TUB DAILY NEBRASK AN BUTLER DRUG CO. 1321 u street THE TLACE TO BUY Drugs Drug Sundries Toilet Articles Cigars v Candies Kodaks Magazines ' We specialize on all good Soda r ouniain opemaiues 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. Picnic Lunches ill Attractive Convenient jj II READY TO SERVE jj p Includes Complete Service jj $25c $1.00 I " The DAIRY LUNCH I; 1238 "0" ALL THIS WEEK With Betty Compson Bert Lytell and MayMcAvoy In A Paramount Picture "KICK IN" A George Fitzmaurice Production Rialto Syhpmony Player. SHOWS START AT 1, 3, 5, 7, 9 COLONIAL ALL THIS Week "Fury" Shows Him at His Grandest. RICHARD BARTHELMESS With Dorothy Gish In "F U R Y" SHOWS STATS AT 1, 3, 5, 7, 9. ALL THIS WEEK Her First American Picture POLA NEGRI In a George Firtmaurice Production "BELLA DONNA" A Paramount Picture SHOWS START AT 1, 3, 5, 7, 9. MON TUES. & WED. "BIRDS OF PARADISE" A Gorgeous Vaudeville Novelty with Chalfonte Sisters. LEO HALEY Versatile Comedian in "Gossip" BILLY MILLER & CO. In Mr. Miller's Original Comedy "THE SIGN POST" CARL ALICE HELORTO & RICHARDS in "Fiddlesticks"' 3 MELVIN BROTHERS 3 Touring the World Presenting Their Startling and Ser.sational Offering. A PLEASANT JOURNEY A Big Laugh Presented by "OUR GANG" Liberty News Weekly The World's Events Visualized BABICII and the ORCHESTRA Shows Start at 2:30, 7:00 & 9:00 Mats 25c Nit e 40c Gal 15c -tHRCCTIOri Of LM. CARMAN "fJt r HL TRACK TEAM OPENS KANSAS MEET TRYOUTS WILL BE HELD TODAY Coach Schulte to Conduct Com petition in AH Events at Four O'clock This Afternoon. K. U. HAS STRONG TEAM "We Own the Valley" Slogan of Jaynawkers Will Be Con tested by Husker Tracksters. Final tryouts for the Kansas Uni versity dual meet which will be held at Lincoln Saturday morning, May 5, will be held this afternoon. The truck will leave the Armory at four o'clock and all cinder path men must be ready for the truck at that time. The try outs will probably be held on the Wes leyan track at University Place. Coach Schulte has not yet decided where the meet Saturday with the Jayhawks will be held, tho it will be held either on the state fair grounds or the Lincoln high school track. The Kansas track team, which won the 1923 indoor valley championship at Kansas City March 24, is one of the strongest teams in the middle west. The Huskers, valley champs in 1921 and 1922, also have an excep tionally strong and well-balanced team. The meet Saturday will be hotly contested by both teams, for this meet will go a long way toward determining whether Nebraska or Kansas will be outdoor conference champions in 1923. This meet will be a direct challenge to the "We Own the Valley" slogan of Kansas. If Ne braska wins, Nebraska will own the valley, bu; if Kansas wins, her slogan will be justified, for the Jayhawks are 1922 and 1923 basketball cham pions and 1922 baseball champions, while the Huskers this year have only won the football championship of the valley so far this year. Nebraska must win in track to keep her ath- Era iresHTAiN SZCMIZZ 1 The Best Fountain in Town i at the i SILVER MOON Facing Campus i Try Our Night Service jiiiaggatiii THE "Blink . if Your Lights' ' JJ FAREWELL DANCE SERENADERS WEDNESDAY NIGHT Lindell Party House REFRESHMENTS 'LOO PLUS TAX M i;3anw.l I 11 "' ! .LIW'.HL.!IJ.U.1I-JI '"Ji.-TOfflmsa r Do You Need Send for catalog describing over 400 courses in History. English, Philosophy, Sociology, etc, given by "PJI? towCTedits earned may be applied on present college program. If? Utttonsittj HOME STUDY DEPT. letic standing in the Missouri Valley conference. In the tryouts today, Crites, Cre ed ius, Broad well, Lear and Kenner will compete in the hurdle events. Close followers of the Husker team were much encouraged by the excel lent performance of Lear, the Omaha medic, at the Drake Relays. The Husker hurdler crossed the line in a blanket finish with four other hurd lers, who were given the first four places. The time for the race was 15 1-5 seconds. Lear had previously won his heat in the preliminaries of the hurdle races. Woodward, Trexler, Layton, Ted Smith, McAllister and Crites will try out in the 440-yard dash. In the half mile Gardner, Coats, Higgins and Bowman will compete for berths. At the Drake Relays the Husker two- mile relay team, composed of Higgins, Allan, Coats and Gardner, finished in fifth place. Each of the Huskers were over-anxious, and over-ran the first quarter of his race. The Husk ers, however, improved the time they made at the Kansas Relays by a good margin. In the mile run Captain E. Allen, Wier and Bowman will run. Com petition in the two-mile run will be between Haskell, Gardner, Rogers, Cohen and Ted Slemmons. Tryouts in the century and the 220 will be between Noble, Lloyd, Baldwin and Lukens. At the Relays last Sat urday, the quarter-mile relay team, composed of Baldwin, Trexler, Noble and Lloyd, ran second to the winning Illinois team, which broke the world's record in the 440-yard relay by run ning this race in 42 3-10 seconds. If two of the Husker sprinters, Noble and Lloyd, had not had a mixup in passing the baton in this race, Ne braska, instead of Illinois, would have won the race and broken the world's record in the quarter-mile relay. In the field events, Riddlesbarger, Gleason, Gish and Frasier will try out in the pole vault. Lloyd, Hatch and Layton will compete in the broad jump. Hatch won third in the broad jump at the Relays, but Graham, a Kansas athlete, copped first place in the event. Turner, Drishaus and Parks will try out in the high jump. Turner, who tied for second at the Des Moines meet last Saturday, cleared the bar at 6 feet, 1 1-4 inches, which is a new Nebraska record. Turner is jumping better and more consistently than ever before, and should score many points for the Scarlet and Cream be fore the season is over. In the shotput Noble, Parks, Myers, Hartman and Bassett will take turns at heaving the heavy leaden ball. Hartman walked off with first honors in the shotput at Drake, defeating the famous Van Orden of Michigan, who won first in many meets this year, and was doped to cop the shotput honors. Green, Hatch, Noble, Parks and Myers will try out in the discus throw, while Wenke and Hartley will throw the javelin. Angier of Illinois broke his own record, which is the American record, in the javelin throw by throwing the spear a little better than 203 feet. Piatt of Denver made a new Drake Relays record in the dis cus throw by heaving the leaned plate over 138 feet. The old record of 133 feet, 7 inches, was made in 1922 by Tom Lieb of Notre Dame. Graduates from four-year non-ac-cdited high schools in Nebraska who e planning to enter the University ci a i of tti Nebraska will be given an oppor nitv to take the intelligence test S; iturday morning. May 12, High- hool Fete Day. The tests win oe ven by Dr. Winifred Hyde of the gi ( lepartment of Philosophy in room 10 1 Social Science building, urati- i . . l u; ates s of non-accredited nign. scnooi required to pass either an aca- ai e de mic examination or an intelligence te.- t. Extra Courses? Z. of dljtaujn 3l8t CHICAOO. IUJNOIS 1923 HOME SWIMMING MEET 10 BE HEUIHIB' GIRLS Co-eds Will Gather at Lincoln High School Pool This Evening for Annual Event. The competitive swimming meet lor University girls will be held to night at the high school pool. The meet will include swimming, diving, and racing tests. Lois Pederson, Dorothy Teal, and Miss Marian Bald win, of Lincoln high school, will be the Judges. The personel of the relay teams is: Freshman D. Goodale, M. Hymer, II. McClelland, M. Ginn, and A. Groethe, and ' C. Kingsbury substi tutes. Sophomore L. Branstead, T. Bel lows, M. jTool, T. Lewis, and P. Mangold and E. Gramlich, substi tutes. Junior L. Shepherd, P. Saflord, E. Armstrong, M. Snavely, and B. Erickson and E. Swanson substi tutes. Senior E. Cull, B. Grabill, S. Sur ber, and H. Kennedy and E. Wilson substitutes. Pearl Set N Pins Pearl Set Guard Pins Senior Pins Senior Rings New Nebraska Belts 1.50 HALLETT UNI. JEWELER After May 13 Just Around the Corner 117-119 So. 12th. Published in the interest of Elec trical Development by an Institution that will be helped iy what ever helps the Industry. SEASON KKEAK HIKE TO END AT CAMPANILE TODAY Hand-cuffed back to back, dusty and worn by 72 hours spent on the road, two students from the Univer sity Farm at Davis, California, will culminate today a stunt which has attracted attention throughout the state. The annual cow race was called off this year. To take the place of the long-held bovine classic and at the same time call attention to the annual Farm picnic to be held Saturday, Fritz Glingaman '24 and Tom Colt, '25, agreed to walk from Davis to the Berkeley campus in the unusual man ner above mentioned. These modern Siamese twins left Davis Friday noon, and according to calculations, based on trial runs at the Farm, they should reach their des tination at the foot of the Campanile by noon today. The pair were in Tracy Saturday night, and at a late hour last night were reported passing through Tinole Daily Californian. Jewelry On Easy Terms For a limited time we are offering $50 Diamond Kings at $:9.30 on terms of $4.00 per month and you wear the ring out on the first payment of 23c. These rings are a special purchase from Amsterdam and are values unheard of be fore. Wonderful sparklers in fancy carved mountings. Again we wish to call your attention to a special Elgin Watch offer. For 23c the first payment and $4.00 per month we are offering a 17-Jewel Elgin Boulevard Watch in a hand somely engraved case guaranteed for 23 years. This is a piece of mechanism that will last you a life time. Its an asset to any young man. Start your account now and have the rest of the year to pay. r o Wanted men to find the answer THIS is written to the man who loves to seek the unknown quantity. lie is the kind of labora tory worker who ventures into untried fields of ex periment, rather than the man who tests materials. Industry has need of both types, but of the former there is a more pressing demand. College men may have been discouraged from pursuing pure research. In this highly practical age it may seem there is little room for work which does not have an immediate dollars and cents application. Hut such is not the case. The pure research man is the pathfinder. With' out him our fountain of knowledge would dry up. His findings in themselves may be uncommercial, but they establish a field for others to develop. Volta worked out the crude voltaic pile unim portant until other men improved and applied it. And so with Papin in the field of steam, or Lavoisier in chemistry. Men of the inquiring slant of mind, stick to your last. In post graduate study, on the faculty, in the laboratory of some industrial organization, there will always be an "X" to baffle other men and call for the keenest thought of you blazers of the trail. Since 1S69 makers and distributors of electrical equipment SATURDAY BUS SERVICE I)E LUXE OPERATING Lincoln-Omaha Line EAST BOUND 7:30 & 11 a. m.; 2.15 & 5:30 p. m WEST BOUND 7:30 & 10:45 a. m. 2:15 & 5.25 p. m. Lincoln-York Line WEST BOUND 7:30 a. m., 2:30 p. m. EAST BOUND 10.00 a. m.; 5:00 p. m. Lincoln-Beatrice-Fairbury Line SOUTH BOUND 7:30 a. m.; 2:15 p. m. NORTH BOUND 10:45 a. m.; 5:30 p. m. Passengers Protected by Insur ance. For Further Information Call White Transportation Co. DEPOT 117 No. 9th B2595 1 :;::::::::::i:::::i::;::-3 X Number 29 of a itrirt 155