1922. THE DAILY NEBRASKAN ,:;;::iii;iiiiiiii!:i:!l!i::iiiili I CLEAN CAPS .... ...mWHPd how nice VnO.ll oo ' lr look and it will not hurt he beak. It will save you the price of a now cap. Just Phone B3677. VARSITY CLEANERS Roy Wythers. Fred Thomson. Franco-American Beauty Shop SPECIAL P.ATES Marcel 75c Hair Bob 35c Shampoo 50c Room 8 Liberty Theater Building Elevator Second Floor 1,9072 143 No. 13th Heffley's Tailors WHIPCORD SPECIALS Remodeling for Men and Women 138 North 11th St. lessons. nm American Educational Week. MARSHAALL NEILAN Presents "PENROD" Adopted from Booth Tarking ton's celebrated book and play with FRECKLES BARRY Eight Reels of Enjoyment. EXTRA UNI. GIRLS' OCTETTE A Study In Song Other Entertaining Features RMLTO 8VMPHOXV rl.ATF.R8 SHOWS START AT 1. . . M. iOr. Micht SV. Chil. V. WHKRF. KVERVBOnV iOE8 MON. TUES. WED. HUGH SKELLY & EMMA HEIT In a Snappy and Tuneful MUSICAL REVUE Assisted by Mildred Livingston, Sadie Goldie and Vi Conners. CHARLES BARNEY & CO. In a clever comedyplaylet "KATHRYN'S BIRTHDAY" inez Stanley Just a Girl and a Piano HIBBERT & NUGENT Two Sons of Ham HALKIN'S COMEDY SILHOUETTE A novel and original offering KIDDING LOVE Fairly Sparkles with laughs 'THE TIMBER QUEEN" NEWS WEEKLY. TTK'T! -;n THE ORCHESTRA. MIOMS 8TAKT :SO. 7:00, :W V its. illr. Kicbt Oo- Gl. ISe. fr 2? -wmf, P UNCOLNS UTTLL THtAH American Educational Week. GEORGE FITZMAURICE Fres.cr.1 Mary Johnston's World famous novel "TO HAVE AND TO HOLD" Al! the thrills, the beauty, the excitement of a lifetime crowded into one gorgeoous screen ro mance. WITH AN ALL STAR CAST. Misses Shanafeld . Bierkamp Harpist and Vocalist. Other Entertaining Features 1 VRIC CONCERT ORCHF.WTRA SHOWN START AT 1, S. S. Mt. mir. Mrlit Chil. KX-- COLONIAL ALL THIS Week American Educational Week MARK TWAIN'S Greatest Comedy "A Connec t i c u t Yankee in King Arthur's Court" fcHOWS STAItT AT 1, S. S, 1. . Mats. 15c Sight Sc. Chil. Its. LSrniSHA STATC BANK BUO. 15 OmM IUSKER FORWARD WALL FOR 1923 PETERSON, HOUSE A! NIXON if BEJISSING NEXT fEM With Four Line-men Lost This Year by Graduation the News of Ad ditional Losses in the For.vard Defense is Lamented by Husker Gridiron Followers PETERSON MAY BE DECLARED INELIGIBLE TO PLAY House, the Other Center, Has Accpted a Position With an Elec trical Firm and Will Not Return Nixon May Not be Able to Com) to Nebraska Prospects for a strong forward wall for the 1923 Cornhusker football team wore given another blow yester day when the news came out that Gordon House, substitute center let ter-inan, will soon leave school, that Peterson, star center on the 1921 and 1922 teams, may be ineligible for an other seasonand that Bryan Nixon, two year letter man who plays either guard or tackle, may not be back for the 1923 acuson. Four reg ulars of this year's powerful line, Scherer. Schoeppel, Wenko and Wel ler, will be lost through graduation, and if the throe men mentioned above alao leave seven veteran linemen will be gone. House has accepted a position with an electrical concern at Landsdown, Pa., and will retire from school )n the near future. House is a strong linesman, who was expected to fill in one of the gaps on the line next year. Carl Peterson formerly played foot ball on the Lindsberg Academy in tCansas, and it is over his playn, there that some question has been rased. If Peterson Is declared inel gible for another season's participa tion on the Varsity, Coach Dawson will have a difficult task to fill the center position, as Peterson is one of the greatest centers ever developed at the Cornhusker school. Bryon Nixon, who has played guard, center, or tackle for the past two years, does not know whether or not he will be able to return to school next year. The failure of Nixon to return next year would leave stiil an other bg gap to fill on the Husker line. BEG YOUR PARDDON. It was erroneously stated In yes terday's Nebraskan that the Syra cuse game next year had been scheduled for Thanksgiving day. No date has been set for this con test, although a number of Ne braska alumni are asking that the game with the Orange be played early in the season, and that the stadium be dedicated on the same day as the Syracuse fray. HAVE LAST DINNER OF OMAHA CLUB WEDNESDAY The last Omaha Club dinner of the year will be held at the Grand hotel. Wednesday at 6 o'clock. The attend ance at these meetings have been steadily increasing, and according to reports, this meeting will go "over the top." Special music will be provided by an j outside group. Plans are made to have some faculty member speak each month. Due to a misunderstanding. Coach Dawson was not present last time, but he will probably speak at the dinner Wednesday night. DANCE Wed., Fri., Sat. LINDELL PARTY HOUSE Refreshments Favors $1.00 Plus Tax Orepheum Orchestra, the Best in the West. TOPICS OF THE DAY. AESOP'S FABLES. WILSON AUBREY TRIO Comedy Gymnasts . Wrestlers VINCENT O'DONNELL "The Miniature McCormack." ELIZABETH KENNEDY and MELTON BERLE The Twinkling Stars in "BROADWAY BOUND." Harry Ursa FABER & McGOWAN In "THE COMPASS" Harry Watson, Jr. As "The Young Kid Battling Dugan" and in the Tele phone Scene. Billy Edna FRAWLEY & LOUISE In "IT'S ALL A FAKE." JOHN & NELLIE OLMS PATH E NEWS. Matine Daily 25c, 60o B3126 Mights 25c, 60c, 75c B3 128 BEGIN 10 SELECT MYTHICAL ELEVENS Weller, Peterson, Noble and Hart ley Given Places on All Valley First Team Scarcely had the last cheers of the 1922 season died when the mythical elevans began to demand a generous share of the sport page. The first Missouri Valley team to appear is by Edward W. Cochran, a football offi cial who has officiated in more than thirty of the Valley games this sea son. Four of the Huskers gridsters are given places on his eleven. Hart ley, Weller Peterson and Noble were considered worthy of a position among the top-notchers in the conference. The four greatest players in the Val ley are Noble and Hartley of Ne harska, Swartz of the Kansas Aggies and Boelter of Drake. Preston would have been in line for honors on the first team had it not been for his mid season injury. Hartley is also made the captain of the mythical squad. The writer praises his generalship and his football ability which gives him the honored position. Noble is described as the greatest line plunging halfback in the confer ence. "He can make any football team in the world," says Mr. Cochrane. Weller easily warrants a position on the mythical eleven. His work in every game has left no doubt in the mind of the WTiter, but that the husky tackle stands far ahead of any trickle in the Valley. The little lyinsas Aggie back who kept the Huskers guessing a few weeks ago, is given the privilege of filling the mythical shoes of the mythi cal quarterback. He was a crafty and cool general in the game that made the Huskers play football to win. The first and second All-Valley teams follows: First Team. Marsh, Oklahoma, left end. Weller. Nebraska, left tackle. Hahn. K. S. A. C, left guard. Peterson, Nebraska, center. Denton, Drake, right guard. Bunker, Missouri, right tackle. Black, Kansas, right end. Swartz, K. S. A. C, quarterback. Noble, Nebraska, left halfback. Boelter, Drake, right halfback. Hartley. Nebraska (c). fullback. Seoond Team. Scherer, Nebraska, left end. Nichols, K. S. A. C, left tackle. Higgins. Kansas, left guard. Smith, Missouri, center. Lewis, Missouri, right guard. Wenke, Nebraska, right tackle. Munn, K. S. A. C, right end. Preston. Nebraska, quarterback. Orebaugh, Drake, left halfback. Starke, K. S. A. C, right halfback. McAdams, Kansas, fullback. fID It WORKERS ARE RIGHT Havelock Minister, Experienced in Recent Shop Troubles, Tells of Wall Street Plot "Regardless of whether capital or labor wins in the present trouble, there can be no permanent settlement until it is settled right, and right settlement is based on the principles of the Man of Galilee. Labor and capital must get together on the principles of Christ." This was the solution of the strike between capital and labor which was presented by Her. L. V. Slocumb of Havelock at vespers Tuesday evening. Lois Peder son led the meeting. The Rev. Mr. Slocumb spoke on the stand of the church in labor problems, and confined himself to re marks about the present strike. The speaker has had a great deal of. ex perience with labor problems In Hare lock during the present strike. He has taken hi stand foursquare with la bor, because, as he explained, he al ways takes sides with the underdog. The present railroad strike, which began in July, is Just one round of the eternal fight of capital and la bor. Of the large numbers of la borers who went out on strike in July, eighty-six per cent are still out The Rev. Mr. Slocumb came out boldly with a statement that Wall ninniiMD GLUUUj Stroet has promoted the strikes. He state that ninety-eight per cent of the people of the United Statos are controlled by the other two per cent. Twelve institutions in Wall Street control the health of the country. In 1917 those institutions met behind closed doors to reconstruct tho or ganization of the nntion. From facts learned later it has come to light, Mr. Slocumb said, that Wall Street at the meeting determined to got back into its banks the more than seven and a half millions that the laboring men of tho country had da posited at that time, in 1917, at sav ings for homes and educations. The speaker emphasized that if la bor had had a leader at the right time, tho destruction of Wall Street would have been assured. But they didn't, and Wall Street started on Its plan to get back the seven and a half millions. The railroads and oth ers layed off men in pursuit of th plan. "The only difference between a hold-up man and the great financial institutions," Rev. Mr. Slocumb as sorted, "was that the institutions didn't go out with a gun and say 'Hands up.' " Since 1917, as part of that same plan, three million working men in this country have been made idle. The speaker told of abuses that once existed in Havelock. The shop men there were handed ballots and compelle to vote a certain way, they were told from whom they must buy their lots and materials for their houses, and they were made to do all their banking and building and loan business with one bank, the president of which was at the head of the shops. The laborers were compelled to do these things on penalty of los ing their jobs or getting even worse punishment. With the organization unions for protective purposes, condi tions of labor have changed. The hope of winning today, accord ing to the speaker, lies in the fact that the Vnited States is thinking as it has never thought before. The vote is part of the solution of the prob lem, as is also the fact that public sentiment has gone against Wall Street. WISCONSIN TEACHERS JAZZ UP CLASS WORK A group of Wisconsin instructors have startled the educational world by eyplaining at a teachers' confer ence in that state how they inject jazz into the study of geography, physiology, and other subjects. Press reports read in part: "In studying the geography of Ara bia, for example, we have discovered that it aids the students to play a record of "The Sheik,'' explained one member of the new educational school. "The plastic minds of the pupils absorb the local color, the very atmosphere of Arabia, and they will never forget it." "When one of my pupils absent- mindedly slipped up on the location of Louisville, before a member of the school board recently, I hummed Kentucky Blues." and the board member was astonished at the pupil's intelligence. Why, 1 simply couldn't teach geography without such synco pation as the "Songs of India," "Cal ifornia." the "Wabash Blues," and others." "jct the music box jazz oft "Hot Lips" and see whtt interest the class will take in physiology,'' she said. "Why explaining textiles play 'Georgette.' 'After the Rain is so enlightening in classes of physical geography. 'Look for the Silver Lin ing' has the very rudiments of ge ology." One of the teachers of this new group suggested that "Nobody Lied" would be excellent for ethics, "That's Where My Money Goes" for courses in economics, and "Do it Again" for laboratory classes. CELEBRATE FOUNDERS' DAY. Founders' day is being celebrated by Coe college yesterday. A banquet closed the program last night. 753 a Ik'UjUJi Vr-. The Flavor Lasts 1 ill SUFFERS CALLED CAPTAIN Graebing, Leader of 1922 Team, Asks Candidates to Report to Y. M. C. A. at 4:30 Candidates for the Varsity swim ming team nro usked to report at tho City Y. M. C. A. at 4:30 today by John Graebing, cuptain of the 1922 team. Practice for the swimming meets which will bo held this winter wiK start at once, according to his an nouncement and a much larger group of men must turn out if the season is to be a success. Only three of the "N" men of last year are in school this year, so many new men can be used. Swimming, as a minor sport, has gradually grown until a regular schedule with other schools has been arranged. Tho meets this year have not as yet been defintely arranged. Two distinguished visitors in the persons of Prof. Henri Pirenne, rec tor nnd professor of medieval history at the University of Ghent, Belgium, and Madame Pirenne are tho guests of the University this week. Under the auspices of the departments of history and political science Profes sor Pirenne will lecture at Wheeler hall. The discourse will bo carried on in French under the general topic of "Origin of Cities in Europe." Professor Pirenne is the most prom inent educator in Belgium and one of the foremost scholars in Europe. Among his many writings those best known are "Histoire de Belguique,"' the standard history of Belgium, and "Bibloigraphie de l'Histoire de Bel Ruiqne." which is a bibliography of national history. The Daily Califor nian. Signifying the transition from the conservative old to the progressive new campus, the first step in the raz ing of University hall was accom plished yesterday by the sophomores when they razed the portico which has designated the entrance to the main building of the University since 1871. Since the steam shovel started its work of excavating for the new liter ary building less than a week ago, such progress had been made up to Wednesday that this move was found necessary. Since 8 o'clock yesterday morning curious onlookers inspected the portico, doubting whether the sophomores could pull down the huge concrete and brick pillars. Eleven o'clock found the crowd increased tp more than 500. Soon after that hour the scaffolding was completed anrt the sophomores, armed with pinch bars, steel pikes, and sledge hammers clambered over the top of the portico and began their work of destruction. The railing was first attacked, and a number of colonets from it were given to the Women's league repre- Pall Mall Club Dance at K. C. Hall Saturday, Dec. 9 LOUISIANA RAGADORS Admission $1.00 Tax, 10c Total, $1.10 See Us First! If it is in the drug line or sundry line we have it or will get it for you. Special Attention Given to Prescriptions Butler Drug Co. 1321 O St. B1183 SETBACK sentative under the direction of Mar garet Shafer, '25, and were sold. Michigan Daily. OFFICIAL TIMERS TO USE TEN-SECOND TIMEPIECES The complaint of Charles Paddock, fustest sprinter In the country, to the A. A. U, about stop watches that register only In fifths of a second in stead of tenths, has resulted in a decision being made to use new tenth second timepieces at tho intercol legiate cross-country championship run at Van Cortlandt Park on Mon day. These chronometers were employed for the first time at the cross-country title run last year. The indi cators were again tried at the Indoor nnd outdoor championship meets and in both cases timers said that they had never seen such agreement as to the exact time of a race The Cal ifornia Spectator. lr- pucker hean 1123 O Jewelers Opticians Stationers Complete Supplies for all Departments of the University. Make Your Football Reservations Here. For every occasion where formal clothes are required, the FARQUHAR'S COLLEGE TUXEDO $45 is just the suit you want. Splendidly tailored of a fine herringbone cloth, it makes a suit good for your entire col lege life. The $45 price in cludes a black silk vest. Express shipments, received Tuesday, make our stocks complete for your selection. New Rental Tuxedos, $3. With Vest, $3.50. Tuxedo Vests, Shirts, Col lars, Ties, Hose and Jewelry are ready! 1325 O Street. Clothiers to College Men. Your Money's Worth and Then Some Is What We Aim To Give You In a TUXEDO $25 - - $30 IN STYLE QUALITY SERVICE These formal clothes are the equal of higher priced garments. YOU I Make the compari son and be the judge Gugenheim Bros. 925 O St. STREET. I t