li: 1 THE DAILY NEBR A8KAN an!Mi!iHIIIIIBII!miniBIUWIlH"lHIIIIHIUIIH 1230 0 Street k location . New Fountain k Vhri You'll intt t roURTKSY 10 U PROMPTNESS EFFICIENCY Look at our window. Have MEIER DRUG CO. X ... . mill? TrC!T Cocklins i DRUG STORE 12th & M Sts. Where You Feel at Home. w5 Excellent Food Snappy Service Fair Prices The DAIRY LUNCH 1238 "0" rfitrft9 PjCTyP5JIND-R(7 ALL THIS WEEK This Week We Are Paging The Laughs FRONT! "BELL BOY 13" With Douglas McLean More Laughs Than A Bell boy Has Buttons Rialto Syhpmony Players. SHOWS START AT 1, 3, 5, 7, 9 COLONIAL ALL THIS Week ART ACORD In "THE OREGON TRAIL" A Remarkable and Thrill ing Drama of Pioneer Adventure in the West. COLONIAL WEEKLY SHOWS STATS AT 1, 3, 5, 7, 9. 1 1 1 wrri wt i itti r THFiTrs I . rJ14jXLVJCL7Si. ALL THIS WEEK "THE CHRISTIAN" The Famous Novel and Play by SIR HALL CAINE with Richard Dix, Mae Busch, Garet Hughes, Phyllis Haver and Mah lon Hamilton Directed by Maurice Tourneur I SHOWS START AT 1,3, 5, 7, 9. HUSKER MAT MEN MEET HAVVKEYES AT IOWA CITY Ames Team Tied with Ohio and Indiana for First Place in the Conference Standings. NEBRASKA IN FIFTH PLACE Iowans Have High Hopes of Staving Nebraska Crew Off in Last Match of Year. Hunker wrestle meet the Hawk eye matmen tonight at Iowa City. Coach Howard's team has an even break on the win-lose Idea. Iowa has lost ono game to Illinois; Nebraska has lost to Ames. Nebraska has two men on the team who have not been beaten this year, Iowa has ono. The Nebraska men are Captain Trautman, 175 pounder, and Renner, heavyweight. The Iowa man Is Prerer who is in the 115-pound class. Both Iowa and Nebraska have new men In the three middle weights while the other members of the teams are veterans. Renner will go up against Heldt who is one of Iowa's strongest men. Trout man will meet James who is also reputed to be a strong man. Heldt has a weight advantage over Renner, but the speed and strength of the Cornhusker should count heavily in the match. The Nebraska lineup for the Iowa City meet is as follows: Probst, 115; Kellogg, 125; Inman, 135; Pickwell, 145; Reed, 158; Trout- man, captain, 175; Renner, heavy. The big upset in Western Intercol legiate circles this week was the de feat of the Iowa University squad by Illinois, and the trouncing of Wiscon sin by Chicago. Ames, Ohio, and In diana are still heading the list. Ames has the best record in points scored and scored against. Indiana and Ohio will meet this week. Neither team has met with defeat in Western In tercollegiate conference. Nebraska jumped from seventh to fifth place. The match with Iowa is the last one of the season, and if the team defeats Iowa, it will go up an other notch. "" The Western Intercollegiate Wrest ling Association standings folio: Won Loot Pet Ames Ohio State 4 0 Indiana 3 0 Irviifa TTnlvorultv 3 1 lUHW Vlt - j Nebraska - Illinois Wisconsin 2 Chicago 2 Piirrlnn 1 Michigan Aggies 0 2 Minnesota 0 4 Northwestern 0 ' 1.000 1.000 1.000 ,750 .667 .667 .500 .400 .250 .000 .000 .000 Luehring Is "Fan" for Outdoor Lite the aervico. University of California. A proposed honor eystem for the students of the University of Colo rado may bo brought about as a re sult of an investigation started by the Boosters Club this week. Prof. George H. Light of the Department of Mathematics, suggested to the Boost ers at their meeting Tuesday after noon that the club undertake to in quire Into the possibility of the adop tion of such a system at the Un! 17ikhU ST BEBTY T II U R. FRI. SAT. P-IG VAUDEVILLE BILL The Pretentious Offering "THE SPEEDERS" a comedy playlet with music and pretty girls featuring JACK MUNDY O'NEAL SISTERS & BENSON "The Sunshine Kiddies" WM. LOUISE WOLFE & WARD Presenting "TEA FOR TWO AND THEN SOME" DON LANNING "First Young Don" WARD & ZELLER "Hat-o Maniacs" "THE OREGON TRAIL" Babich and His Prize Orchestra Shows start at 2:30, 7.00 & 8.00 Mats 25c Kite 40c Gal 15c BUTLER DRUG CO. 1321 O Street THE PLACE TO BUY Drugs Drug Sundries Toilet Articles Cigars Candies Kodaks Magazines We specialize on all good Soda Fountain Specialties Meet your friends at our store. Use our telephone and city directory. Buy postage stamps here. We appreciate your patronage and want you to feel at home in our store. il Fred VV. Luehring, director of ath letics at the University of Minnesota, who was formerly director of athletics at Nebraska is taking advantage of the opportunities offered by the cold season to push winter sports and is drawing up a program of outdoor sports for the summer time as wen. Following his service on the general committee In charge of the National Ski tournament early last month, Mr. Luehring has been devoting himself to the development of an outing club at the University of Minnesota, now named the Gopher Outing club. Its first outdoor tournament, with events at Glenwood park, on the university campus and in the Hippodrome at the state fair grounds, was conducted last week. Events included snowshoe and frki races, a dog derby, tug of war on skates, skating races, stunt skat ing, women's hockey championship match, interfraternity hockey matches and several fancy skating competi tions. In response to a questionnaire that asked which winter cnort the students took and Interest in, Mr. Luehring has learned that the men students are interested as participants In an aver age of three or four outdoor spom apiece. The first 500 answers con tained designations of 1868 sports in which students were interested, as follows: Hiking - 264 Canoeing 305 Fancy skating 39 Snowshoeing 53 Tobogganing 229 Skiing 138 Ski-joring 33 Curling 37 Ice boating - 117 Bob sledding 112 Total v1868 Mr, Luehring expressed particular satisfaction that canoeing and rowing, sports exactly suited to outdoor Min nosnta. for which also there are fine facilities near the University of Min nesota, should have been specified by so many. In order to establish permanent memorial scholarships in memory of those representatives of the Uni versity who gave "their lives in France during the great war as members of the American Field Service Ambu lance corps it was decided at the meeting of the executive committee last night to appoint committees to take charge of a drive to be conduct ed in the University in the near fu ture. A', the close of the war $600,000 was left over from the amount raised to outfit this branch of the army by private subscription and this was turned into a sinking fund, the inter est on which was to be used for fel lowships for University graduates in this country to French universities. The present drive is for the pur pose of augmenting this sum so that there will be sufficient money to es tablish a memorial fellowship Tor every man of the old volunteer am bulance sections who gave his life in ROSEWILDE PARTY HOUSE SATURDAY MARCH 10TH DANCING 8:30 Till 11:30 $1.00 Plus Tax m bp. .'a r-tr.r-.Tr. g,.- - fcH II I Milt IjllliW DANCE TONIGHT SERENADERS Lindell Party House REFRESHMENTS 1.00 PLUS TAX Spring Dresses show foreign inspiration Jt There's nothing like a few minutes' rest and delicious refreshments for that "tired feeling" on a Spring afternoon. Tiffin Room Fifth Floor. I Beautiful Dresses of bold printed fabrics and Paisley effects prevail for Spring wear. Priced 2975 to 75 Lovely combinations of materials and colors make our assortment of the new dresses unusually inter esting. Every girl will want one of the "newest" for Spring Parties. Satin faced Canton, Tricosham, Crepe Cairo, Crepe Madria, Frost Crepe, Faille, Crepe Romaine, Taf feta, Az-u-wer, etc. For almost every hour of Zg V X V- the day, blue serge is SwMM N correct. At business, for Wd sport (often with white cNlA X flannel trousers) and for mTT V AiV informal evening affairs, srT VrJTi you'll see them worn this iBk ?V VM fjjOi season by more well- -sLx 7 J "Al rj dressed men than ever J BLUE SERGE for What suit is so useful ? What one gets such exacting wear as your blue serge ? To keep its good looks, to with stand day - after - d ay service, quality must be there all through! Quality! That's the Kirschbaum idea. m 6u 35 and HO The Store For Men on N Sl Co laReinVuM