THEDAILYNEBRASKAN !T7 trAPTV Shova it yoursblf ' Sanson Motor Co., phones' B1560 and ix-" - dortrait photographer Same popular Sunday Dinner from 5:30 to 8:00 Special Music 8:30 to 10:30 Harold Jones at the Piano THE IDYL HOUR Formerly McDowell's "Where Students Meet" 136 No. 12th St. Showing Sunday Afternoon "SCARS OF JEALOUSY" at Jewel Theater HAVELOCK Th&Appollo Orchestra Dainty Fountain and Luncheon ette Service. Rector's Pharmacy 13th & P Sts. C. E. Buckholz, Mgr. Our new Spring line is now complete with the most beautiful fabrics we've ever shown. t Our price will please you. LOU HILL 1309 O St. I Up one flight, turn to the right Fenton B. Fleming Jewel Shop. Corner of 12 th & O Just the place to leave your repair work. Do your buying. Use the tele phone B3421. Wait for your car. 1143 O St. 1143 O St. BBB71 Sport Briefs. Seven K's were awarded Kansas basketball players at Lawrence last week. Tusten Ackerman, center and forward was elected captain of the 1925 team. Ackerman finished third among Valley forwards with 141 points for the season. Captain Black is the only letter man who will be graduated this year. The chances of a fourth consecutive championship for the'Jayhawk school look good. There are six letter men who will re port for the team next year, and the substitutes this year were considered exceptionally good. Tha freshman squad also had some good material The seventeenth annual Kansas Shopping With Charlotte If it's something' new to wear Or a place to go, or thing to eat We bring these items to your home And lay our service at your feet. Make Your Easter Plans Now. Easter is not very far away, so you should begin selecting your Easter remembrance. George Bros, have gifts symbblical of this season that will please your friends of either sex or of any age. They have a most attractive array of cards that you are sure to like. For Easter parties they have unusually clever favors. Be sides many new ideas in rabbits, chicks, and Easter eggs, they have a very novel Easter bird. 1 (:''' r) 1618 Himr St. Omaha, Nafar. "mJ XUJ 1 1 1 J l If lliii T1 il A Hat For Vacation. When you go home for spring va cation you want to look your best. You cannot be really smart unless you have a chic new hat to go with your other clothes. Ben Simon & Sons have some darling little sport hats priced from $3.85 to $7.50. They are of felt, straw or silk com binations. The magpie colors, black and white, are extremely clever. Besides these they are making a special showing of dress hats at $10. Beads From Paris. While you are thinking of new clothes you want to think of new ornaments also. Harris-Sartor's have some wonderful new beads and ear rings that come to them from Paquin There are strings of amber and of amethyst, lapis lazuli and Russian malachite, and of the fascinating cut crystal. A person would indeed be hard to please if she could not find the strand for any gown here. Spring Coats for Spring Days. The bright days we have had this past week make us realize that we have very little cold weather left. We can think of leaving winter coats at home and donning the light ones of spring. Gold & Co. are showing some exceptional values in spring coats. Their buyer is in New York and has just sent a shipment of coats which are selling at $19.50 and 29.50. Instead of Afternoon Tea. About four o'clock, or after an afternoon movie one always likes to eat. I can give you no better sug gestion than to drop in at Rector's for a sundae or a malted milk. They have sundeas of all kinds from the plain chocolate to the most compli cated one could desire and their malted milks are always delicious. A week of comic reprotorie THE COFFER-MILLER PLAYERS i Presenting "THE RIVALS" MONDAY NIGHT "Andorcles and the Lion" Tuesday Night "Imaginary Invalid" Wednesday Night "Taming of the Shrew" Thursday Night "The Rivals" Friday Night .Under the Management of the Uniersity Players Five evenings of continuous laughter TEMPLE THEATER U 75c Seats on Ie at Roes P. Curtice Co. high school track and field meet will be held at University of Kan sas, Lawrence, from April 18 to 21. Teams making certain time qualifi cations will be allowed to compete in the Kansas relay events later in the spring open to all high schools of the United States. The high schools are grouped in two classes, those of 200 or more students are in class A, and those with less are in class B. Coach Zuppke's chief worry in spring football at Illinois this spring is plugging up the gap left in the line by the graduation of McMillen who played a tackle position. Zuppke is stressing line work in spring prac tice in hopes of developing some good linemen from the freshmen and other new material. As yet his efforts have been unrewarded, and he has characterized the linesmen who ar? reporting for practice as slow. TMi nois first gam-a next fall will be against Nebraska at Lincoln, October 6th. Miss Abbott Writes Book on Immigration "Immigration," a volume of select documents and case records dealing with the journey of the Immigrant, the admission, exclusion, and expul sion of aliens, and domestic immi gration problems, by Edith Abbott, A. B., '01, has been published by the University of Chicago press. Miss Abbott is the newly appointed Dean of the Graduate School of Social Ser vice Administration at the Univer sity of Chicago. As one of the Board of Directors of the Immigrants' Protective League of Chicago, Miss Abbott gained a long first-hand knowledge of the work 6f a social agency dealing with immi grants. Her selections of documents (has been made largely from official sources, and it represents, for the most part, reports that are out of print. This careful analysis of the immigration problem is expected to contribute a sound basis for further social work. I RI AT TO .s Week IITLLj 1 J Week Jacmieline Loean W J 'Tm&mpmrar mmimUTk Percy Marmoht Sigrid Holmquist , David Torrence f '4 All I 1 T TT f All I This I Y w I I This 1 Week L 1 ill Vl j Week I I illl "1, S!DNEYAOLCOTT JWAHSON e HUMMING BIRD ' PRESENTED BY ADOLPH ZUKOR. ANO JESSE LLASKY I BE RTY MONDAY TUESDAY WEDNESDAY DANNY GRAHAM'S REVUE A bevy of versatile artists in "A TERPSICHOREAN RESUME" With Hilda Orth at the Piano 1 fjrj If j VUSI L LA8KY VUSBNTO A GEORGE MELFORD PRODUCTIO M : LIGHT THAT FAILED' All This Week Colonial All This Week Fafhepicture 'A v S5 . '"" &) t T H i Urn Hal RoacK TheCaMoftheWid: from tke femous do story by Jack London ORPHEUM On Week Beginning Monday March 31. Saeen Attraction ofttel RUSSELL & PIERCE Screamingly Funny Acromedians RAY CONUN A Clever Vaudevillian assisted by "SPARKS' BILL AND GENEVIEVE In "Frills, Thrills, Spells" Crowning feature from Ringling Circus DELMAR'S FIGHTING LIONS The most thrilling exhibition ever attempted "LEATHERSTOCKING" "MINUTE NEWS and CURRENT VIEWS" i COMING THUR., FRI., SAT. World's fastest melody unit RAYMOND FAGAN and his ORCHESTRA Almost a Production II The II ffi a i II Ifl " I 0fi ula; IB mMcM CiK BABICH AND HIS PRIZE ORCHESTRA Entire Change of Program Thursday SHOWS START at 2:30. 7:00, 9 KM MATS 25c; NITE BOc; Cl 20e All seats reserved. On sale Thursday, March 27 -r Matinee 50c to $1.00; Night 75c to $1.50, plus tax.