THE DAILY NEBRASKAN PHARMACY OFFERS MANY ADVANTAGES TO STUDENTS Nebraska has one of its strongest colleges in Pharmacy college. The University of Nebraska College ranks right up at the top with the very best schools in the country, both in equip ment and instruction. New students j,re enrolling each year in greater numbers. Graduate students find their occupation as analysis in biological nnil manufacturing laboratories of the country, in pure food and drug chem ists, as retail and wholesale druggists. Much opportunity for graduate work is given at Nebraska. Students may major along pharmacological lines, analytical or manufacturing lines. Pharmacy" is one of the coming pro fessions. No other science todi.y is forging ahead like this older art: The country is demanding college trained pharmacists who are reliable dispens ers. It is not a painful curriculum for a student to follow throughout his college days. There is none of the humdrum tediousness connected with it. New things are seen each day, now discoveries are made and the work Is made to be interesting. No other profession today offers more chance of service to the public than does pharmacy. It Is a science that is concerned with the nation's health and the college-trained pharmacist is in position to be one the communities !iggest assets. Any university student then becoming more or less dissatis fied with his course, should by all means procure a catalogue of the col lege and get an interview with a mem ber of the pharmacy faculty. H II Kit K KVKKYHODV (iOKS MON. TUES. WED. 6 ANDERSON SISTERS 6 A Sextette of Yei-Htitile (iirls Crawford & Broderick "IX A SMII.K OR TWO" BERT LEWIS A Syiicopiitiir of Southern Sonits MONROE & GRATTAN "TIIK illtr, XKXT POOR" CLAUDE AUSTIN Keren trie Comedy .JukkI'T "RUBBER NECK" KlKliteen MinliteM of I.iiukIib Other Kntertiilninir Features Internntioniil News Weekly KAI'U'll AMI Til K OKCIIKSTRA Shinvti Start at 2:H0, 7:00. 9:00 .MiiIh. SI. MKht 40e. C.iil. I'm-. LVMIC ALL THIS WEEK The Sereen Cliisfcle til'S KIV.KIS' "SCHOOL DAYS" A lMi I.A1 fill WITH WESLEY BARRY "A Country School" l'renenteil hv Seven VKKSATII.K SCHOLARS KIXOfiRAMS OF 1XTKKKST I'. i. M'VAY, DIRKtTOK SHOWS START AT I, 3. 5. 7, 9 a! Mutt. :tor Mailt -(ii Dili. wo ALL THIS WEEK "ORPHANS OF THE STORM With Lillian and Dorothy Gish MIOWS START AT 1-8-5-7-0 Sharp I'lrst time here never before nt lhee low prieen: Mats. r0i' Xlglit ." Children 2."ie EVERYTHING FOR THE TABLE Peoples Grocery Ik :t !t t' !Un?"HX53r STATE BOARD EXAMS COME MAY 15 TO 18 The Department of rubl.ic Welfare lias announced the dates of May 15 to May 18 as the days of the state board examination for pharmacists. On these days the board will be held at Creighton University at Omaha, the last examinations in the fall having been given at the College of Pharmacy here. About twenty University tof Ne braska men and women will take the board this year. This is a necessary procedure, as registered pharmacists must successfully pass the state board before being allowed to practice. The Nebraska board, along with the New York state board of pharmacy, has the reputation of being the most diffi cult board in the country. The board members are men of high pharmacal ideals, and their examinations are said to be so rigorous that only college trained men and women can pass. The Nebraska method calls for a series of eight examinations, covering the course of Materia Medica, Pharmacy, Chemistry, Pharmacuetical Arithmetic, Oral Pharmacy, Practical Pharmacy, Pharmacognosy, and Toxicology. An average grade of 75 must be made and no lower grade in any subject than 65 is permitted. If these conditions are not fulfilled the candidate is flunked and is not allowed to practice. w . . I COSOSCOOOSOOOCQiSOSOGOOOOCO UT-1- i r T" & Beef call at Braun'ss 8 Market N 8 139 So. 11th 8a TTILLER'S J-ERFECTO'S JLi LEASE 16th & "0' B4423 S Dean Lyman, of the College of Pharmacy, lias established a record antionally of being at all times a leader for the advancement of Phar macy. In 1917 lie was chosen presi dent of the American Pharmaceutical Society. In 1918 ho was called to Washington by the Surgeon General to help formulate plans for a Pharma ceutical branch in our armies. At the present time lie is a member of the council of the A. Ph. A., is chairman of the executive committee of the American Conference of Pharmaceuti cal Faculties, and editor of the sec lion given to the A. C. of Ph. F. in the Journal of the A. Ph. A. Wednesday, Mnv 3. 1922 CAMBRIDGE HIGH TEAM ENTERS STATE MEET SQUIRES TO PICK THEIR SUCCESSORS (Continued from Page One) Those who were selected charter members of the society last year and who will pick their successors Fri day include: Doane F. Kiechel John son; Story Harding, Nebraska City; Wil'iam Dudley, Hot Springs, S. D.; Eugene Dornbaugh. Tecumseh; Fred Walrath, Omaha; Fred Peters, Yutan: John Williams, Fairfield; Lloyd Rolfe Wisner; Emerson J. McCarthy, Ponca; Harry Hubbard, Ypsilant. Mich.; Floyd Wright, Omaha; Emil Luckey, Columbus, and honorary, Dean War ren A. Seavey. See our new visiting card samples. George Bros., engravers, 1213 N St. Adv. wfs- THE BUnk Your Lights At The GREEN LANTERN 41 1 1 FOUXITAIlf EitvicrD Our CRISP SHEER Sj ORGANDY DRESSES in the new luxuriant S Cambridge High School has entered a team in the State high school track meet which will be held the afternoon of May 13 on Nebraska field. The Cambridge team has participated in several dual meets this year, and made excellent showings. Uodwell, all-state quarter-back, is doing good work on the track team, starring In the dashes and the broad jump. The following men compose the Cambridge team: Paul Uodwell, Wayne Italian, Ed ward Ellingson, Donald Aiken, Paul Mouse), Arthur Easter, Myrl Stahl, Claude Mousel, Eldon Simon, Allen Thompson, Arthur Mullock. COURSE OFFERED IN SANITARY SCIENCE (Continued from rage One) duced into every nook and corner of the car, including each and every berth, linen closets, bedding presses, smoking compartments, dressing room toilets, etc. The cost of installing the system is slight and it cannot get out of order. THE PHARMACEUTI CAL OUTLOOK By Dean Rufus A. Lyman What is the .outlook in pharmacy? This is a question which is ever be ing asked by those young men and young women who are choosing phar macy as a profession, as well a3 by the laymen who are interested only in pharmacy insofar as it is an essential element in community life. Pharma cy lias become so powerfully commer cialized that sometimes men wonder whether it can ever escape from that commercialism. The question arises as to whether it ought not to be con sidered as a merchandise trade which requires a certain amount of special scientific training. As a matter of fact pharmaceutical work is no more commercialized than medical or dent al work or even law. Tlie difference lies in the fact that in pharmacy there must always be a certain amount of tangible merchandise while in these other lines the merchandise which is sold is not tangible. Very recently one of America's most famous and most constructive sur geons has made the statement in a public address that most physicians and surgoons when they get down to brass tacks must certainly admit that they are in business. This is not an ideal which medicine stands for and neither ought this to be an ideal for dentists, lawyers and pharmacists. The only thing that will eventually prevent every line of scientific and professional activity from being sunk in commercialism will be dependent upon the ability of those individuals wha have the proper scientific and professional training to maintain those ideals. Those of us who have for over a dec ade watched pharmacy develop and have been instrumental in influenc ing it, believe that it will be possible to establish pharmaceutical ideals on such a high plane that pharmacy can take its place along with the other so-called learned professions. Chief among many hoperul signs which In dicate that this is iv probability is the fact that pharmacists themselves all throughout the country have Come to the realization of the fact that if pharmacy is to occupy the placo where it rightly belongs that the present ed ucational requirements for the study of pharmacy must be greatly in creased, as must also the period of scientific and technical training. That this hope is bolng crystallized into action is shown by the great In crease in educational requirements being demanded by institutions teach ing pharmacy and also by legislation which is being shaped so as to in crease greatly requirements for the practice of pharmacy. Again, there is a feeling amongst educational institutions that pharma cy is really worth while. This 13 shown by the fact that pharmacy is supported much more liberally by ed ucational institutions today than it was fifteen years ago. Tlio writer is of the opinion that the drug store has more to do with the morals of a community than any ether instution excepting the church and school. Hq does not hesitate to say that the drugstore has more in fluence upon the morale of the com munity than all the doctors, dentists and lawyers put together. The government has placed upon the pharmaceutical profession the re sponsibility cf dispensing to society in legitimate way for medical and in dustrial list's the hs-bit - producing drugs and alcouu.. Probably no other class of men in our national life have ever had placed upon them a respon sibility comparable to this. The phar maceutical profession is handling this problem, is opposed to, and has to contend with the baser elements in all other professional lines, especially those of medicine and law, who have at their command the financial re sources of the anti-prohibition ele ments of the nation. Mr. Kraemer, who until recently was the chief executive officer of the jrovernment prohibition enforcement machine is responsible for the state ment th-.t it was simply appalling how physicians came to the conclu sion at once after the passing of the eighteenth amendment that alcohol was a valuable remcty in the treat ment of colds. He !so brought out the remarkable fact that it always took a pint of whisky to cure a cold, that all physicians' prescription for the treatment of colds called for a pint of whisky which is the maximum amount that a prescription can be written for. It was also interesting how hundreds of physicians in Chi cago and other citio3 had just three hundred patients with colds a month, which was the maximum amount of prescriptions that could be written. The writer has called the attention of the reader to these facts for no other purpose than to bring to the attention of the public the enormous problem which the druggists of America have to handle in the discharge of tilt ir Orph STARTING TODAY Mark Twain's Joy Bringer A Connecticut Yankee The Funniest Picture Ever Shown legitimate business, and to show tht, reader the enormous social problem that the druggist 1ms to contend with In the discharge of his legitimate duty. The most Important work that pharmacists have to do at the present time Is to make bettor retail drug gists, who are well trained for the dis pensing of poisonous bodies and hub it-producing drugs to the public So that ther servire can be Intelligent and honest. In a scientific way the fields oi pharmacy are unlimited. Dr. Roger Adani3, research chemist of th,, I'ni versity of Illinois, has recently given lectures before the students of th ? University and one r these 1. ctures dealt only with one phase of pharma ceutical endeavor, namely the produc tion of synthetic drugs which are of use in the treatment of dis ase. Dr. Albert Plaut, who died recently, was employed by the firm of Lehn and Fink of New York and was said a fabulous salary for no other reason than that he knew the drug mark ts. of the world. The production of drugs is one of the greatest problems ahead of the scientific pharmacist. Before the beginning of Jewish history, the si arch for drugs was always tied up with that for gold, silver and precious stones. That problem Is even a great er problem today. The opportunities along the line of pharmaceutic!'! manufacturing are also unlimited. Industrial pharmacy is almost an untouched field today. Tin- pharmacist who lias been prop erly trained botanically has opportu nities In Ihe field cf pharmaceutical botany that are worthy of anyone's talents. It is probable that as requirements, both educational and professional, are incna.-od for the practice of phar macy that drugstore merchandising will change as it has already changed in foreign countries, so that the pat ent medicine end of the business for which medical men have been largely responsible, will become purely a branch cf cheap merchandising and will got to the department stores, ten cent stores and the corner grocery, while the more scientific aspects of pharmacy will be carried on by men who will be properly trained. MODERN BUSINESS Cannet put up with slipshod faining. It demands the best the very kind we specialize in. The call i'rr ..I'fiee help is increasing daily. Why not get ready now? Our graduates are in demand. Start Monday Literature Free NEBRASKA SCHOOL OF BUSINESS T. A. P.lakeslce, A. P., Ph. P., President (Accredited by American Association of Vocational Schools) Corner O and 14th Sts. Lincoln, Nebraska LI lV-,'ffygg-!'l''lJ'",-''p, y 1 " '" 111 "" "'' M"'iM'.'''T'Wl .. COMING The $2,000,000 Spectacle 1 with Betty BIythe The most beautiful woman the world has ever known. ' Special Musical Accompaniment w 'K'SS SSSSSK s. &. J 8. ;. gji :: :: -0: V ;; si it. :! it. a ; :i it. :s. . st "iXiOX aiOISS'' ,ii 1 I Varsity Cleaners I Call B-3677 ROY WYTHERS FRED THOMSEN Managers Girls! Watch the Rudge & Guenzel Co. ad in this paper Thursday There9 11 be Lots of Gossip about Intimate Friends of your wardrobe (See Window Display 13th and N St) I Co cccccccccccoccocccocoscccc