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About The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current | View Entire Issue (Oct. 10, 1922)
Tuos.lny, October 10. 1922 THE DAILY NEBRASKAN HEFFLEY'S TAYLORS For Those Nifty Clothes Rcmodelinn. Cleaning, Repairing Hor Men and Women 133 North 11th REMEMBER ValFs Barber Shop ,1 j: 131 No. 13th St. i TUESDAY ONE NIGHT OCT. 10TH The Theatrical Event of the Season Neil O'Brien Minstrels llth Biff Annual Tour Prices 50c to SI. 50 Seats Now Selling VAUDEVILLE Wednesday 4 Days The Paramount Character Actor THEODORE ROBERTS with Dewitt C. Jennings in "The Man Higher Up" 7 BIG ACTS 7 No Advance in Prices. Mats. Prices 25c-50c 25-50-75C Harmonizing Entertainment ALL THIS WEEK A Rip-Snorting Vile and a Half a Minute Automobile Picture Jesse L. Lasky Presents Wallace Reid in "ACROSS THE CONTINENT" Other Entertaining Features SHOW START at 1, 3, 5, 7, 9 Mats 20 Night 35c Chil. 10c ALL THIS WEEK GEORGE MELFORD Production "Burning Sands" WANDA MAWLEY, MILTON SILLS, ROBERT CAIN and JACQUELINE LOGAN GREATEST OF ALL DE SERT THRILLERS Other Entertaining Features SHOW STARTS 1. 3, 5, 7, 9 MATS 30 Night 50c Chil. 10c IBEM'Y MONDAY TUESDAY WEDNESDAY A Vaudeville Gem J. C LEWIS JR, & CO. in r Variety Act featuring J. C. LEWIS JR, and TWIN SISTER MAXINE GRAHAM, REED SISTERS And DARDON Cl'ssy Song and Dance Revue JA DA TRIO CHESTER. ALLEN. O'BRIEN -The Three Live Wire Boys" JERRY & GENE "Big and Little Casino" M'NALLY "The Boy With the Hats" "FRESH KIDS" MILES OF LAUGHS Ruth Roland in "Timber Queen" International News Weekly SHOWS START AT 2:30, 7. Mats. ?0c Night 40c Gal. 15c Colonial ALL THIS WEEK "THE SIREN CALL' with Dorothy Dalton Supported by DAVID POWELL and MITCHELL LEWIS A Paramount Picture "r DTC il I. 1. i 7, I Mat-15c N.ght-iSc Chil. 10c COLLEGE SPORTS " EIO GO 10 LAFAYETTE FOR GAME OlfSATURDAY Expect More Than One Thousand ans to Follcw Them to Wit ness Annual Battle N'otro Danio. Oct. 7. More than 1.0, in studcnls of the I'nivorsity are ix. rrleil to journey to Lafayette Sal unlay, Ortoli.T 14, to witness the innnal None name-Purdue battle. The rally will leave South l?enl in the early morning and leave I.afayett before midnight. Pames and other eiK-.tauinunts art being arranged for the evening by the student aitivities cmnmittee, under whose aut-nieos the tn'ii will be made. The student out 'miring of last year was made to Indianapolis for the In diana game and two years ago the join m y was made to Chicago for ill -N'oi ihw extern engagement. The Turdue contest w ill measure tin 1 cieniia) strength of the squad of new men whom Coach Kockne uncovered i" the opener against Kalamazoo on last Saturday. Two sensational runs of ninety and ninety-five yards by Paul Castner. and dashes of more than for ty yards by Crowley, I-ayden, Millar and Kane, were made through an eleven which wa tiring fast. A squad of the strength which Purdue always packs will give Rockne"s men the ex act test needed to classify this year's learn ami to determine its chances of success against Cvorgia Tech, Indiana, West Point. Carnegie Tech. and Ne braska. neve'opments in the opening game against Kalamazoo have changed the complexion of the eleven. Ifcsch re ieive,1 an injury to his heel in the sec ond play of the game and iil be out of the game for a period yet unde cided. The showing of Crowky. I.av dfn and Kane at left half has resulted in a four-cornered fight with lierg man, McXulty and Vergera are con testing the end positions. All of the more prominent sport miters agree that the Ame-Coe game Saturday was a complete upset. The liule Iowa college went through the Aiues line four times, while they held the Ag team to a goose-eg; score. It was a repetition of the defeat to Ames last yeat. Either something wer.t wrong in that game, or else something is radically amiss at the Ames school. Ames usual'y turns out a fonnidaW-1 eleven, putting a healthy fear into the test of the Valley elevens. The result of Ihe Kansas-Army game held little surprise for the mapoiiiy. The Jayhawkrr eleven, with just three weeks of pradice behind them, trav eled half way across t uc commem. to find that they were hardly a match for the Hudson river mililauis. Credl is due "Polsy" Clarks' eleven, how (ver, lor Homing me wesi t um. to two touchdowns, which shows that the teams were not so badly ill match ed. The game was played ill a drizzly rain, and the West point players attained a certain amount rZ profici ency oil a so"; field at the Polo Grounds last November. Keturns from the World's Serie games are being received by radio in the military office in Ihe Armory, ac cording to an announcement by that depaitment yesterday. A wagnavo has been installed, and there are ac commodations for as many as care ' listen to the reports. Signal corps equipment is being used, a id the Je porls are received from the W-L-A-CJ station at the Oak Grove hotel about 1:30 p. m. The reports will tnence to come in daily, until the sena is over, lasting about an hour and i. ha'f. The Minnesota laily. With the appoiuunent of Frederii W. li. Coleman of Miueapolin tht minister from the l'nited Stati-b xj Eslbonia, Lithuania and Latvia, an olher graduate of the Tniversity of Michigan I brought into Ihe national limelight. Mr. Coleman graduated iu the class of 5SS from the Literary col lege and received his degree from t! e Law school three years later. Th.' Michigan Daily. "I don't think it's fair," faid Ka:h ryn Miller. T3. Saturday nion beii. released from her two-oay jail sen tence which was iuns-d for sieeiir)S at the rate oi . -ty-one niiles an hour on College avenue last week. Mis Miller w as arrested by Officer C. P- Taylor. '23. a student in the ColVge of Mechanics, while speeding from ber classes. Judge Robert Ed gar gave her the alternative of doing without ber car for six months or sending two days in the county Jail Claiming the was only going thirty miles an hur. Miss Miller vigorously opposed giving tip her car. In con- wk-end cramming far mid-terms and preparing assignment? I The Sport Circle Missouri is next on the list. The Tigers tire working hard in prepara tion for ihe Nebraska game, and it is safe to say thnt the lluskers will not inn circles around the Tigers like th'' did with Ihe Coyotes. "Het Nebra k:i" is Missouri's slogan. The lluskers bettered Coach Alii-.-oil's statement by twenty-six points. The S"otuh Dakota mentor said before the game that Nebraska wasn't any good unless she beat the Coyotes by forty points. Rudy Iamh, who starred as quarter back on the freshman team here two years ago, was a leading factor in Ihe victory of I-omhard Col'ege over ihe Notre Dame Reserves last Satur day. A sensational forty-yard run by limh was a feature of the game. Paul Schissler. former assistant coach at Nebraska, is head coach a: Lombard. Thtee opponents of Nebraska this year had scouts at the gam- last Sat urday. Coach C.harrity of Missouri, former Princeton fullbac k, scouted the game for the Tigers, and was loud in his praises of the Husker eleven. Scout Williams of the Kansas Aggi?s was also in the press box. Chet Wynne, former Notre Dame star, who is now coaching at Midland, scontel the game for the "fighting Irish." Syracuse. Nebraska's eastern oppo nent this season, scored its third vi--loiy of the year last Saturday when it defeated New York I", by a 30 0 MUint. Captain Wairen of the Husker ba :, ketball team sude does b -licve th: t the early bird gcts the worm. War ren is conducting daily workouts iu the Armory gym for the candidates for the Nebraska cage crew. Between fif teen and twenty men are practicing :laily. shooting baskets and passing the ban. Captain Chick Hartley is carrying around a charley-horse as a result of the track meet with the Coyotes last Saturday. An the other Husker plov ers came out of the game in fine shape. The lest of the Valley .r.ere practice affairs. games were Washington won. Oklahoma did not get into action, the Kan.-as Aggies took their gamv v.ilh Washburn College. Drake w.ri at Des Moines. The standings: w. l. r-t. Nebraska - 1 ' I1"" Missouri 1 " Kansas Aggies 1 " 3 Washington ... 1 " 1 Drake 1 1 Ames - 1 Kansas . 1 1 Grintie'l 1 Oklahoma -' The inler-sectio.-ial games were not very surprising, chiefly because the ... - ....I. . favorites did not meet ineir maimer, in any case. Vale trampled on North Carolina, while Chicago was doing the same to Georgia. The Army leat Kan sas. Cenlre's victory over Mississippi indicates that the Praying Colonel's are still a factor on the gridiron. Noire Dame is up to her old tricks. One of their men made a ninety-five yard run down the side of the field in Saturday's game with St. Louis. This is enough to indicate that the Catho lics are still playing football. Saturday's game wilh 'South Da kota t bowed uj. some weaknesses i'l the Coruhusker line, and many point 5 of strength iu the backfield. tl was stated preseason that Coach Dawson would indeed be lucky if he could find men competent to fill the plas of J'ucelik and Lyman, stars on the 1 521 squad. The coaches se:n to have found two good men for the places in liassett and lJerquist, who both showed they knew considerable of the game Saturday. Ikitn men are heavy. Basset t weighing 1 S. and lJerquist IIS. The two linemen were resjKin sible for uuiny of the substantial gains made by the backfield thru the left side of the line. The backfield is a machine in itseli. probably as formidable a one as lias played on Nebraska field since the war. Noble did the lion share ot carrying the ball, and never failed t gain. Herb DeWitz upheld bis repu tation in carrying the bail as well. The sturdily-built little half is awz; like a shot whenever he is entrusted with the ball. Captain Hartley showed promise of gaining a berth on the al! ValVy eleven w ith bis brilliant I lay ing. The leader of the iuad is a veteran of the gume. and his playing bears that out. In Preston. Nebraska ha a quarterback that would be harti to rivaL Preston use, his head in the direction of the advance. The squad now begins two weeks haul training in preparation for th. homecoming game, October LM, with Missouri. The coaches have a tak m-fore them in smoothing out some ot ihe lough spots that were evident in .he opening game. It would be difli ciilt to estimate the barm that wou'd 4esult should a spirit of over confi dence invade the Husker camp now. The team won one game, but tiny did it over a green squad, composed iiwo-thirds of new men. The Corn busker have seven games ahead of them, two of the hardest ones far fro"i the cheers of enthusiastic Nebraski supporteis. They face two more games, equally difficult, on the local field. An all victorious team is a sweet dream, but many things can happen between now and Thanksgiv ing day. Missouri failed to show up to her best advantage in Saturday's game with Grinnell College at Columbia. The Tiger squad noticed the loss of three of its veteran players .who were on the sidelines wun injuries. ure score was 03 to 0, but it can hardly he an indication of what the Tiger ?quad can do in two weeks, with more training, and the regular lineup 5:1 place. The Kansas Aggie hopes of XI is souii Valley honors went up another notch last week with the return of "Swede" Axline, quarter of the 1!'-" squad, and "Susie" Sears, two letter fullback. This makes a total of ten letter men now in the fold. Halm, left guard: P.urton. right naif; Sears, fullback; Swartz and Axline. quarters- Stark, left half: Steiner, left guard. Nichols, left tackle; Schlinder. right guard, and Sebring. right end. FALL SPORTS Whether you play iacX. bili, basket bell. --v off mau-c m way thletic sport. Epaidinij ifno1 men'.s i,re must sauwacuaai. If It's Spalding's It's Right Scud It Catalogue 0 r s- Lawlor Sporting Goods Co. We Feature Eastman Kodaks and Supplies Let us show you some of the latest models. We develop films. We appreciate vour business. Butler Drug Co. 1321 0 St. B1183 mm Twent When these are gone there will be no more available. Preserve the Past Year Memories for the Future CORNHUSKER EXCHANGES I'niveisity of Washington, P. I. N. S.- Latest available registration liK ires show 4. 574 students enrolled on registration day which is twen'y-two less than were recorded on the com plete census last year. Three to five hundred students usually register late. Approximately ftSO students were refused admission to the Vni versity this quarter on account of their low grades. This is the first year that high school students were limited, requiring that two-thirds of their subjects be SO per cent or above. About 17." applicants for admission were turned away on tis account, bul three-fourth of these were admitted after passing the freshman scholar ship examination. Discovery that the hillside where the stadium will be built was of a sedimentary lorinaticn rather than I nrd rock has removed the final and most important dilficulty which laced the stadium committer. Professors Andrew- Iawson and lin Hnwalda. heads of the geology .l.'inii iment, gave an opinion some time ago that the entire lull by Straw berry canyon was of shale com position. This statement has now- been verified by the drill shaft which goes back into the hill for a dis taiuv of over a hundred feet. Had the test shaft revealed hard rock strata the approximate cost of excavating for the bowl would have "i-uky-Curve' as a Parker patent vi'tiich rnrplor the sc ien 1 1 he p n n eipi or capillar..-attraction to make m fnoMh flow in i. Icakproof lev 3. Noother pea has it- mi hid y-nine 0 II 1922 A good chance for entering students to become ac quainted with the traditions of the school. Get Yours Now at the In the College Book been about three million dollars. The stadium committee originally planned for Ihe total cost of building the structure lo he approximately $r.0o. not). The Pailv Californliin. Lansing Definite action granting the t'nivorsity of permission to proceed with strection of the foundation toward Michigan the con. and first structural slab of the first unit of Chairman of Refreshment Committee Fraternities and Sororities Place your order for Punch and !: Week and your hoi:-. Punch per gallon, $1.00 Over 5 gallons, 85c per gallon. Varied assortment cream. of wafers to Fancy H:icks. We are in a position to serve 'To: cream and Pecans, sandwiches. hundred coupes. Come in and table linen and punch cups. Colored Men in Capp's J. G. "I give the Students Bntler Dm? With Get tfEae Fern that F2HH8 Iby a o tShs Bust ton qA FillerThat's Not Exposed So Can't Catch and Spill Ink 'THIS is one of the vital reasons why the Parker Pen ranks highest with America's educators and student bodies. Its filler is"safety-sealed" beneath the neat screw cap end. There's no exposed lever to catch on the clothing, spill ink and spoil your suit or blouse. Remove the cap, immerse the pen in ink, press the button and the Parker is filled. This simple, perfect filler was created by Geo. S. Parker, inventor of the celebrated lealcproof "Lucky Curve" feed. And in r.o ether pen can you obtain these features so importa... .0 operaiion if a pen is to perform without a hitch. And that's what you want in a four, lain pen not one that distracts your mind when you're trying to concen trate on study or class instruction. All Parker points are 14 K rolled gold, so th:y can't rust corrode or tamish and are not a fleered by z.'.s. Prices range from $2.50 upward according to s:yle and mountine These pens are made wish tbesamemechar.:.i! perfection ar.J jewel er's accuracy and finish found in thefatne-jt Parker 25-yeir Duof&lJ the lacquer-red pen at $7 that has taken America ty srerm. Come pick out the point that best suits your hand extra fine. fir e, medium, coarse or stub. Well give you a Parker Accident Policy free insuring j-ou for one year against any breakage, darrage or un satisfactory service of any kind. PENS $250 II Made by The Parker Pen Co., George Bros. Harris-Sarto Co. Miller & Paine Latsch Ero. H. Herpolsheimer. Tucker-Shean Lincoln Eick Store Cornhuskers eft STATIONERY Store Facing Campus the new Literary building, Involving an expenditure of JloO.OOO, waa today ieit iu the hands of the finance com mittee of tii,. administrative board. The Michigan Daily. I The McCiill I'nlversity Swimming i lull will urn e again start to train a team in order to bold the intercol leciate water polo championship. ! e-hm.-nts party this for i iii: Heine Coni.ng List prices ?;i-rl'"s. on Ice f. ct vfT , l n... Ti:v . 1Vi:y all t Let i. -. W. Coupe with whiii-rVx-olnte" for a i ret.r ,,nd furnish Fountain Capp What They Want." 1321 0 St J aneiv .UTs. SHOP 1 5 i i 1 i i t i