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About The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current | View Entire Issue (April 23, 1917)
THE DAILY NEBRASKA C. ROY MILLER, For Foot Comfort Adjustment ol Fallen Arches, re- moval of Corns and ingrowing Nails Phone and the relief of Bunions. COMFORT SHOES B3781 410 Ganter Building ..MunAV.TUESDAY-WEDNESDAY . ... Attern Vaudeville 3 Shows Matinee 2:30; Evenings 7:00 and 9:00 green, Mchenry & dean From Farm to Cabaret LEXEY A O'CONNOR Vaudeville Bits GARDNER & REVERE SinQing Talking FOUR NOVELTY PIERROTS Gymnastic Surprise MIZPAH SELBINI & CO. In a Distinct Novelty THE SECRET KINGDOM Episode 9 Matinees 15c Nights 25c MONDAY-TUESDAY-WEDNESDAY Photoplays PEGGY HYLAND AND MARC MACDERMOT In "BABETTE" A Five Part Vitagraph Feature Vaudeville METROPOLE FOUR Kings of Harmony GROONE AND ALBERT In "ON THEIR WAY TO SCHOOL" . "PEARL OF THE ARMY" TIME 2:00-7:00-9:00 Matinees 10c Nights 15c LINCOLN HIGH ALUMNAE NOTICE "The Fortune Hunter" Thursday April 26 SENIOR PLAY 25c No drawings for reserva tions. Seats reserved begin ning Tuesday, at II. S. office. Come back and see your friends. SpringTime is Kodak Time HAVE YOUR FILMS DEVELOPED BY FRK. MACDONALD Commercial Photographer 1309 0 St., Room 4, Lincoln, Neb. I3S WE PRINT OR ENGRAVE CARDS for your graduation and Invitation or Announce ments latest styles. Graves Printery Have Your Eyes Examined and Glasses Fitted by DR. MARTI N, Optometrist, Specialist in Eye S'flM Care. 1234 O Street Opposite Miller A. Paine CLEANING SERVICE You need not have an ex tensive Wardrobe with our Prompt service at hand. Phone us any day if you &nt garments cleaned and pressed hy evening. We can oo u and do it right. LINCOLN CLEANING & DYE WORKS 226 S. 11th Lincoln, Neb. LEO SOUKUP, Mgr. ALL IS READY FOR RALLY TOMORROW (Continued from Page 1) and the seating at the auditorium. Working with him, the executive committee, headed by Prof. H. B. Alexander, of the faculty and Ted Met calfe, '17, and including Albert Dry son, George Grimes, Adolph Blunk, M. C. Dalley. Will T. Johnson, Ralph Anderson, Ivan Beede, Alice Proud fit, Eva Miller, Louise Coe, Olive Lchnrer and Marguerite Kaufmann, will help direct the handling of the units. Senior girls will wear their niortor boards, and it has been suggested that all those who can in both the senior and junior classes wear, inso far aspossible dark suits. Middy blouses and dark skirts have been specified for the juniors. At the rally in the auditorium. Chancellor Avery will preside, and Governor Neville will also be pres ent if he is in the city. Speeches by faculty men and impromptu talks by students will be made; the band will play, and the whole throng will sing. The Nebraskan for tomorrow, which will be issued immediately after 8 o'clock classes, will print the com plete program and also all instruc tions in regard to the parade, and seating at the auditorium. Following are the instructions is sued by the executive committee: Parade w ill form in , columns of four. 1. Old soldiers, regents, faculty and alumni will form directly south of Administration building. "'IIO TYii, 1UI 111 i(l JldllY UCIWUI'U Administration building and Library with the senior girls organizng far thest south in park, junior girls next, sophomore girls next and freshmen girls. To separate the classes the class societies such as Black Masques, etc., will lead their classes. 3. University bands will form im mediately outside campus on terrace and sidewalk between Eleventh and Twelfth streets on R Street. 4. Boys not marching in colleges will form in front of U hall. 5. Agriculture college will form east of Administration building and south of Chemistry building inside of campus. 6. Engineering college will form between Brace hall and University hall. 7. Laws will form in front of the Law college. Order of Parade: Fifo and Drum corps. Old soldiers and veterans. Regents. Chancellor and deans. Faculty. Cadet band. Cadets. Girls by classes. Second cadet band. Boys not in college divisions. Agriculture college. Engineering college. Law college. Artillery with cannon, etc. Notes The first cadet band will form in two single files immediately outside the City Auditorium with the cadets in two columns down Thirteenth Street standing at. attention one 'column on each side of the street. The girls' division, headed by a group of girls carrying a huge Ameri can flag flat, will march between the two columns of cadets into the atiditorium. Everyone should carry an Ameri can flag. Arrangements have been made whereby Mr. Long of the Col lege Book Store, facing the campus, will give free flags to all not having one Tuesday morning. As the sup ply is limited, it is urgvd that all who can furnish their own flag. The flags will be given away Tuesday morning before and not after 9 o'clock. The parade will organize immedi ately at 9 o'clock and the procession will commence at 9:15 from Eleventh and It street, marching down Elev enth street to O, thence east on O street, to Thirteenth, and south on Thirteenth to the City Auditorium. No one not a student or partici pating in the parade will be ad mitted to the Auditorium until the entire parade has been seated. , SOCIETY April 20 Delta Delta Delta entertained ninety couples at its annual formal party at the Lincoln. The chaperones were Mr. and M.-s. Phil Easterday, Mr. and Mrs. 0. Klose, Prof, and Mrs. Grove E. Barber, Prof, and Mrs. E. H. Barbour, Dean and Mrs. C. C. Engberg, Dr. and Mrs. It. J. Pool, Mr. and Mrs. F. G. Kloke, Mr. and Mrs. N. Z. Snell, Lieu tenant Governor and Mrs. Edgar How ard, Mrs. D. M. Butler, Mrs. S. S. Hadley, .Margaret Feedo, Lelio Corbin, Kuth Dorsey, Mary Graham. Mildred Perkey, of Wahoo, and Helen Mc Mahon, of Omaha; were special guests at the party. Alpha Phi held its eleventh annual banquet at the Lincoln. Ruth Thomp son, 'OS, of Omaha, was toast-mistress. Frances Barstow, '20, Katherine Sturtevant, '19, Mildred Montgomery, "18, Elizabeth Doyle, '17, Ruth Haller Drake, "06, Mrs. Lea Myer Faulkner. j '06, and Mrs. Charles Wright of Omaha responded 10 toasts, me out-of-town alumnae present were Mrs. Charles Wright, Ruth Thompson, '06, Rutp Haller-Drake, '06, of Omaha; Jane Rlanchard McMonies, '06, of Lyons; Betty Drake, '13, Beatrice; Vernon Storey, '17, Red Cloud; Ruth Ogle, Havelock; Elizabeth Mickey, Vniver sity Place, and Ruth Nichols Johnson, of Rod Cloud. Ninety couples attended the fresh man hop at the .Rosewilde. Miss Ina Gittings was chaperon. The committee included Russell Best, chairman; Mer wyn Heald, master of ceremonies; Bess Wallace, Genevieve Loeb, Hiram Studley and Kenneth Saunders. Bushnell Guild held its fourth an nual banquet at the Lincoln. The toastmaster was E. S. Ripley. The toasts were, "Why," by A. C. Krebs, '16; "Whence," Walter Judd, '20; "What," H. F. M. Hall, 'IS; "Whither," E. E. Schofield, '17; "Where," Fay Merriam, '17; C. B. Hvustis, of Omaha, was a special guest. April 21 Eighty couples were entertained at the annual formal parly of Delta Gamma, at the Lincoln. The chap erones were: Prof, and Mrs. P. H. Grumann, Dean Mary Graham, and Prof. Guernsey Jones. The out-of-town guests were Dorothy Hippie, Stella Robinson, Bernice Johnson, ex '20, Dorothy Cavanaugh, Nina Dietz, Dorothy Morton, of Omaha; Ruth Fitz gerald, of Louisville; Lucille Clark, Stella; Mildred Smith, University Place; Gladys Kellar, and Marguerite, Scoutt, of Kearney; Blanche Young, of Chicago, and Charlotte Flindt, of Spencer, la. A hundred active and almunae mem bers of Delta Delta Delta attended the twenty-third annual banquet of Kappa chapter. Lulu Shade, '17, was JULIAN ELTINGE AND GIRLS at the Oliver, toastmistress. Those who responded to toasts were True Jack, '20, "Doubt;" Gertrude Squires, '19, "Dates;" Helen Young, '18, "Dollars;" Ruth Weeks,1 '17, "Diamond;" Mary Chapin, j "Doomed." The grand president of! Delta Delta Delta, Miss R. Louise I Fitch, of Eugene, Ore., was a spe-1 cial guest. The out-of-town alumnae present were: Verna Jones, ex-'19, 1 I Lillian Johnson, ex-'18, Bernlce ' Thomas, '14, Alice Gideon, '13, Esther Hunter Van Orsdal, Stella Morrison, I Clara Hermanson, Lucille Reader ! Morse, cx-'16, of Omaha; Lou Petree, ' Missouri; Helen Densmore Wiese, i Laramie, Wyo; Pauline Van Orsdal, I Eugene, Ore.; Rita Thomas, Nebraska City; Florence Podd Sheldon, Ne- hawka; Florence Brown, Holdrege; I Cleo Curry, Broken Bow, and Helen Bouse-Osterhout, of David City. The fifth annual banquet of Alpha Xi Delta was held at the Lincoln. Eva McN'amara, '15, was toastmistress. The toasts were: "The Parting of the Rose," Lulu Runge; "Our Rose Bud," Jane Beachler, '20; "A Year in the Rose Garden," Amy Koupal, '19; "The Perfect Rose," Helen Humpe, '18; "A Jar of Rose Leaves," Verda Lanburn Coon, '15; "The Full Blown Rose," Louise Schavland, '17; "The Future of the Rose," Feme Longacre, '17; "The Awakening of the Rose," Edna Bushnell. Amy Koupal sang a solo, Louise Schavland, and Ada Kib- I ler presented a skit, and a quartet sang new songs that have been com posed by the active chapter. The out-of-town alumna present ' were: Eva McNamara, '15, Lamona, la.; Verda Sanborn Coon, and Helen Luller, Omaha: Madge Daniels, Ord; Thlma ! Kauf, Schuyler; Christine Paulsen, Fremont; Hazel Robinson Yager, Hastings; Zoe Greenough, Omaha; Ella Peterson, Cedar Rapids; Ruth Ellees, Scribner; Laura Bates Boydes, Overton; Carolyn Funke, Blue Hill; Ruth Carol Nealy, Gering; Hazel Harnsburger, Osceola; Elsie Peterson, Chadron. Alpha Tau Omega held its annual spring party at the Lindell for thirty-five couples. The chaperones were Guy Reed and H. S. Williams. PERSONALS Lester Frundell, '20, was in Crete Saturday and Sunday. Katherine Nye, '19, spent the week end at her home in Wisner. W. B. McDonald, ex-'16, of Buffalo, Wyo., has been visiting at the Phi Gamma Delta house. Mrs. O. C. Hatheway, from St. Joseph, is at the Alpha Chi Omega house visiting her daughter, Edna Hatheway, '18. Frank Hixenbaugh, '17, Robert Proudfit, law, '17, Fred Walrath, '20, and Frank Carpenter, '19, were in Omaha over Sunday. as seen in "COUSIN LUCY," Tonight. Iff 1j VV filter Every fJeal W uWUJ The Flavor Lz:sio OBJVEES THEATRE Monday Night April 23 THE GREATEST STAR ON THE AMERICAN STAGE THE ARTIST WE HAVE WAITED YEARS TO SEE And New York Cast of 40 With Chorus, in the Best Musical Comedy of the Year "COUSIN LUCY" MUSIC MIRTH MELODIES $10,000 WARDROBE PRICES Orch. $2 and. $1.50; Balcony $1.00; Gallery 50c Tuesday Night. April 24 The Winter Garden's Annual Outburst of Travesty, Spectacle and Song The Passing Show of 191G An Uproarious Eruption of Comedy, Music and Girls In Two Astc and Sixteen Scenes, with ED WYNN AND MIGHTY MOBILIZATION OF MERRY MUMMERS Belle Ashlyn, Herman Timberg, Charles Mack, Fred Walton; Wm. Philbrick, James Clemons, Ford Sisters, Stella Hoban, Elida Morris, Jack Boyle, Pearl Eaton, Augusta Dean, Vera Roehm, Wilbert Dunn, 5 Violin Girls, Andrew Harper, Bly Brown, William Arnold, Bud Murray and Ma-Belle. GALAXIES OF GLORIOUS GLADSOME GIRLIES PRICES Ore. $2.00; Bal. $2.00, $1.50, $1.00; Gal. 75c FRESHMAN GIRL AT TEXAS UNIVERSITY TRIES TO JOIN AVIATORS The arrogant anti-suffragist must forever be silent when he hears of the exploits of this 17-year-old fresh man girl. No more can he claim that women are too weak to fill a man's place. This girl's mother awakened two mornings ago to find her daughter gore, and a note, a la moving pictures, pinned to the kew- jiie pincushion: "Have gone away on a freight train to join the avia tion corps at Miami, Fla., Will drop down on you some day. Your loving daughter." Thv wildest excitement prevailed throughout the household, and immediate steps taken to recov er the adventurous girl. After two days' search she was finally over taken, and after much cogitation, f'iecided to wait until the United States called out the girls. She has at present resumed her studies in the university. Ex. Four Semesters Plans are being discussed at the University of Washington to install the four-semester system now used at the University of Chicago. Under the proposed plan the school year will be divided into four semesters of twelve weeks each. Ex. Medics A joint lecture course for the up per class medics at Harvard. Tufts. and Boston universities is being planned to rush their work towards graduation. Instruction in military medicine is the main object of the course, and it is the intention of those in charge 1o prepare the men for the actual fifld service. Ex. I The Long Island College Hospital BROOKLYN. N. Y. FOL'R yru mdcx counr for tfw M. D. degree. Two ear or ccJIpjt work rrguired for entrance. Fxcrp tonai clinical, hostirla! and laboratory fariluicv Larp-Kt College Hospital and endowrd dispensary in rhe Lnitcd Stairs. Uniltual npportuniti'" in greater Nrw ork. tot particulars, write to Otto von Huffman. M. D., Srrrf tary of iacujty. Henry and Amity u., BiooLyn, .V Y. TUCKER-SHEAN Eleven Twenty-Three O St. Manufacturers of Jewelry of all inds. University, Fraternity and Sorority, Rings, Pins and Ath etic Trophies of all kinds. Orig nal designs in colors and esti nates furnished free. Expert Watch, Clock, Jewelry And Optical Repairing Class Distinction JESS WILLIAMS' ORCHESTRA L-9783 L7779 uUk rvlM Optf at All Time Orpheum Cafe Attantlan t University ttudtnts