The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, March 01, 1917, Image 3

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    THE DAILY N E B E A 5 K A IT
Oliver Theater
This Week, Twice Daily,
The truth of Birth Control
"THE UNBORN CHILD"
Mats, for Ladiee ONLY
Mata.S5c25c; Night 75c to 25o
ITT I Tli Hill r it -
Martin Beck's Orpheum Circuit
2:20Twice Dally 8:20
MURIEL WORTH
Vaudeville's Veraatilo Exponent of
the Dance
CLAYTON WHITE
AND COMPANY In "PEGGY
JOHN AND WINNIE HENNINGS
THE VOLUNTEERS
A Singing Novelty by George Botsford
A BURDELLA PATTERSON
WALLACE .GALVIN
DONAHUE A STEWART
-Naturally"
Tnvel Weekly Orpheum Orcheatra
J,U-5c; Night-55c0e.75c
THURSDAY-FRIDAY-SATURDAY
THE SIX COLONIAL BELLES
A High Claas Musical Offering
LEW HOFFMAN
The Worid'i Worst Juggler
PEGGY HYLAND with
Marc McDermott and Bobby Connolly
in -INTRIGUE" (5 Parts)
TIME 2:00, 7:00, 9:00
Matinee 10c Nights 15c
MAJESTIC
THURSDAY-FRIDAY-SATURDAY
Dainty, Delightful
VIOLA DANA in
"THREADS OF FATE"
MRS. VERNON CASTLE "Patria"
Episode 7 "Red Dawn"
TIME 1:50, 3:15, 7:15, 9:00
.dulta 10c Children 5c
HayeYcurFiksDevelcped
By
FRK. MACDONALD
Commercial Photographer
1309 O CLRoom 4 Lincoln Nebr.
tulek ServtM
Opal at AH Time
Orpheum Cafe
la ma I Attention ta University
Students
PRINTING THAT PLEASES
AT
125 North 12th Street
Cornell University
Medical College
In the city of New York
Admits graduates of University
of Nebraska presenting the re
quired Physics, Chemistry and
Biology.
Instruction by laboratory meth
od throughout the course.
Small sections facilitate per
sonal contact of student and
instructor.
Graduate Courses leading to A.
M. and Ph. D., also offered
under direction of the Gradu
ate School of Cornell Unlver
aity. Applications for admission are
preferably made not later than
June. Next session opens Sep
tember 26. 1917.
For information and catalogue,
address
THE DEAN, CORNELL UNI
VERSITY MEDICAL COLLEGE,
Box 447 First Ave A 28th 8L
New York City
qP A TALBOT I
The Ann A-vn r
r I K YJ I 11 A
new ji uvivvu
H COLLARS
arc Curve cut to fit the
Jhoukkrs perfectly
FARM CAMPUS PAGE
POULTEY DEPARTMENT
HANDLES EGG PROBLEM
Would Be no National Problem, They
Say, if Same Efficiency
Prevailed
If poultry men throughout the coun
try were getting results the poultry
department of the agricultural college
is getting, the egg problem would be
solved, records of the department
show. When eggs were 45 cents a doz
en, the poultry department was get
ting 300 eggs daily from a flock of
500 laying hens.
With up-to-date equipment, the de
partment has been able to increase the
production of eggs from its flock of
laying hens. Electric lights have
been Installed in the laying houses
to lengthen the day during the win
ter, being turned on at 5 in the morn
ing and left on until daylight
The department has a number of
new portable colony houses which are
moved about the farm with chicks in
them to give them the benefit of
free range and shade. These houses
will be moved to a cottonwood grove
at the southeast corner of the farm
as soon as warm weather begins.
make a number of wagon boxes for
which advance orders have been re
ceived by Professor Baer.
NUBBINS
H. B. Pier is in Beatrice on exten
sion work.
A. V. Kjelson, '13, is working for
a bank in Gothenberg, Nebr.
Elliott Davis was at Battle Creek
at a sheep breeders meeting Monday.
W. A. Rocke, '13, is with the United
States soil survey station at Waynes
boro, Ga.
J. C. Wolford, 18, of Lincoln, who
has been on the border for the past
six months, has returned to school
H. N. Colman and O. H. Liebera
went to Beatrice to look over a ship
ment of dairy cattle from Ohio yesterday.
COUNTY AGENT WORK
SHOWS RESULTS IN
CO-OPERATIVE SALES
County agent work in Nebraska is
getting results in a new form the co
operative sale of live stock. Utah
interests have called upon agents of
this state to supply ten carloads of
pure-bred cattle and ten carloads of
brood sows.
This foreign demand is the direct
result of co-operation of farmers in
county agent work. For some time
farmers associated together in farm
bureaus have been purchasing live
stock co-operatively, but this is the
first big sale that they have effected.
AG ENGINEERING
STUDENTS WILL
BUILD WAGON
Lewis Reynolds, new Instructor in
the agricultural engineering depart
ment, will instruct the students in
forge work in wagon making. They
will build a complete wagon from
gears to wheels, a feat that has not
been attempted in the department for
a number of years.
The students in carpenter work will
Sigma Kappa Zeta, honorary horti
culture fraternity, held a special meet
ing at the Lindell hotel at 6 o'clock
last evening.
Several Shorthorn steers from the
Farm herd will be shipped to Grand
Island for the combination Shorthorn
sale March 5 and, 6.
SOCIETY
SOCIAL CALENDAR
March 2
Delta Zeta banquet Lincoln.
Sigma Nu dance Lincoln.
Phi Delta Phi dance Lindell.
Kansas club dance Faculty hall.
Pre-Medic hop.
Beta Theta Pi house dance.
March 3
Alpha Phi banquet Lincoln.
Delta Zeta formal Lincoln.
University night Auditorium.
Sigma Nu banquet Lincoln.
The Alpha Phi banquet Saturday
evening haa been postponed on ac
count of scarlet fever scare, because
out-of-town alumnae who have - chil
dren are afraid to come.
PERSONALS
Mary Hughey, '20, is going to Om
aha Saturday.
Gladys West, '20, is gong to Ne
hawka Friday.
Marie Pettit, '18, is visiting at her
home in Fremont this week.
The state high school Judging contest
will be held at the State Farm March
31, under the direction of the animal
husbandry department.
Prof. L. F. Seaton of the agricul
tural engineering department was in
Omaha to the auto and tractor show
Monday and Tuesday.
The dairy department has finished
a ten-day digestion trial in an experi
ment which was to determine food
requirements for growing a dairy
heifer.
H. C. Gramlich, head of the depart
ment of animal husbandry, leaves to
day -for Oklahoma City to judge in the
students' contest at the Southwest
American live stock show.
Two hundred head of experimental
spring lambs are to be shipped out
to Omaha today. The lambs have
been fed on special feed for ninety
five days and were fed seven differ
ent rations.
SPRING FEVER
Somehow along in th' early spring.
When th" fust red-breast begins t sing
Ez he builds his nest in th apple tree.
An the sparrers 're twltterin merrily.
When th sun shines warm from th
cloudless sky.
The snow all gone an' th' groun' all
dry.
'Ceptin a little patch now an' then.
In a shaded spot, an th' ol barr d hen
Begins f cluck an' fluster aroun
An ruffle her feathers at every soun
When th air seems sort o' sun an
sweet
1th th openin' buds, an' you hear th
bleat
O' sheep in th' pastur 'cross th' road.
An out In th garden th ol wart toad
Sits an blinks in th' mornin' sun.
-When th' creek in th' holler begins t'
run.
An' fish worms wriggle an squirm an
creep
Out'n th groun. I like f sleep
The hull blame day. Jes lay an' snooze,
An' liter aroun' ei I durn choose.
Scuffy.
THINK FEVER IS
AT ITS HEIGHT
(Continued from Page 1)
action other than a possible slight
sickness.
Six Released From Farm House
Six of the members of the Farm
House fraternity, shut off from the
rest of the world yesterday when the
whole chapter was quarantined, were
officially removed from isolation by the
health department yesterday. All six
iof them have had the disease, and.
after being properly fumigated.( were
in no danger either of taking it them
selves or of spreading the epidemic.
The six men are Paul H. Stewart.
16; Arthur W. Tell. '17; Dana F. Bige
low, '19; Fred Kelly. '18; Francis
Coulson, 18; and Carl A. Olson, '18.
ALPHA KAPPA PSI
INITIATING TODAY
Commercial Fraternity to Take in
New Men Banquet Follows
This Evening
Alpha Kappa Pel, commercial schol
arshio fraternity, will hold its initia
tion at the Phi Aipha Delta house.
729 South Tenth street at 4 o'clock
this afternoon. The annual banquet
will be held this evening ai 6:15 at
the Lincoln hotel.
Colgate. The annual mid winter In
terfraternlty carnival Is being held In
the hills around Hamilton, New York,
this week. The fraternity men enter
teams in all of the outdoor events and
at the end of the week each has a
formal dance and house party to close
the carnival- Ex.
A College Student
The Purdue Exponent, in a recent
article, defines a college student as a
"phase of existence." It goes further
to classify between adult and "kid"
college students as those who are sent
to college and those who go; those
who get an education, and those who
"get by." Ex.
Ohio Gets Large Appropriation
The State Legislature of Ohio has
appropriated $1,383,937.22 for the Uni
versity to be used as expenses for
the current year. This Includes the
building of a new wing on the Chem
istry Building. A bill was also In
troduced to change the name of the
institution L-om The Ohio State Uni
versity to The University of Ohio.
Ex.
Knojt New faternity rushing rules
recently drafted make it a misde
meanor for any fraternity to tamper
with the pledges of any other and in
cases of pledge releases, to rush or
pledge until the expiration of six
months after the release. Ex-
Lucille Nitche went to Omaha Mon
day and expects to return to Lincoln
next week.
Edgar McGee, '18, who has Just re
turned from the Mexican border, regis
tered yesterday.
Dean Mary Graham is in Kansas
City this week attending the National
convention of deans of women.
Raymond Wenk, '19, who has been
ill for the past week at the Delta
Upsilon house, returned to school
Wednesday.
Miss Ulenna Ingersol, of Mount
Pleasant, la., province president of Pi
Beta Phi, is a guest at the local chap
ter house this week.
FELLOWS,
the new Suits
are ready
"peppy" styles that
you'll be crazy to
get into the minute
you see them.
Come and Look !
Th Boom t Kunnakeiaat
THE
Gleaners, Pressers, Dyars
For the "Work and Senrioe that
Pleases." Call B281L The Beat
quipped Dry Cleaning Plant as the
West. One day service If seeded.
Reasonable Prices, good work, prompt
Telephone 12311 rTlc-
tZi North 12th St. carefully made.
Mrs. J. A. Mawhinney of Omaha,
will be the guest of her daughter.
Beryl Mawhinney, Saturday, at the
Delta Delta Delta house.
Dr. Louise Pound, professor of Eng
lish literature, is going to Kansas City
this week to address the National
association of principals and superintendents.
tudents
Refiiter for your mmio work at
THE UNIVESITY SCHOOL OF MUSIC
Twentj-Third Tear Just commencing
Hanj teachers in all branches of music to choose from.
Dramatlo Art Aesthetic Dancing
Ask for information
WTLLAILD ITTMBAT.T Director
11th and R Sts. Opposite the Campus
is
Lym V Heal, "Washburn"
Ukuleles, $15.00; Letnardt
Kunes genuine Hawaiian mat,
$7.50; Alauna Lea brand, $4.
May be had if 12,000 UaImZ
music dealers. Writ for name
. cf the nearest dealer.
THE languorous charm of the
Hawaiian native instruments so
moving in appeal, so observably
in vogue is strikingly characteristic
of the Ukulele. Its tone possesses that
curiously beautiful timbre, that exotic
charm of tonal quality which has
made these instruments so sensation
ally popular.
The Ukulele has a pleasing grace of
form. The finer models are made
of genuine Hawaiian Koa wood. It
is much in request today am jng the
smarter college and other musical
organizations.
It is caiy to Jeam. Its price include an
Instruction Book.
Hawaiian Steel Guitar
Every chord rtruck upon thii typically rep
resentative Hawaiian instrument is marked
by a weird, plaintive harmony and ftrangely
beautiful qualitie of tone. It brings, to any
music, qualities full of vivid color and va
ried charm.
Trice M.M sa4 xmi, lrfiI Strriml-c( Tkiw
Ttil l tor ffanac aa4 lmxrmatom Sta.
Catalogs on application. '
51-67 JACKSON BOULEVARD
CHICAGO