram J't. t tbs br,r -!v.rt i--.v-e- m " ' .""4 ."T.""i""i"i"'r"f 'I 'I 'I-.'! . i mag tINCOtN I cmI to life: the problem of mak tii ins a mu of a spoiled a. of the '( tdie rlth; and the nfice thl 7 only an exceptionally true heart, ' tinman a. ml a,.1 ru-K ijnanrtintin ('. Of a WOD1KII CkH (IV I m Cntlio. -Hit GLORIOUS NIGHT." it. r.ii'iN-rU one ,n fore f ih. uii. of l. -n treate lover. alrat ,!?' Nm-lf rldiculoue. but b. d . out nwy. The P'f" lrt !,..!v w.ih nothing '"y """ .. re th.n steeplechasa. U ha. 1, fiie --nwirk- of flop, but Ln krta to pick 'P. "ally . k. up I" th etr,?r 1.1 nr. king: b f.nunrtatl at tlni nartirular po" ttrtihW. T,Vc?f'Hl ludirroui rather than tVminp But ha improve. Thf plot f'"rt,nK. vn U it d. th M having the v.,-0 in ln-a ih aomeone above U taUi tn Ufa. It la dreaacd l,e ID a different way. and kept n rue-si" aa to tba manner in which the hero abould prova hlm nelf Irrrfilnltlhle. -blcJi ha. of Th, crmMy l rpellent and here 1 plenty of It- In p)ac It u a trifle er-ah-aplcy. but not objecU"nDly ao. n rimer Skov. ORPHEUM "THI TRESPASSER" StudenU love real, heart grip ping photnplaya and Gloria Swan mo offer her eat production of her career. In my opinion, at the Orpheum this week. With very lit tle comedy, entertaining only the more serious side of life, dealing wiin Juxury, moUitrhood, aacrtP.ce and the supreme thought, love, "Tne TreHpasser" la one of the most pnpplng melodramaa of ev eryday life that I have seen. Gloria Pwanson la beautifully mature in her artlona, has a lovely voice which records aa weU as en T.rmit but more than that sht has a oenain appeal i" 1 tor of the home economics puhil- 1 u.. vb mdhmIaiii aurlr in 1 ... . J was a member of the board of publications. After graduating from the University of Minnesota she taupht for two years in south ern Minnesota. Miss Leaton Is a graduate of the Wesleyan university, at Eloomlng ton. 111. She received her master's degree from Oregon State college. She served as an instructor of home economics in Lombard col lege. Galesburg, 111., and in the South Dakota State college, at Brookinea. Besides being resident adviser for the home management housp at the Nebraska college of agriculture, she assists in the work at the nursery school. r vt r. .. V : . ti 1 .; t '--'- Uffci TrT-.i . - - "ti'ini: of Tb lfri NEW INSTIU'CTORS JOIN FACULTY OF HOME ECONOMICS May Mackintosh cf St. Paul. Minn., and Louise Leatoa of Brookings. S. U.. are new mem bert of the hone economics fac ulty to the college of agriculture. Miss Mackintosh la an Instructor la the foods division taking the filace of Mrs. Marjone Hiller. Miss itklnn la tha rwaldcnt adviser for the home management bouse, re- YESTERDAY I nt erf retermty Council Daraneae Art for Art' take 1 : IN fi MM IAI. AKFA1KS By MARTHA DliBRANE Thuradav s column, the para- mnh coDcernlnaT the tnterfrat- ernity council contained a state ment to the effect that the council bad taken no acUon laat year against groups which had violated rules laid down for tne conduct of probation week. The statement as It elands is cor rect, but It apparently ignores the improvement resulting directly placing Ruby Simpon. from the violatlona. The council. Miss Mackintorti la a graauaie ft UBAnimoue vote, entirely of the I'nlverslty of Minnesota and ftDf,ilghe1 probation week, and waa baa studied for a year at the Unl-' hearUiy commended from ail verslty of Chicago. She is a mem- j gujet ber of Rho c hapter of Omlrron Nu, Rpsllon chapter of PI Lambda However, the abolition, dosir Theta. both national organisations, jble aa it waa, added litue U the ana or ine i Diversity oi vun" lory or ine councu. ii, - chapter of Kappa Mu Sigma, hon orary chemical fraternity for women. During her entire college career she worked on tne Minnesota coi fee ted only as a means of aavlng the races or ine seventeen imicr nlties which had been charged with infractions of the rules. Rather than attempt to inflict the Th. TrenriBjiser." It deals with the love of two individuals of different STUART wanthurul Veu in "Clow Haiwony." Stt than In Arthur throbbing leva ataxy. i tham Naw Train's NiingEiK A PA RAM Q U NT Plf-TURt FRESHMEN SEE YOURSELF IN PICTURES! Moving Pictunaa of tha Fraanman all Thla Waafc ON THE BTAO Vaurtavlila'a Funnlaa Man "HERB WILLIAMS" Preeenllng A Keflned Oemedy "FHOM SOUS' TO NUTt" Vau havant laugHad until veu aaa tMa aoL Colburn and Lake Tha Danalng Marrymakera tuart Symphony Ononaatra Playing "SOUTHKWM SiHAPSODV" PARAMOUNT SOUND NIWI Mat. Shews 1 -6-7-11 40 Iva. (0 Lege SO anS 7S "LSO" Metro Oetdwyn Lien In Ptraan will ba In front of tha Thaatar Tueaday Noen. Saa Him da Hit auinta. lege of agriculture paper. thelwna.ity previously decided upon, . . . . .4 1 !r. .. : . J - J -. I 1 riopner countrjinao. sm wm rur mi councu eioesippea aau wi- tshed probauon. Complaint la being made about tha iiimniir ouaJitv of the dark ness found on the walk running east and west, north of Social Sciences and the Teachers college. This walk, used extensively by coeds who visit the campus at night, 1s decidedly unlighted. Of course, university students are not afraid of the dark, but they do not relish prowlers, which seem to thrive In darkness. Furore enough waa created last spring when the prowler prowled. Even though the Kosmet Klub staged a melodramatic man hunt, and The Daily Nebraskan started etinri tn h offered as a reward for the capture of the creature, It is Still loose, unless some one few lirbts along that walk. It may be that ha will return to his original haunts. Saturday, after reading the "Echoes of the Campus" on art for art's sake, and learning some of the details of the affair, I was n -t to write a scathlne denun- nioHnn df tha hoodlums who would ktt 'penetrate such a dastardly -of. Wednesday, Oct. . lot Sigma Pi. tea for glrla. Cht mistiy bail 310. S.SO to 4 SO o'clock. Thursday, Oct. 3. Sirma Delta Chi University ball 1 104. 7 o'clock. Friday, Oct. 4. Chancellor's faculty reception. EUen Smith tall, b to 11 o'clock. Alpha Delta II bouse party. Kappa Alpha Theta tea for Mrs. Sargent, S 30 to 5 SO o'clock. Kappa Fipailon mixer, armory, 8:50 to 11 SO o'clock. Phi Kappa bouse party. Theta Chi bouse party. Saturday, Oct. 5. All University party. Barb council, coliseum, admission S3 centa. Acacia house party. Alpha Sigma Phi house party. Alpha Theta Chi bouse party. Beta Theta Pi bouse party. Delta Vpsilon bouse party. farm House bouse i-arty. Kappa Psl house party. Phi Kappa Psi house party. Phi Sigma Kappa house party. Phi Delta Theta bouse party. PI Kappa Phi fall party, Lin coln. Sigma Kappa bouse party. Y. M. C. A.-Y. W. A. A- party, Ellen Smith balL sitrAarbuuoA A X ETAOECCUN LE R0SSIGN0L TELLS OF EAST CONTEST (Continued From Page 1.) essay that by its style and presen tation seems most likely to inter est the ordinary business man will hsve an advantage. TLTr OmrinrlK RlsO SUITCeHtS that the contestants compare the rela ! tlve merits of the English banking vatam and Its control oi croon . .'.tn rhnaa of our system and that they also make a study of the part that the cost of credit plays in advancing and re garding general welfare and pros parity. I Tbe contest closes on Dec. 81, 1829. A'l essays should be in ' thr- bunds of the Economic Oon i test Editor, Simonds Saw and Steel "nmpanv, 470 Main St., Fitchburg, : Ito., on or hH'ore that date. Any j person interested should write for ! the rules for no essay will be con 1 sidred for a prize unless it is pre pared and submitted according to Mb'; rules. Nothing V V Adv like good Lime Gloria Swanaon haa made har flrot all talking plctural ..,!. And aha will am you I Mar tam ing voloo msgnlfleantl Vou'va never known aert, ur,t yoi'va aaan and haard her In thla atory of lova frustrated and metner hood defeatnd! in on of Lincoln's theaters. But that nlgnt I saw the vaude ville act which is the cause of all the commotion, and now every thing is forgiven. It must be admitted that the person who wrote "Art for Art's Sake" had the right idea. It isn't at all proper to hoist newspapers In the air during a performance. Neither is it polite to commit mur der. But in murder cases, senten ces are often softened, and occas ionally never imposed because of v.hst the legal profession calls mlUgratlnfr circumstances. There were mitigating circumstances at that show. Hoisting of newspapers was not tbe only insult offered to Ncbranka spirit. The act itself was certainly no compliment. Congrat ulations, law students! But don't do it again. ' LINCOLN now .lE'SPICTURt WILL NOT l"PEAL TO THI CH I LDP. El at Lut You Can Hew Him Talk I ir otu,ll' haar tha great reman- ttar at ht makea lova In one ""a after another. Vau aea !!1M ,h daahlng eavalry offioer Pfinoeee. hut aotually oarrlea har '..T"nd m,ka har Ilka HI Tha k " OMbert vehicle I JOHN GIL "TV a. Oiractad By Lionel Barrymore (r Mm who Made Madama 48 aa. SSI 'A. IT.?' i mix X) All Talking picture "LADIES CHOICE" POX SOUND NEWS ""'a I Mat IS Ev so Chll 10 4r A United Artist AM Talklnfl Picture All Talking COMEDY NEW BELLE CK LOOKS TOE 25,000 AT GAMES SATITRDAY (Continued from Page 1.) ltig the choice seats of the stad ium will hold 840 students. Thraa trains and ten large busses A will bring the Texas delegation to ? ' Lincoln on the Missouri Pacific at 1 about 11 p. m. mciay nigni ana ) headquarters for the team as well as for the entire lexma using lhfu i-dl h at the Lincoln hotel. Two '. more trainloads of Mustang root- ' rrat In T .Inr'filn Rut.UrJaV n o v i. . " morning over the same railroad. Band WelcomeB Delegation. The ten busses are expected in Lincoln at 10 p. m. Friday night. Each bus accommodates 30 peo ple. Tbe caravan will be wel comed bv the Innocents society end by th? R. O. T. C. band at tbe init rs' headquarters, the Lincoln hoil. Early in the summer Selleck sent 1,000 tickets to Dallas for Southern Methodist rooters. Three hundred of thes have been re- i turned so that 700 supporters from f ihe Lone Star sitae will be on hand to cheer their teaam. FossiDility exists that the delegation will be some larger with the 11 tlefcet purchases. GR I 'MM ANN RECOVERS FOLLOW ING ILLNESS HEETZLEE PUBLISHES EXPLANATORY VOLUME (Continued from rage 1.) written material which he thinks , will interest not only sociologists particularly, but all those inter- ested In social institutions, and j this category includes the social scientlift and the Intelligent lay-1 man. I In more than a dozen major di visions does Mr. Hertzler treat of 1 social institutions. In the first dl- vtKlon be examines the meaning and place of social institutions. In the second parube inquires about the causes and functions of such Institutions as society has de- j manded. He then digs down Into their Inner composition, making an examination thereof, determining j their relation and their reaction to what he calls "pivotal Institutional fields" such aa che economic, the , political, the religious and even the matrimonial In his close analysts of social machinery he tuft dealt liberally with the story of Institutions In evolution. Further on he discov ers the relation of tbe social insti tutions and environment. He pro ceeds Into the important relation that the Institutions bear to the Individual, and the Individual to the Institution he has raised. Toward the end comes an exami nation into the future at social in stitutions, whose evolution and re lationships he has closely analyzed and comprehensively treated. APPLICANTS RECEIVE HELP FROM ALUMNAE (Continued From Page 1.) $25,000 in the course of a few years. According to Mr. Ramsey, however, only the interest on this amount will be used to assist needy students. The $3,000 of in terest available for use this se mester has been consumed now, but $2,000 more will be obtainable next semester. No freshmen can obtain loans. Seniors and juniors are given preference in considering the ap plications although sophomores are elso coa-iidered. Both men and women may apply. Not more than $300 will be loaned to a student and not more than $100 a semester. This must Fun, ready. pleasure V. -Adv. V. Be CLASSIFIED ADS. AFTEK Ai.L Ite a Towneeim FkotoErapti yuti want. LOKT KuPliu kej Call" tUBHft, F702B or H4H44 ClfcM I'MON drawing act POlvpnaee elide rule lur raie. 'an i OXPHEDM now Showe 1-3-D'7',,l Eva SO Chll Mat IS 10 Prof. Paul H. Grummann, -director of the school of fine arts, was able to meet classes the latter part of tbe past week, following a period of illness during the ini tial days of school. It la ilirriruit nut tu write eetlra "Your Drug Store" , it xure In a Brand and fcinrlouM feeliiiK tn ne all the tiuuch hack unm. THE OWL PHARMACY B-1066 1B N. 14th. Learn To Dance I "No Failure" iWill Guarantee You to Dance ; In Six Private Lessons. i Ballroom. Clog and Tap Dancing ' Leo A- Thornberry J (A Student of Bug. Ad Col.) 5 : Call for Appointments t LB251 Private Studio 2300 Y St. DS HERE THEY ARE COLLEGE COR The type that all the chaps about the campus go in for. Lemon yel low, well tailored, in wide trouser bottoms and all sizes and leg lengths 3S0 and 550 -and the crew neck SWEATERS Smart, self patterns in white, black, blues, reds, tans, browns and greens $5 'en Skfwn&Smd- FORMERLY ARMSTRONGS Ml ii3Vit3 III 13 f 'pr Milaaaaaaa-aaaiaaaaaeeaaiaaaaaaaaaaMaaeja-aajaaaa-aM H I Autumn of '79 ) 1R70 3 CJ- HILE Yale and Princeton were battling f a fie JU at Hoboken, New Jersey, s small group of scien tists, directed by Thomas A. Edison, was busy at Menlo Park, only a few miles away. On October 21, their work resulted in the first practical incandescent lamp. Few realized what fifty years would mean to both elec tric lighting and footbalL The handful who watched Yale and Princeton then has grown to tens of thousands to-day. And the lamp that glowed for forty hours in Edison's little laboratory made possible to-day's billions of candle power of electric light- In honor of the pioneer achievement, and of lighting progress, the nation this year observes Light's Golden jubilee. Much of this progress in lighting has been the achieve ment of college-n-ained men employed by General Electric. 1929 jm th m Tut nrertu I JL emra, skoucit evi iv ti aoT aT a ex., t..T. OK tT10-Win ..C KTTWntt. 4-T170C GENERAL ELECTRIC sttTt titTrnc coMfAKT. c-itNFCTAor. new ok