mJrJSRDRUGCO. 001 r 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. 1 Picnic Lunches I Attractive Convenient p READY TO SERVE !ii Includes Complete Service 1 $25c $1.00 The f DAIRY LUNCH I 12S8 "0" biutciion of in ALL THIS WEEK "JAVA HEAD" A Paramount Picture A George Melford Production Rialto Syhpmony Players. SHOWS START AT 1, 3, 5, 7, 9 COLONIAL ALL THIS Week M. C. Levee Presents Maurice Tourneur Production "THE ISLE OF LOST SHIPS" By Crittenden MarriQtt. A First National Picture SHOWS STATS AT 1, 3, 5, 7, 9. II i iLINCOLNS LITTLETHEA1 j'e I ITTI r THFATFRl ' ALL THIS WEEK Robert Z. Leonard Presents ' MAE MURRAY In "JAZZMANIA" A Cinema of Syncopation and Splendor SHOWS START AT 1, 3, 5, 7, 9. BABICH and the ORCHESTRA Shows Start at 2:30, 7. -00 & 9:00 Mat 25c Nli ite. Gai 15e Mm RECORDS ARE BROKEN IN BIG IRAGK CARNIVAL Excellent Performances Feature Nebraska-Haskell Indian and State High School Meets. The state meet team results: Group One. Lincoln 30 Hastings 21 Omaha Central 15 Alliance 14 Columbus 11 ij University Place 10 Grand Island 7 Beatrice 5 Superior 5 Kearney 2 York 1 North platte, Scottsbluff, and Nor folk did not score. Group Two. Broken Bow 34 Gothenburg 1 30 Tecumseh 27 Crete 14 Cambridge &V2 McCook 7 Aurora 4 Cozad 4 Wilber 3Va Osceola 3 Geneva 2 Tekamah 2V2 Havel ock 1 Hebron 1 Harvard did not score. Group Three. Callaway 32 3-7 Clay Center 30 3-7 Berwyn 19 DeWitt 13 6-7 Edgar : 13 6-7 Dodge 12 Tobias 8 Ohiowa '. 7 Waco 4 Valparaiso 2 3-7 Arlington did not score. Track, the international sport, was supreme at the State Fair Grounds all day yesterday, when the Nebraska track team defeated the Haskell In dians in a dual meet, and the state high school track teams, almost forty in number, competed in the twenty- first annual Nebraska high school meet. Beginning at 11 o'clock in the morning, when the field events of the Haskell-Nebraska meet were held, an almost uninterrupted string of track and field events were run off until six o'clock in the evening. The two features of the great cinder path and field, program held at the Fair Grounds Saturday were the smashing of the Nebraska and the Missouri Valley Javelin record by "Chick" Hartley, and the breaking of the high school 880-yard run rec ord by Hubert Franck of Tobias, who covered the distance in 2:019-10. The former high school record in the half of 2:03.2 had stood since 1910. Hartley threw the javelin 189 feet 6 inches Saturday morning in tne Indian meet. This is over 16 feet farther than the former Nebraska record of 173 feet, 4 inches, made by Schoeppel last year. The other out standing performance in the varsity meet field events was the great throw of 138 feet 4 inches in the discus by Auge of Haskell. His mark was over four feet better than the Missouri Valley record. PRESIDENT OF AMHERST TO LECTURE Dr. Meiklejohn to Give Annual Address of Phi Beta Kappa and Sigma Xi Sororities. tv, onnnai iwfnro of the Phi Beta 1UC Xi. societies, of ivapyai '-e - the University of Nebraska, will be held next Saturday evening. May 19, President Alexander ineiKiejuiu" uj. . .. . At- - 1 Amherst University win give vne na ture. "Democracy and Excellence" is liofessor Meiklejonn, is a nanvc England, and a graduate of Brown TT.,;r;tir. He has a Doctor of Phil osophy degree from Cornell. From 1897 to 1912 he-was a proie&sui i "philosophy at Brown. In 1912 he was called to Amherst to oe proieur Logic and president 01 uie ""- sity. He is a member 01 dow nu j4. nT:i,i,;Vm ia ft recoemized leader uenc iuciiu.jw Ol Allicin-uii - 1 1 : .mmf. demand for ad- dresses before learnea soae. is the author of "Tne UDerai cation". The public is invited to at tend the lecture. -r,.r am useful, but A3 a means of promoting virtue they are not as efficient as 01a s Vnvont had a spring cold in tn year?, Rid others have SATURDAY THE DAILY CORNRUSKER NINE EVENS OP SERIES Captain Frank Carmen, Pitching for Nebraska, Allows the Cyclones but Three Hits. The Cornhuskers defeated the Iowa State baseballers from Ames Friday at Rock Island ball park and again broke even on the weekly two game series. The final count was 8 to 3. On the previous day the visitors won to 4. A drizzling rain which lasted for the first four innings prevented any exceptional displays of baseball ability by either team. Only about twenty- five people braved the imclement weather to see the contest. Captain Frank Carmen, who has had a stiff arm for the past several games, was on the mound for Nebras ka. He allowed only three hits to the visitors while the Huskers found the offerings of Durland, Ames. pitcher, eleven times. The box score: Ames ab h 1 0 0 1 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 13 2 2 5 1 1 0 George, cf 3 Menough, If 2 Jacobson, ss 2 Runkle, 3b 3 Bierbaum, 3b 3 WhUaker, c 4 Rauf, rf 3 Towne, 2b 2 Durland, p 4 Totals 26 Nebraska ab 3 24 17 5 e 0 1 h 2 1 2 1 0 2 2 0 2 Janda, cf 4 Volz, ss 4 Collins, If 4 Lewellen, rf 4 Russell, 2b - 4 Petty, c 4 Arries, 3b 4 Smaha, lb. 4 Carmen, p 4 Totals 36 8 11 27 14 By innings Ames 010 010 0013 Nebraska - 200 020 04 8 Sacrifices Menough (2); Jacobson, Towne. Stolen bases Janda. Lewel len (2). Bases on balls Off Dur land, 3; Carmen 9. Struck out By Durland, 5; by Carmen 8. Wild pitch Carmen (2). Double plays Towne to Runkle to Jacobson; Russell to Volz to Smaha. Earned runs Ames, 2, Nebraska, 5. Left on bases Ames 7, Nebraska 6. Time 2:08. Umpire Sipe. Many a juryman weeps to hear that the pretty feminine defendant was treated as shabbily as his wife is treated. WHITMAN'S WOODWARD'S LOWNEY'S And GILLEN'S CANDY jILLAR'S PRESCRIPTION ,1 HARMACY Teachers Wanted For Colleges, High Schools and Grades. Many openings in all branches of teaching. Enroll now for best positions. CLINE TEACHER'S AGENCY, INC. Columbia, Mo. afiC COLLEGE CLOTHES jj for jj; COLLEGE MEN I High Class but jji Not High Priced jll I! Come Up and See jj LOU HILL 1309 O Street Up One Flight Turn to jj the Right. ::::HS Standard fj LAWLOR SPORTING GOOD3 CO 117-119 So. 14 rf-r I m Ball! q4 lj Spalding athletic goodai 1 1 lftnif and W NEBRASK AN Dr. Laura B. Pfeiffer of the Uni versity of Nebraska is the new presi dent of the State Historical Teachers' association which was in session here Friday evening and Saturday morn ing. Prof. J. E. Taylor of Doane col lege at Crete was elected vice-president and Miss Margaret Davis of Lin coln secretary-treasurer. Dr. Pfeiffer suggested Omaha as the meeting place next year, but the place will be de cided definitely later. The session opened with a dinner at Ellen Smith hall with sixteen present. Friday eevning Prof. N. A. Bengston lectured on "The Economic Factor in International Affairs," and Dean P. M. Buck, who has recently returned from India where he was ex change professor, spoke on "The Present Condition of India." Professor Rose B. Clark, of Wes leyan university, Prof. J. D. Hicks of the North Carolina college for Women at Greensboro and Prof. Jacob Warshaw of Nebraska university were the speakers Saturday morning. Professor Hicks spoke on the Pied mont area and especially North Calo- lina as typical of the Southern states. He said that the growth of manufac- IT Probably the greatest collection of collar'attached shirts for college men ever shown in Lincoln awaits your choosing here now. We've assembled these shirts for spring and summer wear; they're just the styles, and fabrics, and colors you'll want for the hot days just around the corner. Stop in Monday or Tuesday and select the things you'll want Prices? - $2 $3 $4 ' turing industries in this section in re cent years has brougnt about an im provement in condit'. jns tof living. The poor white peopb are now in fac tories instead of farming in a shift ness way and are better off for the change. Professor Hicks spoke at length about tthe negro problem. He said that the colored people have changed a great deal since 1890 and most people don't know the modern negro. Coeducation is not particular in North Carolina, according to Profes sor Hicks. Only about seventy women attended the University of North Carolina which is primarily for men while the North Carolina College for Women is its equivalent for women. He said that the south has not ac cepted women on terms of equality with men but still holds them on a pedestal of man's making. While the south is still controlled by the democratic party. Professor Hicks said that the manufacturing in terests are backing the republican party. Professor Warshaw spoke on Latin American culture. He said that few people in the United States realize us. " nn CLOTHIERS TO COLLEGE MEN 1325 O the progress that Latin-America has made in a cultural way. He named a large number of Latin-Americans who are internationally prominent in the arts, sciences and law. He said that the influence of their normal schools has been very important and that our normal schools have much to gain from a study of theirs. Professor Clark's topic was Topog raphy, a Factor in History." About thirty history teachers at tended the lectures. Among those from out of town were Miss Edith Field of Omaha, Mir-s Amanda Sun dean of Minneapolis, Miss Eliza Gab ble of Beatrice and Professor Taylor. Lives of great men oft remind us that one need not be a sage that the only thing essential i3 a headline on first page. At this rate it won't be 200 years until all the people have political jobs and make a living by taxing one another. When you cross two plants, you raise a hybrid. When you double cross a wman, you raise what Dante saw. J better memories.