The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, October 17, 1916, Image 3

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    A, ... .
THE
DAILY NEBRA3KAJT
"minor Thnntnr
MATINfcfc Jt;ou
TllDAY TONIGHT 8:15
Photoplay Direction of U M.
German
WILLIAM OILETTE
SHERLOCK HOLMES"
MATV0c. NIGHTS 15c
MAT. A NIGHT, OCT. 18
werld.. Gre.teCom.c Opera
MARTHA"
4"r ADC R
Sin,nfl"n Symphony Orchestra
u. 11.50 to 60c
Mat. NJflht 2 qq t0
L. AMI!
Emu
MONDAY, TUESDAY, WEDNESDAY
WESTERN VAUDEVILLE CIRCUIT
-.THREE SHOWS DAILY
NEFFSK TROUPE
SCAMP A SCAMP
Universal Weekly
Two Part Deluxe Drama
McCLOUO A CARP
BILLY "SWEDE" HALL AND
TEMPLE QUARTETTE
TIME 2:30, 7:30, 9:00 P. M.
MATINEES 15c I NIGHTS 25c
MW'lli lllk. MIT UJH
MONDAY, TUESDAY, WEDNESDAY
-THE SHIELDING SHADOW"
The Wonderful Serial In 15 Episode
Featuring GRACE DARMOND, RALPH
KELLARD and LEON BARY
THE MUSICAL ALEXANDERS
MIMIC FOUR
AIo a Comedy Scenic and
Pathe News
MAJESTIC
MONDAY, TUESDAY, WEDNES
DAY AND THURSDAY
-THE SALAMANDER"'
RUTH FINDLAY
Also Two Good Comedies
HANS & FRITZ
Wednesday and Thursday
"SPA"
Get your Lunches at the
City Y. M. C. A, Cafeteria Plan
13TH AND P
Have your eyes tx
amined and Classes
fitted by W. H.
MARTIN, O. D.
Optometrist
DIFFICULT CASES SOLICITED
1234 O Street, Suite S. Phone L7773
Opposite Miller 4. Paine's
Start Right-
Let us take care of your gar
ments when they need a thor
ough cleaning or pressing.
Our service is A-l must be
we operate the largest clean
ing plant in Lincoln.
"We clean and block hats.
LINCOLN CLEANING
& DYE WORKS
326 S. 11th Lincoln, Neb.
LEO S0UXTJP, MgT.
Keep
Carbon
Copies
of lectures, theses, etc. This
can only be done by buying
or renting a typewriter.
Special rates to students.
Phone or call at
L C. Smith & Bro.
Typewriter Co.
LINCOLN, NZBE.
1111111
Grace Kannon, '15, of Nebraska City,
spent Sunday in Lincoln.
Florence Jenks, 18, spent the week
end at her home In Avoca, la.
Marjorie Odman, 17, spent the week
end at her home in Valparaiso.
Myrna Anderson, '20, has quit school
and gone to her home in Kenton, South
Dakota.
Mrs. Arthur Chase, '15, formerly
Gladys Dominy, is a guest at the Al
pha Omlcron Pi house.
Margaret ha Grimmel of Omaha, who
has been the guest of Helen Giltner at
the Alpha Phi house, returned home
yesterday. '
Mrs. B. J. Bates of Lodgepole, spent
the week visiting her daughters, Ber
that and Doris at the Gamma Thi
Beta house.
Deloss Anderson, '18, of Crete, was
operated on for appendicitis Sunday
Spohn's Disappearance Made
The mysterious disappearance of
Don Vilas "Pinkie" Spohn, caused his
Phi Gamma Delta brethren to spend
seven hours of worried search yester
day, while they feared all sorts of
catastrophies had happened to their
beloved fellow student
Early in the afternoon It was noticed
that "Pinkie" had not been seen, and
the hunt began. Loud calls for
"Pinkie" resounded through the house.
making the welkin ring and rousing
many echoes, but not producing Spohn.
Then the Phi Gam freshmen were
ordered to the telephone, and in relays
they called every possible place where
Spohn might be. It waa without avail.
Phi Gams walked down town, np to
TWENTY-TWO VARSITY MEN
TO MAKE OREGON TRIP
(Continued from Page One)
tices will be had each day on the road
and a last workout will be had on the
field, where the game will be played,
on Friday afternoon.
A squad of twenty-two men will be
taken in addition to one freshman.
The freshman who is to go is Sam Kel
logg, the ex-Nebraska City star.
The choice of freshman was to have
been made by Stewart, Rutherford,
Halligan and Corey, but they could get
no farther than the three best It was
then decided that the choice should be
made by drawing numbers. .
Men Who Will Go
Manager Reed wrote numbers on
pieces of paper and shoow them up in
J ': I
f ; - f
ELAINE DE SELLEM IN "MARTHA"
At the Oliver, Wednesday, Matinee and Night, October 18
morning. Yesterday he was reported
in a favorable condition for recovery.
At a dinner in the Lindcll hotel Fri
day evening in honor of his twenty
first birthday, Guy Moates entertained
the following men: Cecil Laverty.
Loyd Tully, Ellsworth Moser, Ivan
Beede, Frank Boehraer, Wayne Town
send, Homer Rush, DeWitt Foster,
Karl Brown and Norman Musselman.
Announcement is made of the en
gagement of Florence Angle, '16, and
Guy E. Reed, 11. Miss Angle is a
member of Kappa Alpha Theta, Y. W.
C. A., Xi Delta, Black Masque and
Girls club board. She was honored by
being chosen May Queen, last Ivy day.
Mr. Reed, who is manager of athletics.
was a prominent track man. He held
the Missouri valley record in the 440.
He is an Alpha Tau Omega. The wed'
ding will take place in November.
WALT LUDWIG
Makes the Nobbiest Clothes In Town
Ask about him.
Frantic The Phi Gam's
the University, and to all of the fav
orite haunts of their missing friend
but as the shades of night drew down
upon the city, and "Pinkie had not
been found? a general council was call
ed to devise a better means of learning
something.
They were plainly worried, and it
was the opinion of inost that some
thing terrible had happened and a
searching party was ordered out while
one went to the phone to call the
police.
But then and here ends the story
"Pinkie" who had fallen asleep in an
obscure corner, and slumbered for
nigh on to seven hours, appeared, and
asked what in Sam Hill all the excite
ment was about.
his hat. Then amid deafening silence
each one of the three, Schellenberg,
Hubka and Kellogg sneaked up and
coaxed the lucky number out, but Kel
logg proved to have the only horse
shoe.
The varsity men who w ill make the
trip are as follows: Otoupalik, Corey,
E. Kositzky. Moser, Dale, Shaw, Rid
dell. Cook, Caley, Rhodes, Gardiner,
Doyle. Dobson, Wilder, Cameron, Ma
loney, Norris, Selzer, Porter, Heller,
Hoadley and Proctor.
STEELE HOLCOMBE, 18,
ALSO PHI DELTA PH
Clinton Steele Holcombe, '18, of
Maxwell. Neb., was pledged to Phi
Delta Phi. the legal fraternity, his
name having been omitted from the
list given to The Daily Nebraskan, and
published yesterday.
t
... 1
III
v ' -
The College World
NIGHT CLASSES AT N. Y. U
To meet an increasing demand for
courses of evening instruction of en
gineering and other technical studies,
New York University has announced
that its extramural division will In
clude evening lectures and laboratory
instruction in various phases of en
gineering as a part of the 1916-1JU7
curriculum. As most of the applica
tions for engineering instruction in
the evening come from young men
lecking previous technical training,
the beginning courses will be mainly
elemental in character, although more
advanced studies will be offered as the
need becomes apparent. Exchange.
THE IDEA OF A UNIVERSITY
Among the more than 600 courses
offered at Columbia university this
season are dancing, boxing, drainage,
dairy work. How such a curriculum
would have made the oldtimers stare,
when much Latin and nearly as much
Greek were almost the whole of the
stock in trade of a scholar! The stu
dent who goes to the University of
Pennsylvania to study dental surgery,
or to Harvard to study blacksmithing,
or to Princeton to study phohometry,
is as far from the seventeenth cen
tury concept of a liberal education as
Canopus or Rigel is from the earth.
Dr. Eliot said he would not be hap
py till most of the courses at Har
vard taught a man to use his hands.
In some genteel preparatory schools
manual training for some foolish rea
son is still disparaged, and a good deal
more than the desirable amount of
time fs spent in looking up the mean
ing of words in a glossary. It is a
temptation to let the passion for the
utilities go too far, and to dwell on the
bread and butter argument and the
dollar mark. Theory and practice, like
science and religion, have no quarrel.
Whatever the books contain of wisdom
is to be reinforced and proved by the
pragmatic test
It is the business of the head and
hands to co-operate of the theorist to
instruct the artisan of the laboratory
to be the radio-active intelligence of
fice for the factory. The business
executive, the broker of the finished
product of a great plant of furnaces
and chimneys, has learned that motor
cars, steel rails and electric locomo
tives crystallize a highly specialized
form of Intellectual activity, and that
a man may ravage a library or sit and
think "how to do it" for hours of abso
lute mental concentration and be most
valuably employing his time. Phila
delphia Ledger.
Guy Chamberlain, who will long be
remembered at Kansas as a young
gentleman of superior ability who once
played on the Nebraska football team,
has a cousin on the Hill who is said
to have as much football ability as
Chamberlain himself. Cousin's name
is Will Beck, of Baldwin, and he is
at present enrolled in Oread high
school. He will enter the university
in February.
Beck played on the Bakor Academy
team last year, where he made good
with a vengeance. He is an excellent
liackfield man, according to report, and
commonly punts fifty or sixty yards.
Exchange.
UNIVERSITY STUDENTS DIG
CELLAR
In squads of fifty, with picks, shov
dp and wheelbarrows, 700 undergrad
uates of the University of New York
will start excavating for the founda
tion of the new $275,000 Physics-Engineering
Building. The building will
be 50 by 200 and it is expected there
will be 100,000 cubic yards of earth
removed by the students for the base
ment of this new science ball. When
administrative efforts failed to raise
sufficient money to complete the build
ing fund, the students, tiring of
delay. Exchange.
STUDENTS AT WISCONSIN NOW
VOTE BY MAIL
The bill providing that voters tem
porarily absent from their home pre
cincts may cast their votes by mail to
day became a law. Students residing
in Madison whose home towns are
within the state, and members of the
militia regiments now at the front, HU
have a chance to cast their, ballots ia
the c ; iag elections.
The bill was Introduced in the ex
traordinary session of the legislature
which convened on October 10, in ac
cordance with the call issued by Gov
Philipp. After being amended by the
senate, it was passed by the lower
house without dissenting voice, and
yesterday received the signature of the
governor. A special messenger will
be sent to the front to receive and
carry back the ballots of the militia
men. Exchange.
Harvard is entering its 281st year of
educational work with an enrollment
cf "00 freshmen Exchange.
Dartmouth Day will be celebrated
next Friday with the inauguration of
Ernest Martin Hopkins, of the class
of 1901, to the presidency of that in
stitution. He is the second college
president under the age of forty to be
installed this year among eastern
schools.
Seniors will don cap and gown for
the procession up to the auditorium
and the day will be made one of festiv
ities on the part of both faculty and
student body on the Dartmouth cam
pus. Exchange.
AEROPLANE AT CIRCUS
An aviator turning double somer
saults in the air will be one of the
special features at the coming inter
fraternity circus at Chicago. The air
man, a student in the university, will
drop bombs on a warship outlined on
the field and otherwise perform in a
hair-raising manner. Exchange.
"1 trust," said the anxious parent,
"that there is nohting in the college
curriculum that will endanger my son's
patriotic spirit"
"My dear madam," said the profes
sor, "our school fairly breathes the
atmosphere of the new Americanism
on all sides. We have even cut out
the hyphen in the use of compound
words." Laurentian.
Caught in a rooming house: "You
haven't anything on me; I sent a pair
of socks to a laundry here, and did
not get back anything but the ruffle
on the top." Daily Kansan.
Michigan has established a new
honor system in its engineering
school. According to its precepts,
there is no committee, no faculty legis
lation, no signing of pledges. The
student goe into the examination cn
his honor and is allowed to come and
go whenever he pleases; if he sees
any cheating, he is supposed to stop it,
either by speaking privately to the
"cribber" or else by calling the at
tention of the class to the matter.
Exchange.
FRANK A PETERSON
Class '05, Law 10
Democratic Candidate for
COUNTY ATTORNEY
TUESDAY AND WEDNESDAY
The famous stage and screen star
PAULINE FREDERICK
As the self-sacrlfleing wife who pits
herself against "The Woman" in
-THE WOMAN IN THE CASE"
A picture adaptation of Clyde Fitch's
Drama
ADMISSION: Eveninns 15c a
Shows: 1:30, 3:00,
f
A ' , -
S V '
I
' 1 t
; ; - I ' ,
i,
William's
Orchosiro
INSURE THE SUCCESS OF
THAT PARTY BY BOOK
. ING NOW
B-1654 Hours 12-1, 6-7
917-21 0 Street
Exclusive Lincoln Retailers
EAT AT
POTCH
MILL
CAFE
234 No. 11th Street
THE
LINCOLN CANDY
KITCHEN
FOR THE BEST
Lunches, Home Made Candy
and Ice Cream
Cor. 14th and O Sts.
PRINTING
That's Satisfactory
Boyd Printing Go.
125 North 12th
THURSDAY, FRIDAY, SATURDAY
That dainty, mlschevious person
"MARGUERITE CLARK
As a slip of an Irish lassie in a
fanciful romantic photoplay
-LITTLE LADY EILEEN
"A dainty, airy thing with charm
ing touches of fairy lore
nd 10c; Matinees 10c and 5c
6:30, 8:00, 9:15
GENfy
3 it-Jb! Ki
i