winy, February 2, ,1022. Tiiin; Other Worlds Than Our Own. ., unlverlty-"Ftlrnos3 and nnss-all engineers," U the Tl -lopted by the engineers In Or?ort to stop the cheating in ex- . imis Tlie idea was started by J,"; tnoniry engineering societies. Northwestern University-Glenn F. Thlstlelnvalte has been chosep the ,e dK-e01" of Physlcal tra,n,nS and atliletits. University of Mlnnesota-Lydia Johnson, senior academic student, has eoeived the word appointing lier as r8 of ti,0 five American delegates to the World's Student Christian federa tion conference to be opened at Tsing Ka college, Peking, China, on April fourth. Alumni Notes. Mr., '14, nd Mr9' Wm- Rf-7lda" (Fiorcnco Hill, '14). of Omaha, are in Lincoln during the session of the legislature. The Lincolnshire Club Will Have Tea Dansant evorv afternoon from 3:30 to 5:30 , bop-inniriff today Xo charge for dancing. Ackerman will distribute Iiis easy goin' jazz ORPHEUM STARTING WED. MATINEE Santos & Hayes Revue with Florence "Ilusflrr" Santos & Jncqno ".Mary .lime" llayeH. A vaudeville pmrriptlnn In three Hcrnm with WHtWK TKKMAINK. M 1 1,1, 1IIG (,1K mid SAI L MARSHALL and A BKAl'TY CAST. Tim & Kitty Eritton O'Meara "Memories of the Dunce" Sophie) Allen's Kassmir Tnternntlonal Prima llnnnn AL & FANNY STEDMAN In "Finnoenpers" Frank & Milt "Saj- It With Musle" Major Jock "Nettlnsr the Leopard" Jack Kennedy & Co. In "A Oolf Proposal" a Comedy .of tho Llnkr PATIIK NEWS AESOP'S IABLES TOPICS OF THE DAY Muts. 20c o 50c. Night 25c to $1.00 r- wHTfHJ ir-n 1 GAP""" C r0 Till R. FR I. ySA T. Liberty Concert Orchestra Arthur ,1. Itublcli. Itlreetor International News Weekly Xhoning Subject niwl Point" of I ntereNt 'WHITE EAGLE" A Tale of the Wet With KITH ROLAND "BEACH NUTS" V I.iiiiKh-Provokiiifr Comedy ACT TO BE ANNUNCED MANNING & MANETTE "MTTISMH" 'THE MINSTREL MONARCH' A I nlij tie Offering in MlnHtrely with M1MTK. HILLY (iOI.DEN. HILLY It'll., .11)11 N K. t.OKMAN, CIlAn. k. I DELL 'ACT TO BE ANNOUNCED AI.I-AANHER MK.Ll'ORD TRIO "t'loMnosltie at the Carnival" SHOWS START AT :80, 7:00, 9:00 Slut. Site; Night. 40c; Gal. 15c fLYMC ALL THIS WEEK WALLACE REID GLORIA SWANSON ELLIOTT DEXTER In one of the muni drllclnn, nik llng Corned le Ever Staged. "Don't Tell Everything' Other Entertaining TVatqren SHOWS START AT t:SO, 7:00, :O0 Main. 80c; Night, 60c; Chil. lOo Till K r'KI. MAT. Railto Symphony Players iean I,, hehaefer. Conductor PATHE SEMI-WEEKLY NEWS The World's Event VIiHrd Topical and Travel Pictures Showing Subject and IolnU of Interest "ROLLING STONES" Eighteea Minutes of Merriment RALSTON-FROSH TRIO focal Inxtromental Entertln-r "EXIT THE VAMP" Wilbur R. Chenoweh. Orgmiot SHOWS START AT L i. 5, 7. Mat. 20r; Night SSci Chll. Mr BE MAY AID FAMILIES OF SLAINSOLDIERS VOCATIONAL TRAINING IS ASKED FOR WIDOWS, MOTHERS AND ORPHANS American Legion Sponsors Bill In Congress to Help Soldiers' Next of Kin Washington, (Special) Widows, mothers, and orphans of men who died in service during the world war will receive vocational training, if congress acts favorably on legislation now being pressed by the American Legion. At present tho next of kin of a sol dier who lost his lifo receives $25 a month from the government. Inves tigation has shown that hundreds have been thrown on their own re sources, having no trade, profession, or business experience with which to moot tho competition of the business world, and with no aid other than the relatively small compensation payment to keep them going. A bill sponsored by the Legion pro viding a training program to cover the situation passed the senate dur ing the last session, but died in the house. Its resurrection and passage will be persistently urged by its sup porters in the present congress. In the more than thre eyears which havo elapsod since the signing of the armistice no steps have thus far been taken by the government to lend re sistance to the dependents of the war dead in flttinfi themselves to earn a livelihood, the Legion declares. It is estimated that there are ap proximately 15,000 wives and children dependents, many of whom are now in distress. NEW ORLEANS FROM OCTOBER 16 TO 20 INDIANAPOLIS MEETING SETS A DATE FOR BIG LEGION GATHERING Other Important Resolutions Passed By Officials Hundred Get 40 8 Initiation Indianapolis, (Special) October 16 lo id, inclusive, has been fixed as the p.ta e: the next national convention of the Legion to be held at N-vV Or leans. This action was tRketi a- the iouic-.tr.ee of Legion oincu-.s at na tional headquarters callotl by Com mander MacNider. Erection at Eden park in Cincin nati, on an imposing brow of the hill r.vprinnkinc a bend in the Ohio river, oi a simple memorial to Commander 'v tv nnlhraith. Jr.. of Cincinnati, who was killed in an automobile ac cident in Indianapolis last June in the service of the Legion, was ap proved by the executive committee. An .-.r.nrnnriation of $25,000 was vol- - - r r- - i ed and the committee decided lo rc- fusei anv contributions toward, tne memorial from tho city, county or state. The memorial will be a gran ite naranet and bench witn a cenuai shaft, bearing a bronze tablet a resolution was adopted to send a cablegram to the Vatican express ing sorrow over the death of Vc?e Benedict. Annthor resolution deplored the riP.nl h of James Cowgill, mayor cf Kansas City, who was one of the of ficial hosts at the last national con vention. ti, .nr rienartment was urged in a resolution to retain the American cemeteries at Bony, France, waere a i T,mhpr of American soldiers, who fought on the British front are buried. President Obregon, or Mexico City, .wori a vote of thangs for his courtesy in sending the police band of the City of Mexico to the national convention at Kansas City. Th r-oxninittee decided that here after the band which wins first place in competition at national conveu-.!,- cbdi hn recoemized as the offi cial band of the Legion for the year following the convention. T-u-inr a renort on conditions or discrimination against ex service men in employment alleged to exist in the navy yard at Puget Sound, Wasb., it.. Avnr-11 1 1 V A committee adopted a resolution asking the navy depart ment to Investigate the employment situation In all navy 7a. .innal commander was au thorized to appoint two national col or bearers and a commuiee -tigate the advisability of the organi sation of the fathers of Legion mera- bCA motion to admit to membership, secretaries, dieticians and technicians who served with American forces tos voted down by the commute. THE DAI h Y NKBRAS K A N A financial situation in tho nation al organization was disclosed bv Mil ton J. Foroman, of Chicago, chair man of the finance committee which makes Imperative an early increase in membership and the prompt pay ment of delinquent dues by all pres ent members. Tho full couforenco voted unani mously an indorsement of the poli cies of the editorial and business heads of the American Legion Weekly. The big frolic of the occasion came on Saturday evening, after all busi ness had been disposed of. One hun dred candidates were initiated into the mysteries of the Sociote des 40 Homines et 8 Cheveaux. Amug the candidates were Henry D. Llndsley, first national commender; Charles Kondrick, of California, national vice commander; Gen. Wilder S. Metcalf, commander of the Kansas Depart ment, and John G. Emery, past na tional commander. STATE RESTS IN ARBUCKLE TRIAL San Francisco, Feb. 1. The state finally rested In the second trial oi Roscoe (Fatty) Arbucklo for man slaughter at 10:35 o'clock this morn ing, just three weeks after the trial opened. Three witnesses, Dr. W. II. Harri son, medical expert; Carl Eisunechim mel, handwriting expert, and J. V. O'Neil of the police identification bureau, closed the state's case. Judge Louderback declared a re cess until 11 oclock when Assistant District Attorney U'Ren opened the argument for the state. Judge Louderback said if argu ments were completed late this eve ning he would charge the jury this evoning. Gavin McNab, chief council for Arbucklo, said he might, in order to speed the case, eliminate all de fense arguments. RIVALRY MAY CAUSE GRIDIRON SPORT WRECK Philadelphia, Jan. 31. College sports are headed toward ruin thru too heated contest toward supremacy, R. Tait McKenzie, physical director of the University of Pennsylvania, de clared in an address today. "Athletic activity is the best sub stitute for war, and every virile no tion must have one or the other," he said, "but the encroachments of com mercialization have endangered in ternational collegiate athletics. At this time over-enthusiastic alumni o institution after institution are com peting for the services of coaches to turn out winning teams at salaries that surpass the salary of the college president. This is especially true in the west. "Their memory does not go back a few years to the time when the rank ness of the abuses they are thus los tering caused the total abolition of intercollegiate contests in more than one prominent college and menaced the very existence of football r.s a col lege game. "They do not remember that the same was saved only with difficulty by the national college athletic asso ciation through a drastic refoim in its conduct and rules. At present more than one college president, him self a lover of clean sport, is looking toward this goal." Eversharp Pencils 50c to $15.00 Moores and Water rnans Pens $2.50 up. Alarm Clocks $1.50 to $5.00 Fenton B. Fleming 1137 O St. v Jewel Shop The One Minute Lunch Room We solicit your patronage Automobile and Bag trade. Special dinner served every day beginning at noon. Sandwiches and short orders served at all hours. 15th and O Sts. P!l!l!lllM!lll!l!liM" H p I Now booking engagements THE JAZZLAND I I BAND I I Featuring that new Chicago g 1 Walk Time. 1 Virgil E. NorthwalL Mgr. I it Thone B-2338 I NEW BUILDING FOR MILITARYRECORDS LEGION ASKS THAT GOVERN MENT DOCUMENTS BE KEPT SAFELY Are Now Stored In Various Places lo Capitol Other Organizations Interested Washington, (Special) Rough plans have already been prepared by the Fine Arts Commission for a na tional archives building, in which valuable government documents and tho military rocords of all men who served in the war will have a safe rostiing place. A bill providing for an appropriation is before congress. The thousands of Civil War cases still boing brought up - demonstrate the necessity of preserving tl'.e mili tary records of ffolrtfers from the menace of Are and decay. The ar chives building is sought by the Am erican Legion, the national Historical Association, and other organizations to whom war documents are vital. At present, official records are stored about the national capital in various structures, many of which have been declared unsafe. Anxiety 'or the safety of their own records has served to arouse veterans of the Leglcn to take steps toward the erection of a permanent archives building. An item of $500,000 to acquire a site for the proposed structure is includ ed in an appropriation recently passed by the senate. Preliminary steps toward the erection of tho build, ing will be taken if the house assents to the appropriation. $50 FOR TROPHIES Omaha Vet Valued Souvenirs of War at $10,000 But Judge Did Not Agree Omaha, Neb., (Special) How much war trophies are actually worth de pends on whose neck was risked to got them. John G. James' room in an Omaha, Neb., boarding house was rifled of all his A. E. F. souvenirs from a model-laden belt captured from a German major, iron crosses picked up from battle-fields, the gas mask he had used in many battles, Red Cross bags containing shrapnel ex tracted from his wounds, a silver cigarette case taken from a German prisoner, to his American Legion but ton. He told the court they were worth $10,000. But the law only com polled the landlord to pay $50, be causa the trophies were in a suit case at the time they wore stolen. Get it at ILLER'S RESCR1PTION HARMACY DANCE We guarantee to teach you to dance in six pri vate lessons. Phone for ap pointment. WILLIAM'S PRIVATE STUDIO. Mrs. T. E. Williams in charge. 1220 D. B-4258. Flhie IS1 1 1 M f THE DAILY Marriages. Miss Margaret Louise Mitchell and Dr. Ross Gamble w ere man led at Silver Springs, Md., January L'5. Mrs. Gamble formerly attended the univer sity and is a member of Alpha Omi ci on Ti. They will make their home at Silver Springs, a suburg of Wash ington, D. O. WANT ADS. WHY NOT A NEW FORD 0OUTK for that date Tuesday afternoon? Drive it yourself. Capitol Ann Liv ery Co. B-2646. Adv. IXDST A BLACK SILK KNIT scarf with fringe and pink stripes across tho ends. Return to Student Activities office. LOST A SCOTCH COLLIE TUP, about 3 1-2 months old, from the Uni armory. Description: White tipped tail, four white font i.nd white collar. Notify Athletic Dept. Coach Schulte. eCOSOOSOSCCOCCCCCOS0700GSC Phone H-15MI 1 1 -S P St. I Say Girs! This is the Time TO BUY HOSE All Silk Ones As low as $1.69 Black and all other Colors Wool Ones Beautiful Shades Plain and Ribbed Others With Fancy Clocking CLEAR DOWN TO $1.P9 Private Studio Phone For Appointment Mrs. T. E. Williams B-4258 1220 D Y'ou Drive We Rent : Forbes Rent a-Fcrd Co. C. E. VI NSON. Mgr. f. ' Cur for all social functions with Q or without drivers. f( oi. - The University School of Music ADRIAN M. NEWENS, Director Offers thorough training in Music, Drcniatic Art. A large faculty of specialists in all departments. Anyone may enter. Full 'information on request. Opposite the Campus. Phone B1392. . ct.-tsTm". h XX X X X X X X X x x x ........... - News of Flhe Day In school is your subscription to the school paper. Subscribe now. It is but $1 per semester. You need it so do not delay. NEB ; Saxophone 1 i Instruction Verne E. Powell Former Pupil of RUDY WIED0EFT POWELL-CAPPS STUDIOS 127 So. 12th St. B-48G6 XI 'x. : )rx';rT:'Y:ir-x"'x ff ): ' '!: a' K 'x :i x'x :: i: S 1: x . x !! x x x x x x x x x :; x x x ;: w x x i; x Jf! f " at! ;xj x! Pi-k was in lat Friday, $ "! January Olh, joy ni'.ikt. Said $ x lie walked 4 blocks to eat, :! ! so pood lie M( wod S0. i ':i ix, xi ;xi Thorn's a Reason, pood food jj, x! ('loan Cooks '' Central Hotel Cafe XX XXX XXX X X X XX X1 EVERYTHING FOR THE TABLE Peoples Grocery CCCSV&OOCOSCOCCOOOOQCOGOCCO osooococccoccoccosccccccoo Tucker-Sliean JEWELERS Diamonds, Watch Ss, Fine Jewelry, Clocks, Sterl ing Silver, Cut Glass, Expert Watch, Clock and Jewelry Re pairing and Manufacturing. OPTICIANS Eyes exvaiined Free. In our Optical Department you may select just what you want in Eye Glasses or Specta cles. Fine Optical Repairing. Broken Lenses Duplicated. STATIONERS Stationery for the Office, School and Home. Waterman's Fountain Pens. Of fiee Equipment and Supplies. Crane's, Whiting's and Hurd's Fine Stationery. Complete line of Supplies for all departments oi Schools and Colleges. 1123 O Street Phones B-1534. Lincoln, Neb. B-3306. B-3307. x .x x XI 9 H M I I i.. R 11th & R Sts. i x, RASEAN r or cnoice orn r eu SjBeef call at Braim'sS S Market. b 8 139 So. 11th