The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, February 21, 1922, Image 3

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    Iny, February 21, 1922.
Tursi
Th geography department Just re
.,v received from the bureau of
ellor service, department or
C,ll Washington, D. C, a number of
hlots describing the oppcrtuni
i in the consellor service of tho
a Dlanks were also received
!hich are to be filled out by thoso
h0 wish to file applications for en
Trance examinations. This material
Ly be consulted in the department's
reading room oy ay
Orpheum
STARTING WEDNESDAY MAT.
ED. JANIS & CO.
.mart dlvprtlHMnrnt of muslu,
' Hon and Ilrrpscliore.
rhr famous Australian sportsman
.ml 1)1 if saiii Imnlwp.
.ml ui Kred LINDSAY
FRANK FARRON
DE HAVEN AND MCE
In "The Follies of 178"
RUTH HOWELL DUO
KELLAM & O'DARE
In "ChHHlnit the lllues"
MOSS & FRYE
How High Ih I pf
i How Cumii?
1 Arkop's Fable Pathe News
I TopU-s of the Day
f Matt. 2S-flr. Nlffhts, 25e to $1.00
jrro wdtrmu wot LWftpmn gin, mob,
JOSEPHINE WORTH & CO.
In (lie IMiifhtful' Playlet
'THE LITTLE SHEPHERD
OF BARGAIN ROW"
FOUR NIGHTONS
In a t'nlque Offrrlna
Amazing, Artlotlc and Darin
FRISH, RECTOR & TOOLIN
Vaudeville Funsters In
Meloilv. I-ausiiter anil Sonit
GLADYS GREEN & CO.
Vaudeville's Dantiest Entertainer In
"The llanre of the Nona- Hlrd"
WATTS & RINGOLD
The Peer of Colored Entertainer In
"The ItluHlilna- Bridegroom"
"THE TOUCHDOWN"
A Cyclone of Laughter
"WITH STANLEY
IN AFRICA"
Rabich and In IT lie Orchestra
Entire (iianirn of I'rofram Thum.
SHOWS JTAKT AT t:M. ,:i0, 8:00
Hat. JOe J Mht 10c; Cat. 15c
UNCOtNlS LITTLC THCA'
sssasisEraDza:
ALL THIS WEEK
A Gilded Romance of Fashion and
Huslness
Ravlkliisir, Daizllna- with Lilting
Ttvana; of t'aharet Jaztins;
MAE MURRAY
In a rorgeously staved drama of
the nlitlit life of Paris and New
Vork; a picture reflecting; respleud
ently the bewildering clamour of
rreat cllles.
"PEACOCK ALLEY'
"BE REASONABLE"
Mack Sennet's Late!) Disturber of
Blues
Prologue
DONNA GUSTIN
CLEO THE DANCER
Lvrlc Concert Orchestra
U. fi. McVay, Director
Minus KTiHT AT 1. 8. 5. T. 3
MAT. :ilci MG1IT. 50c; CHIL. 10c
MON'. TIES. WED.
1 1 ouxe of Harmonizing
Entertainment
MARY MILES MINTER
"TILLIE"
From "Tlllie. t Mennonlte Maid"
Ne by Helen K. Martini Flay by
Frank Howe, Jr.
Added Attraction, the Quartet Frem
"RIGOLETTE"
"BIBTS OF LIFE"
Comedy rathe News. Top'es
The New Kensstlon
H. Mamliall Neilmau l-rsJui'Uoi:
It Nlar onirics
Kiulto Symphony Orchentirf
leun L. hclmcf-r. C-i..M tor
SHOWS START AT J. 3. 5. 7.
MATH. "Oct NIGHT 8Aei CHIL. lOe
mm.
"CAMERON OF THE
ROYAL MOUNTED
From Ralph Connor's Stirring Btery
with Gaston Glass, Vlvlenne Os-
orne and Irving Camming
Indians, border renegades outlaw
t tliat vast stretch of open eoon
try In the far northwest- eery
hand lifted to kill. If necessary, it
carry out their depredations against
the Inwl nd Corporal Cssscrsa,
KoyiU Northwest Mounted Folloe
faced them alone, beat them at their
own game and wen promotion nd
the hand of the prettiest girl in the
Fort MacLeod district.
"GUUESTS AND
JUNGLE PESTS
A Scream
Added Attraction
THE LEATHER PUSHERS"
J11 greatest prise ring fight pic
ture ever screened adapted bem
jolliers Weekly Stories.
"HOWS START AT 1. . B, 1.
"at. Adolts 15c; Nlghfr Adults, 25e
ChUdrea All Shows, lne
RJLfJLdMwM JL
I I
y-'HiiHCiion o Ln CA(iMari-C575gL.'
6
FELLOWSHIP WILL BE
TO
American Scandinavian Founda
tion Will Give Fellowships of
at Least $1,000 Each.
The American-Scandinavian founda
tion will award twenty fellowships of
at least $',000 each for graduate study
in the Scandinavian countries. The
fellowships will be awarded in Swed
en, Denmark and Norway, aa follows:
Sweden: Ten fellowships in any of
the following subjects: Chemistry,
agricultural sciences, administrative
or social sciences, forestry, mining
and metallurgy, hydro-electricity, lan
guage and literature and other hum
anistic subjects. Two fellowships in
humanities will be of $1,200 each.
Denmark: Five fellowships in any
of the following subjects: Industrial
organization, co-operative agriculture,
agricultural sciences, bacteriology,
chemistry, folk high schools, language
and literature and other humanistic
subjects. One fellowship may bo
awarded for social-industrial study at
the new International Peoples col
lege. Norway: Five fellowships in any
of the following subjects: Weather
forcasting, oceanography, hydro-eleo
tricity, forestry, agricultural sciences,
chemistry, physics, language and lit
erature, und other humanistic sub
jects. One fellowship will be award
ed for the study of weather forecast
ing at Bergen Geo-physical institute.
Instructions for Candidates.
Candidates must have been born ln
the United States or its possessions.
They must be capable of original re'
search and Independent study, and
each must submit a definite plan of
study.
It is desirable that they be college
graduates and familiar with at least
one language in addition to English
preferably Swedish, Danish or Nor
wegian.
The stipend will be $1,000 and in a
Paw cases $1,200. Arrangement for a
reduction in steamship rates on com
mercial vessels may be made certain
of the Fellows.
One academic year will be the pe
riod of study. Students in forestry
should sail in June that they may
spend the summer in forests and for
est schools.
Those desiring appointment should
file application papers, including let
ters of recommendation and a photo
graph, at the office of the foundation
before March 15. Papers may bo sent
in directly, but, if the candidate wishes
the official endorsement of his college,
they should be filed at the office of
the president or dean of his college
before March 1. Successful candi
dates will be notified about April 15.
The final selection of Fellows will
be made by a jury of university pro
fessors and tetchnica experts ap
pointed by the foundation.
Application blanks may be secured
at the chancellor's office. The follow
ing letter concerning the Fellowships
has been receivde:
Unusual Talent and
Variety in Paintings
And Exhibition
An exhibit of oil paintings is be
ing shown in tho Art Gallery of Li
irary Hall, February 20th to March
20th. This collection includes an
Arthur B. Davies, a Bellows, a Haw
thorne, a Du Mond, a Carlson, and a
Betts, among others', and contains
scope for the exercise of the mont var
ied tastes and allows a fair view of
the putput of some of the prominent
American painters.
While there are, fortunately, ,no dis
tinct schools in America, nor is It pos-
ible to pigeon hole any of these paint
ers, one could note the many formH
of expression included here. There
re the painters who excel in the
eplotion of a realism of appearance,
such as Bellows and Henri, among the
figure painters, and among the land
scape painters are Carlson's vigorous
tea on tho out-doors and Jonas Lie s
strong reports; also Kroll and Ben
Foster. Then those who control an
other kind of realism of appearances,
those who press it into a decorative
arrangement giving another pattern
of truths, are represented by Hassam,
Eaton and Frieseke. Then there are
those who seek to produce forms
Durely creative, such aa Arthur a.
Davies, Frank Vincent Du Mond and
i f T-wgnn. Tt i evident Indeed
that those who selected' this collec
tion expressed a wide and aJI-lnclus-
ive choice as to viewpoint and tecn
rique. This exhibition In one of fifty-eight
circulated from coast to coast by The
American Federation of Arts In Us
national work in favor of American
art appreciation. These exhibitions
cover a long list of subjects from oil
paintings and landscape gardening to
tapestry, brocades and wall paper.
THE DAILY NEBR A
A special feature of this exhibition
will be a series of Gallery Talks to
be given every Monday, Wednesday
and Friday evenings, while the col
Jlection Ja on view. The speakers
will be Miss Olin Rush, Mrs. Dean It
Leland, Dr. H. B. Lowry, Prof. Paul
II. Grumman and others. The Topics
will be announced later.
The hours of exhibition are 9 a. m
to 1 p. m., 6 p. m. to 10 p. m. dailv
and Sundays from 5 to 10 p. m. Ad
mission will be free.
Major Kidwell Tells
Of Strange Experience
Was Discharged a Few Weeks
Ago After Thirty Years in
the U. S. Army.
Major Frank A. Kidwell, 0. K. C,
keeper of the military storehouse of
the Nebraska R, O. T. C, has had
enough experiences and adventures to
fill a dozen articles like this. From
the time of his enlistment in the
United States army some thirty
years ugo until his final discharge
about three weeks ago, Major Kidwell
has served in all ranks from private
to major, seen service at points from
Alaska to Cuba, and from the Philip
pines to Belgium, and has gathered
up knowledge of a kind that univer
sities san't give.
"I'm a stickler for education,'' de
clares Iajor Kidwell. "It is absolu
tely essentional in these times for a
man or woman to have one. It is
one of the few things that can be
called a necessity. When I was a
boy, even before I had completed
grammar school, Ihad to go to work.
Thmose few years in the grades have
been practivally the only ones in
which I have received knowledge ex
cept that which I have given myself.
I realized what an education meant,
and studied nights and at odd times
so that I have beien able to pass every
army examination that I have ever
tackled.
"I enlisted in the army in 1891
after hearing a cousin who had en
listed talk about its. merits I've
never had cause to regret the act and
can look back over the life with per
fect satisfaction. My son, a big six
footer, by the way, and a fine fellow,
received an appointment to West
Point from the president of the Unit
ed States and is now in that schotl
as a yearling. He's in the first his
tory section, and in a class of 500
that is going some. I have a daugh
ter, too. She's a junior in high school
and has been registered in five dif
ferent high schools in those three
years, yet she has never rnissJ i
grade. Well, as far as that goes, my
son had to go to sclioo' uuer the
same cDrdition and did so well that
he had enough high school credits
so that he could enter the military
academy without mental examina
tion. "I received my appointment as a
major during the war while fight
ing with the Ninety-first. That buncn
saw some real fighting. Just after
we were all worn out and cur ranks
greatly thinned by tho Argonce For
est battle, they loaded us on a train
und shipped us t Belgium " he fight
ing there was worse Uia that which
we had Just undergone. Ocr division
which should liavo been rested and
recruited after the first round, was
just 'about on its last legs after it get
out of that. With the other members
of the division, I am authorized to
wear five bars on my victory medal.
"After three years in Cuba at the
time of the Spanish-American war. 1
and my family came back to America
and I was detailed for duty at West
Point. The West Point Annapolis
football game was the first big event
that had happened for us in three
years, and I, my wife and the baby
went. I ronnember tfle ninety-five
yard run made on that day by one
of the West Point plebes who I knew
myself. He was not more than thirty
yards from me when he started, and
I started out to help him at the same
time that he started lor the goal. I
had my baby, who is now the six
footer at West Point, in one arm, but
I started to get up and tried to push
the runner along. He ran farther
and I got up higher until at last I
was clear up yelling, waving my hat
in one hand, the boy in the other and
my wife trying to get the baby. She
got the baby and the plebe got the
goal. That was a great game."
SOCIAL SERVICE CLUB
WILL HOLD BIG DINNER
All girls In the university who have
dona social scrvico work will meet
for dinner at 6 o'clock Tuesday eve
ning at Ellen Smith hall. The din
ner will be given by the social bctv
ice committee of the Y. W. C. A. of
which Mary Sheldon is chairman.
The social servloe workers are
girls who are leaders of girl reserve
groups, girls who are training lor
campflra leaders, Americanization
workers among the foreign-born citi
zens of Lincoln, ana girls in other
branches of social service.
S KAN
DR. GUI OF
TO TALK TO STUDENTS
Famous Physician and Surgeon
Will Speak in Interests of Stu
dents Volunteer Movement.
Dr. Robert II. H. Goheen of India,
will speak to several classes and other
student groups today and Wednesday.
The doctor is traveling in this coun
try in the interests of the student
volunteer movemendt. Dr. Goheen
is a graduate of the College of Woos
ter and the Rush medical college in
this country and has also taken work
at the college of tropical diseases in
London.
When Dr. Goheen went to India he
took over the work of a' doctor who
held a similar position in that coun
try to the Mayo brothers in this coun
try. The first afternoon he was Ui
charge he operated on twenty-eight
patients. The doctor states that med
ical men are kept busy in India ot
there is but one surbeon to every
million of the population. He tells
of removing a tumor that weighed
over fifty pounds, after which tho
patient from the tumor was removed
weighed but forty-eight pounds Dr.
Goheen has also treated many casts
of leprosy of which, four have been
cured.
The doctor will speak to the local
volunteers, and other students that
wish to attend, at 5 p. m. Wednesday
in Social Science, 102. Anyone wish
ing to interview the doctor may make
appointments through Bill Day of the
university Y. M. C. A.
DELJAN SOCIETY HAS
INTERESTING MEETING
The Delians and their visitors were
entertained Friday evening by an ex
cellent program composed of a musi
cal number by Virgil Michael and
Wayne Gray, accompanied by Miss
Velma Hall at the piano; an interest
ing account of an all summer's visit
in Germany by Miss Augusta Thaden;
an interesting and highly instructive
demonstration of casting fonnini; by
Harold Carlson; and a very enter
taining reading by Miss Gladys Wolfe
Short games pertaining to Valentines
occupied the remainder of the even
ing. Staff Desires To Sys
tematize Cornhusker
Proofs for "Everybody's Corn
husker" Should be Identified
Immediately.
The intervening time until tho Conr
husker goes to press is dally growirg
shorter, and the work of preparation
has hardly begun. It is the desire
ii!i:niiB!ii:!niiinii;sBiii:iBi!HiiiiiBiii::aW
Remember
Vall's
I Barber Shop g
131 No. 13th St.
1
llimiBBIIMIIIMIlDBilillBIIIMIIIIIBIIIIIBtllillllllMlllilBiilll
OOSOOS09000S09900QQ90000CO
ij For choice Corn Fed Q
bBeef call at Braun'sS
8 Market o
139 So. 11th j
oscocooecooooeoooGooeoccco
cooooeoeooeocoscosoooooooc
8
S Tucker-Shean q
1123 O STREET j
Complete Stock of
Standard Supplies
Botany
Zoology
Mechanical Drawing
Bound and Loose-Leaf Note
Books
Lefax Data Sheets
Distributors of
Waterman Ideal Fountain
, Pens
A Point for every hand.
Playing Cards, Chess,
Checkers
Fine Stationery and Corres
pondence Cards
Tucker-Shean
23 Years at 1123 0 Street
oooooeoccgcooccooooceooooc
of the staff to so regulate the work
that all will be done systematical)
and woll, not rushed through at the
end in poor shape. The very first
work is the taking f the pictures at
Townsends. These proofs must then
be identified and the keys to the pic
tures drawn up. Accomtanying theae
keys a list of officers Is also desired
tocether with what information may
be given out of which a write up may
be prepared.
To facillate this work the organiza
tion committee and the individual phi
ture committee are communicating
with all of the organizations and the
juniors and seniors in an effort to
complete the appointments for pic
tures. The dead line for organization
pictures has been set for March 4 and
for individual pictures for March 11.
If you have not made arranpemcnts
for your picture in the Cornhusker do
so at once with Ruth Miller, B13580,
or C. B. Hall, B4621. Remember, in
order that this year's Cornhusker may
be "Everybody's Cornhusker," there
should be a picture of every oryaniza
tion and of every junior and senior ln
the school. Will youra be there?
Put It there, that your friends and
yourself may see it in the years that
are to come.
U if
The new FARQUHAR Hats and
Caps-now on display in our wind
ows, are the last word in correct
headwear for Spring.
They have been selected especially
.for college men with an eye to his
preference for style, color, and price.
Hence, you'll find they meet your
tastes to a "T".
Now is the time to make your selections from com
plete Stocks.
Clothiers to
VAN HE
the Worlds Smartest COLLAR
The trim dignity of the VAN HEUSEN
is not starched nor ironed into it, but
woven and tailored into it.
Will Not Wrinkle
C1rlht roil
PHILLIPS -JONES CORPORATION t
THE HOME EC. THRU THE RYE
If a body meet a Home Kc. jomlu'
thru the rye,
If a body greets the Homo Ec. no
one questions why,
Everybody loves tho Home Ec. ,no
you wonder why?
On her our hopes depend for bread
and meat and pie.
If a body meets a Homo Ec. in the
village town,
Does the body Khun tlio Home Ec.
pass her with a frown?
No, you bet your lll'o he doesn't, no
one wonders why,
They all crowd about the Home Ec,
for dates with her they cry.
Country lads and country lassies,
here s a word for you.
Nothing else farm life surpasses;
build your homo for two.
Every Home Ec lias lijnr farmer,
none will wonder why.
When they see your fine new farm
house, midst your fields of rye.
C. M. B. & E. V. B.
(Apologies to Gertrude B. Anthony)
'The Farmer Thru his Rye."
S.CO.
College Men.
USEN
Nine styles and heights, quarter
sizes irom iiy2 to 20, price titty
cents. Will outwear a half-dozen
ordinary collars.
If your dealer cannot supply yon
with the VAN HEUSEN Collar
urn J the VAN CRAFT Shirt (a soft
whiteshirt with the VAN HEUSEN
Collar attached) write us for
address of one that can.
1225 BROADWAY : NEW YORK