THE DAILY NEBR ASK AN 1 S i C. ROY MILLER, For Foot Comfort Adjustment of Fallen Arches, removal of Corns and Ingrowing Nails 410 GanUr nJ the relief of Bunions Phono Building " COMFORT SHOES B.3781 OLIVER THEATRE "TODAY 2.30 TONIGHT 7:45 Arthur Hammertteln'a Musical Comedy Knockout YOU'RE IN LOVE" Mat., $1 to 50c Eve. $1.60 to 50c Thursday, Friday and Saturday VAUDEVILLE Big Shows A Good Music Wednetday and Thursday Fannie Ward in "INNOCENT" - Matinees all Seats, 10c. Nights, 20c 1:15, 3:00, 6:00, :45, 8:30 SHOWS 8TART AT I Ag School Commissioned Officers' Rosewilde. February 22 Phi Alpha Tau Rosewilde. February 23 Silver Serpent Junior Girls' party Faculty and Musio hall Temple. Alpha Theta Chi Lincoln. March 1 Achoth Lincoln March 2 Achoth banquet 4:30 to 8 o'clock Lincoln. ' University night Auditorium Closed March 8 Sigma Alpha Ep&ilon Lincoln. March 9 Gamma Phi Beta Rose wllde. Delta Gamma Lincoln ' March 15 Alpha Omlcron Pi Lincoln. March 16 Gamma Phi Beta banquet Lincoln March 23 Delta Gamma banquet Lincoln April 13 All-University party Closed II. U. Noble of Lincoln but expects to leave for her home at Lake Worth in southern Florida. PROF. PHILO BUCK AUTHOR OF INTERESTING ARTICLE "The Great False Prophets," Subject of Essay on Philos ophers of the Ages PRSONAL8 SOCIETY SOCIAL CALENDAR February 15 Acacia banquet Lincoln. ri Kappa Phi banquet Lincoln. Sigma Alpha Epsllon bouse dance. Kappa Sigma Lincoln. Bushnell Guild Valentine party. February 18 Freshman-Senior Girls party 2 to 6 o'clock Temple. Alpha Delta PI house dance. Acacia Informal Scottish Rites Temple - Pi Kappa Pbl Lincoln. Kappa Sigma banquet Lincoln. Myra Buntz is visiting at the Kappa Kappa Gamma house. Catherine Barge spent Sunday at her home in Central City. C. E. Hinds, 18. will spend the week-end with friends in Brock. Margaret McDougal spent Tuesday and Wednesday at her home in Te- cumseh. . Mrs. E. C. Hedrick of Tecumseh is visiting at the Delta Gamma house this week. Miss Mabel P. Thompson, class of '17, passed through Lincoln, Friday on her way home at Madison, S. D., to attend the funeral of her mother. Miss Thompson had been in Hie col lege of agriculture and was well known among the members of her class. She is now at Polk, Neb., teach ing home economics in the high school. Miss Orilla Washburn. '11, of Lin gayen, Philippine Islands, was on the campus Tuesday. Shu has been prin cipal of a Bible Women's Training school for five years and Is home for a short vacation. Miss Washburn was formerly an assistant in the sociol ogy department She Is visiting Mrs. i An article, "The Great False Proph ets," written by Prof. Philo M. Buck, was printed in the October and De cember numbers of the Unpopular Re view. This is an anallzation of the theories of the four great philosophers of the ages, Plato, Rousseau; Ruskin and Tolstoi. Professor Buck explains the differences in the theories on life of these four, men and finishes the article with the following statements: "Finally it ought not to be so very difficult to give a broad definition to what has been attempted by these prophets. life is so big. so monstrous, so utterly irrelevant, that our reason quails before it. The average man takes it as he finds it, with an easy optimism. But these greater mon are at first stunned by its meaningless clamor, then roused to inspired ef fort to make reason and the will of God prevail. The demands of the inner life ring clear as a bell, and from its music they catch the melody that they would hear re-echoed from their Imagination to work. They will simplify according to the inner pat tern. But straightway a host of dif Acuities appear and the problem be comes more complex and the unknown begin to multiply, until in desperation they wipe from the slate all the dls trading inconsistencies, leaving only what is fair and reasonable and fit for the divine taskmasters' eye. And yet from the beginning, when ever we see fit to place It, man has been evolved Into an intellectual and moral being by recognizing the facts. especially those in his own nature, and working and enduring In the effort to shape them to the ideal. We cannot solve the problem by simply rubbing it off the slate. Per haps the will of God they seek to have prevail, is a far more complex thing than they thought it. The solution lies through the approximation of rea son and fact Because these great men refused to look at the outer fact. instead of solely at the inner vision, they were prophets letd astray." PHONE B3398 ALWAYS THE BEST SHOW IN TOWN ORPHEUM CIRCUIT: Wednesday night to Saturday night EANCIIOfMlAnCO With Their . FRISCO JAZZ BAND Featuring RUDY WIEDCEFT World's Premier Saxophonist Henry Maida SYLVESTER &. VANCE In a Satirical Comedy with Songs Entitled "Get Out of the Theatre" By Willard Mack TYLER & ST. CLAIR Xylophone Players ORPHEUM CONCERT ORCHESTRA The Psychic Eighth Wonder of the World Accompanied by the Marvelous Occult Revelation In "THE MUSICAL ENIGMA" NOEL TRAVERS & RENIE DOUGLAS in "Meadowbrook Lane" By Edgar Allen Woolf BEE HO GRAY The Versatile Cowboy ADA SUMMERVILLE With HerTrained Horse "Onion" A Potpurrl of Comedy and Skill HFARST-PATHE NEWS Billio Montgomery fi George Perry (Late of Montgomery & Moore) (Late of Perry A. White) "THE TWO BACHELORS OF ART" Matinees at 2:30; all seat reserved at 25c. Evening performance at 8:05; seats reserved at 25c, 50c and 75c. War tax additional. Dr. W. E. J. Gratz Speaks at Vespers Service Dr. W. E. J. Gratz, new pastor of the St. Paul's Methodist church, gave a talk at Vespers Tuesday afternoon at 5 o'clock In the Temple. His sub ect was "How to Make Religion Real." Gertrude Munger gave a solo. Lucile Wilcox presided. "Is religion real to you? Is the Bible a real book," were some of the questions Dr. Gratz asked." There are many worlds today such as art, beauty, music, literature and religion. These are not appreciated by everyJ one. Art may mean much to one man and absolutely nothing' to an other. There is something lacking when things are not real to us. "We can not appreciate the different worlds until first we desire them with our whole heart. Second, we must take time to make them real to us. It is important to take time to enter into religious life, which is one of friendship. "How content we are with seooud hand ideas and notions! What was good enough for our fathers ami mothers, we think is good enough for us. We must have opinions of our own. These are made real to us by experlence only." "How do you continue friendships?" was another question asked by Dr. Gratz. "Often neglect loses friends. One should take time to keep up cor respondence with one's friends. Do not let excuses make you careless of your associates. Will party who took L. W. Ellis note book from Y. M. C. A. lobby, please return notes. 3t LOST Black envelope purse con taining Northwestern annual pass loss between Miller & Paine and state capitol reward. WANTED Ten Unl. man and women to travel during the summer. A wonderful op portunity to see the world and earn money. Inquire Student Activities Office. I rj-BW---- ADVERTISING IN TH 66 f (o) s7s? r J tf 99 College Book Store Mayer Bros. Co. Lincoln Hotel Miller & Paine Schembeck's Jazz Band University School of Music Lincoln Gas & Electric Co. Lincoln Photo Supply Co. Nebraska Central Bldg. and Loan Assn. . Lincoln Dental College Nebraska School of Business Folsom Bakery St. George Ssudio Meier Drug Co Paxton and Gallogher Co. W. Fred Hawck fe Co. (Omaha) Theo. Lieben A Son (Omaha) Smith and Hurst Halls Hardware Co. A. C. Townsend East Lincoln Cleaners Awgwan Armstrong' 8 ' University of Nebraska Saratoga Billiard Co. N. S. Cafe Nebraska Materiol Co. Standard Market Peoples Grocery Castle, Roper & Matthews Kosika Drug Co. Geshwender's Market Magee's Tucker-Shean Fenton B. Fleming Harris-Sartor Jewelry Co. The Famous Keller Photo Supply In behalf of our Patrons, The Management of the Annual Student Publication, known as "THE 1918 CORNHUSKER," ask our fellow students to patronize the above ADVERTISERS. OUR ADVERSISING CAMPAIGN HAS JUST STARTED. WATCH THIS SPACE IN THE DAILY NEBRASKAN nqci ti tci lJUr 4?CU 1UU J 1: