The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, March 11, 1925, Page 3, Image 3

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    1 Jsn -J&E&i dC
Tfcurs.-Frl.-Se.
Kara U Tw Hour ( GIrlou
EatOTtaaimsat
Mr, and Mr.
Orville Stamm
la CarfMU Ofrarinf
"DAY DREAMS"
With
VERCELLE SISTERS
part, WMtny and Pttr Parcel
Charaetsrltlne ths Southern Nefre
The Cotton Pickers
An all-Whit Company with
MICKEY AND ELSIE McCARRY .
Bert Coleman, Waltor Swarta, Rajr
Kally ani Potor J. Smith
T"BVAN & VERNON
Muilcil Comodv Start (
"THE OLD HO Alt"
With Apolotlaa to Don Marquis
CREST & FARRELL
A Duo ef Mualcal Funsters
TWO SHEIKS"
Homer Romaine
Aortal Eccentricities
TEN SCARS MAKE A MAN"
Latt Chapter
"MINUTE NEWS AND VIEWS"
BABICH AND THE ORCHESTRA
Shows Start at :SO, TtOO, :00
THE DAILY NEBRASKAN
R. O. T. C. OFFICERS
GIVEN ASSIGNMENTS
(Continued from Page One.)
Company
Captain Harold S. Gish. to com.
tnand.
Captain Jacob W. Cohen, second
in command.
Firat Lieutenant Richard E.
Blore, Ore Goodson, J. Raymond Tot
tenhoff, I. Leo Rosenberg.
I Second Lieutenants Clark C.
Beymer, Leo P. Black, Edward L.
Ellingson, , Charle E. Griffith, Jr.,
Vollard P. Karlson, Fred C. Krae-
mer, joe untzman, Chester A. 01-
on, uuver A. Sautter, Maurice C.
Swanson.
i After Every Meal I
mm
9 iTotr
mm
"1
BICTION Of I W .ASH.
ALU. IHI WltK
A Pktur RomHnca You'll Choor
"The
Dixie Handicap"
With a Brilliant Caat Including;
Clair Windsor and Frank Keonan
"O. K. CUPID"
Th Latt Story With
JACKDEMPSEY
K1norams -Aasop's Fabl
SHOWS AT I, S. , 7. p. a.
Wr!Uy' Increases the
flow of an lira and relievo
that ".tuff ed" feeling. Clears
the throat, steadies nerves
and sweetens the breath.
Clean teeth too.
RIALTO
ALL THIS WEEK
A Lavish Pareant of Colorful
Entertainment
A THIEF in
PARADISE
With an AJl-Star Cut
TearUoTTheDeep"
Atmospheric Prologue
NEWS COMEDY TRAVEL
RIALTO SYMPHONY PLAYERS
SHOWS AT 1, S, S, 7, p. m.
LYMC
ALL THIS WEEK
A Show Everybody Will Enjoy From
Start to Finish
Harold Bell Wright's
Stirring Romance
THE RE-CREATION OF
Brian Kent"
With a Creat Cast of Player
"THE FOX-HUNT"
A Volley of Laurhter With
THE SPAT FAMILY
"JUDGE'S CROSS-WORD PUZZLE"
NEWS AND TOPICS
On the Staye
"A VOCAL NOVELTY"
LYRIC CONCERT ORCHESTRA
SHOWS AT I. S. . T. p. m
r
Sj Cbsts little-kelps modi "
mm
ROY
This is the day .fin oa
which I mrfc my waekli
sufreshua that you bimbos
have your TUXS hauled in
here eo as to have em
cleaard to be ready for the
-m. Jea Kinds
a reminder don
know 7
uv r.
Mr. Jim Cody
FIVe'pOUND
Box of Candy
last Sunday at 3 o'clock
Have yon been a patron at
The Idyl Hour
between 2 aad 5 P. M. daring
this week? If not yon had bet
ter fet busy a Austin five a
FIVE POUND box away
SUNDAY
At 3 P. M.
PHI
BETA
KAPPA
Keys
We carry a complete as
sortment of official P. B.
ri. y- Ne. Date and
f "ege engraved free of
carge. .
HALLETT
Uturersity Jeweler
1871 , 117-119 & :tSA
Company F
CapUin Eldon W. Kiffin, to com
mand. Captain John J. Wilson, aecond in
command.
First Lieutenants James F.
Wickham, F. Wesley Sunderland.
Second Lieutenant Dan Fagan,
David F. Foster, Ernest C. Hodder,
Jr., Merritt C McClellan, Ernest H.
McGrew, Harry L. Moore, Fred M.
Pokorney, Robert M. Serr, H. L.
Zinnecker.
Company G
Captain Glen A. Dunkle, to com
mand.
Captain Milton P. Beechner, aec
ond in command.
First Lieutenant Morri N.
Shapiro, Francis S. Drath, Rudy M.
Lucke.
Second Lieutenants Charles A.
Gould, Forest R. Hall, William S.
Henry, Lloyd B. James, Torgny A
Knudson, Harold Luscombe, Donald
C Malcolm.
Company H
Captain John R. Gemmell, to com'
mand.
Captain Roy F. Randolph, second
in command.
First Lieutenants Roy W. Pear
son, Gerald A. Randall, Donald C,
Smith, Clyde M. Sharrar.
Second Lieutenants Ernest O.
Bruce, Robert M. Currier, Addison
W. Dunham, Wayne Gratigny, Wil
liam H. Hein, W. Sherwood Kilgore,
Milan J Kopac, Melville V. Pope-
lar, Paul E. Van Valkenbnrgh.
Company I
CapUin Ivan L. Wong, to com
mand.
Captain Otto E. Skold, second in
command.
First Lieutenants John N. Hy
att, Harry L. Bryant, Francis A.
Rudolph.
Second Lieutenants W. Dean
ePVtassachusctts Institute of technology
School of Chemical Engineering Tra&ice
Individual and practical training at five industrial plants are
important features of the Graduate Course in Chemical En
gineering Practice. Field work is carried out at Bangor, Me;
Boston, Mass., and Buffalo, N. V. j in plants producing sulphite
and soda pulp, paper, caustic soda, chlorine, heavy acids and
salts, sugar, coke, gas, steel and other chemical products.
The more important operations of Chemical Engineering, as
typified by the above processes, are studied systematically by
tests and experiments on actual plant apparatus, thus fixing
in the student's mind the principles of Chemical Engineering
and correlating these principles with practice.
The work is non-remunerative and independent of plant
control, the whole attention of the students being directed to
study and experimentation.
Registration is limited, as students study and experiment
in small groups and receive individual instruction.
Admission requires adequate preparation in chemistry and
engineering. Abie students can complete the requirements for
the Master of Science degree in one and a half years.
Representatives of thirty colleges and universities now at
tend the School of Chemical Engineering Practice.
For further details address the
SCHOOL tf CHEMICAL ENGINEERING PRACTICE
Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, Mass.
A Host of Ideas for Your
St. Patrick's Party
The success of your party will depend largely on
the originality displayed in choosing your favors
and refreshments.
What could attract more attention and be mora
appropriate than the following?
Sea green punch (fruit flavored)
Corsages of green candy flowers
St. Patrick paddy-whacks
Green candy mints
Choice green carnations
Remember Her with a beautiful green trefoil box
of Brace's best chocolates.
WOUEN RIFLERS
DOING BBTTER
Markswomen Fire Best Score
of Year Latt Week After
Mid-Seaton Slump.
The University of Nebraska wom
en's rifle team after slumping for a
while in the middle of the season is
coming to the close of the season
with a record that is improving every
week. Last week the co-ed marks
women fired their best week's score
of the year, and from the scores fired
Monday and Tuesday of this week,
it is safe to judge that the record
will in no wise be lowered.
The shooting is against the Univer
sity of Missouri in prone and sitting
postion firing, against Utah Agricul
tural college in the prone position,
and against the University of Illinois
in all four positions.
The best targets so far this week
are by K. Jensen who fired 94 prone,
91 sitting, and 84 kneeling. Another
good record was by Marie Hcrmanek
who fired targets of 97 prone, and
81 sitting.
Reports have not been received
from the firing of last week which
was against the University of South
Dakota and the University of Nevada.
Douglas, Alex S. Dunham, Herbert
Event, Raymond Hall, Mark W. Hir
sig, Kenneth H. McGregor, Jacob F.
Schults, Robert M. Scoular, Lloyd R.
Wagner.
Company K
Captain John D. Marshall, to com
mand.
Captain Cleo E. Rumsey, second in
command.
First Lieutenants Orve K. Hed-
den, Frank W. Jacobs, David S. Zo-
lot
Second Lieutenants Mark Fair,
Rue J. Hammell, E. Lloyd Jones,
Francis J. Murphy, George E. Philip-
sen, Henry Rosenstein, John Shel
don, Harry L. Weingart, Jack C.
Whalen.
Company L
Captain Philip O'Hanlon, to com
mand.
Captain Fred J. Wehmer, second
in command.
First Lieutenants Paul B. Zim
merman, George E. Ready, Lloyd E.
Wagner.
Second Lieutenants Harold B.
Bedwell, Milton E. Anderson, Ben
nett L. Cohn, J. Renwick Hill,
George Horacek, Berle G. Ilgen,
Leonard A. Jordan, Oscar H. Koehn,
Ralph B. Major, Theodore R. Rat-
cliff, John B. Welpton.
Company M
Captain Willard D. Dover, to com
mand.
Captain Harold W. Koehler, sec
ond in command.
14th & O
B-1540
CAPITOL
Shining, Shoe Repair
and
Hat Cleaning Parlor
For 17 years at 1219 O St.
are now located at
1236 O St.
ANNOUNCEMENT
Frey and Frey offer to the students who submit the
best manuscript of not more than three hundred
words using the slogan "Say It With Flowers" these
prizes.
FIRST PRIZE $15.00 Bouquet of Roses, or $15.00
in CASH.
SECOND PRIZE $10.00 Bouquet of Roses, or
$10.00 in CASH.
THIRD PRIZE $7.50 Bouquet of Roses, or $7.50 in
CASH.
All manuscripts must be in the Frey and Frey'Store,
1338 O Street, by six o'clock on the evening of April
10, 1925.
Competent judges will select the best three manu
scripts and will award the prizes the week of May 3.
FREY and FREY reserves the right to use any of the .
essays submitted for publication or advertising.
One of these ROSE prizes would be very much ap
preciated by Mother on Mothers' Day, May 10, how
ever this is optional with the winner.
FREY & FREY
1338 0 STREET
Say It With Flowers
ft
savis--
Anotjier Masculine
Touch In The
Suspender
Skirt
If the young college girl
wants to be decidedly
new she will wear a Sus
pender Skirt with a
brightly embroidered
peasant blouse. There is
something very piquant
about the entire costume
and on a slim figure the
slightly flaring skirt patch
pockets and mannish
straps over the shoulder
gives a quaint little
dressed-up-like-a-boy ap
'pearance. The ones
Rudge & Guenzel's are
showing are both plaid
ard plain though always
very bright.
First Lieutenant R. G. Shel
lenbarger, Erwin E. Perso, Darrel
R. Weaver, George Gulmyer, Roseo
D. Tutty.
Second Lieutenant Gerald
Davis, Hartley B. Mann, Richard A.
Robinson. Donald F. Sampson. Floyd
R. Stryker.
Men are learning, too, to can fruit
and vegetables at Ohio State Univer
sity, and really enjoy the sensation of
accomplishment that they experience.
The materials are brought in from
the university farm and are canned
at a small factory on the campus.
.afJtflgftgg
CAmK for Cl'&Omrfrmk
A bag carrying the
brand has passed
every test of excellence. It
signifies the best from experi
enced leather worker and Is a
guarantee of exceptional service.
ASK YOUR DEALER.
Harpham Brothers Co.
Lincoln, Neb.
.vL.'.W
DAINTY NECKWEAR
for spring costumes
ATTRACTIVE COLLARS, CUFFS,
CUIMPES, VESTEES, JABOTS, FRILLS, ETC
OF linen, in crisply tailored styles, of fine sheer mar
quisette, cream or the new deep ochre tinted net
and lace, the new articles of neckwear are unusually
good looking and varied as to style . The jabot, used
alone or with a color is a popular feature; glimpses of
net and lace, with or without sleeves in "V" neck or pea
sant style are used with suit, coat, dress or jumper frock.
THERE ARE INNUMERABLE STYLES AND
TYPES OF NECKWEAR ALL EQUALLY
ATTRACTIVE.
Priced 1.50 tO 5.00
First Floor.
2m
9
J
We Thank You!
Our ISuftincftf! for February, 1925, lnrT than that for any othr Feb
ruary irw our 20 yearn' history.
W thank our frienda of the Great Middle Went who have made this rh ow
ing txMtft.ble.
Incidentally We are atill regiaterinf new atuent.
Nebraska School of Business
T. A. B LAKE SUE E, Ph. B A. M Pmident.
Approved hy the State Department of Tuhltc Inntroetion
Accredited by American Association of Vocational School
Corner O A 14th Sta. Lincoln, Neb.
The Nebraskan Advertisers Are
Your Friends Patronize Them!
FARQUHAR'S
o
Thursday morning, we place on sale
18 dozen white English Broadcloth
Shirts with collars attached at
$2.65. They're our regular $3.50
quality made of the finest imported
Broadcloth tailored by Star and
the greatest shirt value you've seen
this year.
Don't confuse these shirts with those
you ordinarily find in shirt "sales."
This is simply a special offering at a
remarkable price, and you ought to
take advantage of it.
HURRY IN These
shirts will not last long!
FARQUHAKS
NEBRASKA IXDINC COLLEGE CLOTHIERS
gSgfMfffil'