The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, March 10, 1926, Image 3

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    THE DAILY NEBJIA8KAN
nKLJClOUS 3ANDWICHX3.
E SOOPS-OT DRINKS
t-dvicV. Ta.tie Skopp.
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pb.n.
Rialto Theat re I
" ... T-1JI WCFK
THIS WEEK
Colon , -
Johnny Hmes
RAINBOW RILEY
A First National Picture
" CHARLEY CHASE
.MAMA BEHAVE"
"MUTT AND" JEFF CARTONS
Oceans of TroubUs
" MirWS TOPICS
"KeJilZ: toe.
ORPHEUM
r i -Tm-won.
"X-Pays Only 4
A Now Picture of Laufh.,Wlld
Shriek. and Hy.tarlcal Tear.
'THE CAVE
MAN"
With Fasrlnatlne
MARIE PREVOST
AND MATT MOORE
Other Entertalnlni Picture
SHOWS AT 1, 3, B. 7, 9.
MAT. isc N1TE 25c CHILD. 10c.
Orpheum
MAR.
12-13
" MATINEE SATURDAY
Th, Internationally Fmu Actor
MR. WALKER
WHITESIDE
In the Brilliant Comedy Drama
"THE ARABIAN"
Assisted by
MISS SYDNEY SHIELDS
and Metropolitan Cast
Price.: Nite $1. 1.60, 2, $2.80;
MM. SOc, 1. $180, $2-00 PIu
f,ffla"
rwtl K I ALL THIS
tULUlNlAL. WEEK
Th Screen'. Create.t Hero
STRONGHEART
The Wonder Dot In
"NORTH STAR"
"Fighting Hearts
A New Sport Series with
ALBERTA VAUGHN
Also New. and Comedy Picture.
SHOWS AT 1, S, B, 7. 0.
LYRIC
ALL
THIS WEEK
A Fa.t and Thrilling' Story of the
Turf
"The Million
Dollar Handicap"
with bewitching
VERA REYNOLDS
"Bankrupt Honeymoon"
Twenty Minute, of Laughter
ON THE STAGE
THREE MELODY
GIRLS
Youth, Beauty and Mu.lc
SHOWS AT 1, 3. B, 7, 9.
Lincoln Theatre
THIS WEEK
The laugh aensatlon of the eaon
MARSHALL
NEILAN'S
Uproarlou. .uccea. based on hi.
own story
ECE
Metro-Goldwyn Picture
With SALLY O'NEILL
CHARLIE MURRAY sIERLjgQ
LUP1TJD LANE IN
MAID IN MOROCCO
on-The stage
extra added attraction
OLD FIDDLERS
EXHIBITION
Each Eveninc at 8:30 only
NEWS FABLES REVIEW
LINCOLN SYMPHONY
"WILBUR CHEN0WETjjr3ranit
SHOWS AT 1. S, 6. 7, 9.
MAT. 35c NITE BOc CHILD. tOc
VA I' nlVltLE
lVsHERUVLKl&VUI ULKLi-r-
ALL THIS WEEK
A Vaudeville Mualc-Comedy Revue
with Beauty Chorus
r'eggy
A Glittering Rural Comedy with
I TOBY WILSON
and a versatile
30-Company of-30
including an.
EXCEPTIONAL CAST
and a gorgeous
GALAXY OF GIRLS
"CASEY OF THE COAST GUARD"
New. and Comedy Picture.
0
esTannnmannBBaMea j
M
TWagtTTTBrirfH'i ' 'J-M'-'MfcMlnUfiaMII!aB"l
Iff rTuT,lviuE
BAB1CH AND THE ORCHESTRA
SHOWS AT 2:30, 7:00, 9:00
Stories of Indian
Life Revealed
(Continued From Page One)
sometimes even more. It is, in gen
eral appearance, like a magnified
interest and curiosity. The long in
cllned poles afforded places for suspending-
and securing tomahawks,
pipes, bears' claws, elk's horns, wolf's
ears, and every imaginable acquisi
tion of Indian value.
"A fire is kept constantly burn
ing In the center of the lodge, and
vessel remains continually sus
pended over the fire in which are
cooked provisions for the familly,
such as beef, pork, potatoes, etc. The
Indians regard it unnatural that a
whole family should be hungry at
once, they cannot understand it, and
they never set a table, but each one,
when hungry, helps himself."
The Otoe Burial
In speaking of the Otoes, who then
lived on the Blue River in Gage
county, these inspector sayi "We
visited their graveyards. They placed
some of the boxes containing the
dead in a tree, ' go that the spirit of
the departed can see (around the
big prnirio to the Blue River.' We
saw a tree with ten or twelve such
boxes among its brunches, some of
which, we were told, had been there
for years. When an Indian man
dies, they kill his pony and put it
with its saddle and bridle, near it's
master's grave, or resting place,
with some food for the pony, bows
and arrows, and a bottle of water in
the grave or coffin."
Further on concerning the Oma
has: "These Indians are very fine,
noble looking men, very intelligent,
and mild countenanced and manner
ed. They smoked most of the time.
Many of their tomahawks are con
structed with hollow boll and handle,
to form a pipe, and they use them
as such, passing them around indif
ferently. The bark they smoke is
from a kind of willow, and they
call it 'Rin-ni-ri-nie,' and some times
or perhaps always when they have
any, mix it with tobacco. The bark
smoke is very fragrant, and much
less unpleasant and irritating than
that of tobacco.
"In leaving, like all other Indians,
they shook hands with those whom
they particularly addressed, both
before and after speaking."
Lecture, to Chemical Society
M. G. Vail, secretary and chemical
director of the Philadelphia Quartz
company, gave an illustrated lecture
on "The Colloidal Properties of Sili
cate Solutions," Thursday, March 4,
at a meeting of the Nebraska section
of the American Chemical society.
Di.cua "Bituminou. Pavement."
Mr. A. A. Walther, representative
of Warren Brothers, maunfacturers
of bituminous products in Boston,
will give an address on "Bituminous
Pavements" before the A. S. C. E.
group in the Mechanic Arts 206, on
Friday, March 12, at 10 o'clock.
Get. Many Cell For Teacher.
This is a busy season for the Bu
reau of Recommendation of Teach
ers. More calls are being received
for teachers next year than there are
applicants to fill them, says Director
R. D. Moritz.
No Rule. For Behavior
"No definite rules should be set
down for behavior, either in colleges
or in society, as behavior is a person
al concern only," said Miss Ruth
Hale, president of the Lucy Stone
League of New York.
Splendid Show. Will Greet Vi.itors
of the State Basketball Tour
ment Thi. Week
Manager Garman has booked an
excellent list of attractions for the
visitors of the Nebraska State High
School Basketball Tournament. At
the Orpheum Friday, Saturday and
Saturday matinee, the distinguished
actor, Mr. Walker Whiteside, will
appear in his latest success, "The
Arabian." The first four days of
the week at the Orpheum bewitching
Marie Provost aid Matt Moore win
be seen in a rollicking comedy-drama,
"The Cave Man." At the Lib
erty all week a big vaudeville musi
comedy, "Peggy," "with a ast of
thirty including a talented beauty
chorus. At the Lyric a delightful
racing story, "The Million Dollar
Handicap" and the clever Melody
Girls. At the Colonial the wonder
dog, Strongheart, in a new picture,
"North Star." and "Fighting Hearts'
with Alberta Vaughn. Adv.
Temple Theatre
MARCH 11, 12, 13.
University Players
Present
'He WhoGets Slapped'
Andreyev's stupendous Asiatic . Drama of Shadows
You'll wlep. you'll laugh as you gaze into the shadowed
ZtenW a tortured soul in the circus of life. The
most brilliant Russian classic of the age
Friday and Saturday Matinees at 2:30
Prices: Eve. 75c ; Matinees 50c
Seat, at R- P. Curtice Company
Undergraduates Traveling Abroad
To Have European Student Guides
Undergraduates who contemplate
a trip abroad next summer will for
the first time be offered the oppor
tunity to travel in parties for which
European students will act as hosts
and guides, under a new system of
tours, conducted under the Joint aus
pices of the undergraduates of Am
erica and Europe.
American arrangements for the
tours are going forward under the
direction of. the National Student
Federation of America and an advis
ory committee headed by Dr. Steph
en Duggan, president of the Inter
national Institute of Education, and
including a number of college presi
dents and internationally known fi
gures. In Europe the tours will be
in the hands of the Confederation In
ternationale des Etudiants, while
John RothschildJ, president of the
"Open Road," will act as the agent
of all three bodies in caring for ac
commodations and determining itin
eraries. Twelve Routes Offered
Parties of twelve or fourteen stu
dents will travel under the direction
of a leader carefully picked by the
administration. A choice of twelve
routes is offered, each to consume
roughly three months and to cost be
tween $500 and ?700. Trips cover
England, France, Germany, northern
Italy, Austria, and the Balkans, hav
ing as a universal feature a stay of
some time at the student camp in Ge
neva, to give the members of the tour
Teach Correct Posture In Physical
Education and Add Inches to Height
As much as one inch already has
been added to the height of some of
the men students at Boston Univer
sity who are learning how to grow
tall under the direction of Dr. George
B. Emerson, head of the department
of physical education, 1 who is in
charge of this latest art of calis
thenics. "The secret is in correct posture,"
explained Dr. Emerson. "Besides
keeping the individual from achiev
ing his normal height, habitual in
correct posture resulted in displace
ment of internal organs, interference
with their functions, and resulting
alterations in personal appearance,
especially cast of countenance and
impairment of health."
"If you want to be healthy, stand
up straight," he instructs his stu
dents," if you want to be intelligent
and look it. stand up straight; and if
you want to be happy and make a
success of life, stand up straight.
Thprp is alwavs a feeling of inde
pendence and capability associated
with correct nosture, when, lor in
stance, the waistline is at least three
BIG TEH STARS IN
EVAHSTON MEET
Sizteerth Annual Track and Field
Game, at Northwestern Expected
To Be Big; Sucessc
EVANSTON, 111., March 8. Many
of America's foremost track stars,
Kv nnct anH nresent. will help make
the Sixteenth Annual Track and Field
games at Patten gymnasium rriday
and Saturday nights, a big success.
They have been selected by a con
ference committee to act as officials,
Robert A. Gardner, captain of the
American Walker golf team, which
will invade England soon, and him
self the former world's pole-vault
champion, will act as referee. Gard
ner is perhaps the foremost amateur
athlete in the country today and his
presence will add much to the big
track classic.
Programs - Menus
Neatly and Correctly produced
by Graves Fraternity and
Sorority Crests for your
Approval
Graves Printing Co.
3 Door. South of Temple
312 N. 12th Street
' .
an opportunity to watch the working
of the League of Nations at close
range.
Keep In Touch With Life
The radical departure from the
time-worn method of "doing Europe"
lies in tho fact that almost without
exception European students will ac
company parties throughout their
trip, providing the connecting link
between the traveler and the country
through which he goes, heretofore so
conspicuously lacking. The plan of
accommodations in Europe follows
the same general scheme of keeping
the undergraduate more closely In
touch with the life around him than
is possible if he stops at the more
frequented hotels run for the benefit
of Americans. As a consequence
quarters in college dormitories, pri
vate homes, pensions, and the like,
have been provided, making possible
the low cost of the tours.
Detail. Available Soon
Full details oi the tours will short
ly be in the handn of the represent
atives of the National Student Fed
eration in the various colleges. The
tours will be open to both men and
women, in separate parties, adequate
provisions being made in each case
for chaperoning the feminine con
tingent. Application to enroll as
member of one of the parties must
be made before June 1st, to permit
necessary adjustments in personnel
to be completed before the date of
sailing.
inches less than the chest measure
ment." "Lack of a-ibition, yawning,
stretching, irritability, all of which
are portrayed in facial expression,
are often associated with retarded
function of the vital organs," Dr.
Emerson pointed out in illustrating
the evils of improper posture during
class recitations.
"Improper posture will reduce nor
mal height from one to three inches.
Such loss of height is regained by a
series of exercises. When normal
posture is secured another series, of
exercises is used to maintain the cor
rect posture until gradually it main
tains itself."
The main idea of the course, Dr.
Emerson says, is not to produce a
race of giants, but merely to improve
students' health. The course in pos
ture is only one of a group of new
courses in physical education at the
university. A minimum amount of
physical training is required and a
program of exercise designed to fit
the individual needs is outlined for
each student .
Knute K. Rockne, the Notre Dame
grid wizard, and J. B. Hawley, the
hero of Dartmouth footbr.ll, will be
verv much in evidence m their capa
city as finish judges. Other judges
of the finish are E. C. Delaporte,
director of physical education in
Chicago high schools.
In the pole-vault there will be sev
eral former stars to help judge this
event. Frank Foss, former world
chamD before the rise of Charley
Hoff, and Royal Rouscher, present
Conference outdoor champ, will be
on hand. James Braden, one of
Yale's great grid and track Btars,
will be one of the judges of the shot
put. Morgan Taylor, the sensational
track performer for the Illinois Ath
letic Club of Chicago, will be an in
spector at the meet. Whitey Hagen.
former conference 440 champion,
will assist Charles Carroll, who has
the difficult job of Clerk of Course.
Then, last but in no manner the
least, will be Ted Canty, as announ
cer. No track meet would be com
plete without the scintillating voice
of this cTeatest of announcers.
Canty is a fixture at the indoor con
ference meets and he always adds
much with his great fund of humor.
"The Million Dollar Handicap" and
The Melody Girls At The
Lyric Theater
The thud of hoofs, the wild shouts
of applausing crowds! Amid thun
derous cheers she rides to glorious
victory. The most uplendid story of
the turf ever seen on the screen.
"The Million Dollar Handicap" with
Vera Reynolds, Edmund Burns, and
Ralph Lewis, is a picture that will
thrill and enthuse you. "A Bank
rupt Honeymoon," a continuous roar
of laughter; visualized news, and on
the stage The Three Melody Girls,
three dainty misses, exquisitely
gowned in an offering of harmony
and solo numbers. A brilliant mu
sical program will be rendered by
Ernest Harrison's Lyric Orchestra
nd Mre. May M. Mills, organist. Adv
SPOTLESS CLEANERS
(Harry Uerlinf, Prop.)
Top Coats, plain wool t1 f(
dress;, 2-piece suits J1.W
We Call For and Deliver.
We Cuarantea Our Work.
B4459 2401 J St.
EAT AT
Commercial Lunch
1238 ."O" St.
Under New Management
College Press
THE HIGH COST OF EDUCATION
(Daily Palo Alto)
Under the headline "College Wast
ers and Extravgant Fathers,"
George Wheeler Hinman, financial
expert of the Hearst newspaper syn
dicate, recently discussed his views
on the extravagance of tho Ameri
can college personnel. The article
went further than showing waste
within the college, however, for it
attempted to paint the results of such
waste upon the years following grad
uation. It may have been Mr. Hinman's
intention to place the blame on the
father's of the nation for the waste
of their sons, but he did not accom
plish this result. Instead, one is left
with the impression that it is the
college itself which causes the waste,
that conditions within it tend natur
ally to make wasters of students, j
Perhaps Mr. Hinman unconsciously
felt this tendency did exist.
Ordinarily we would have passed
such arguments by, classing them as
"the other side of the question,"
feeling that enough space has been
given in the past few years to the
value of colleges to the nation. But
the answer that Dr. David Starr Jor
dan gave the other day to the ques
tion propounded him, "Does college
do a boy any good?" inspired a desire
to apply it to Mr. Hinman's argu
ment. Dr. Jordan replied to his
questioner in five words of wisdom,
"That depends upon the boy."
Mr. Hinman himself says that he
has no intention of representing the
majority of college students as ex
travagant; but to lay the blame upon
the institution for the waste of the
minority is to lose sight of the cause.
It lies in the boy, as Dr. Jordan has
suggested. It has never been claimed
for the college that character, in
cluding thrift, can be made with the
aid of the text-book. Association
and a natural intuition develop it
and if waste and extravagance are
shown while in college, it is rather
the fault of indulgent fathers and
inherited characteristics than any
destructive habits fastened upon the
boy by the college itself. The father
in Mr. Hinman's article who allowed
his three sons $3,500 each per year
upon his $20,000 income was himself
to blame for his inability to breathe
as the author put it. One feels safe
in saying that less than one-half that
amount is the average spent in west
ern universities.
Given an amount for one year
equal to' double the living-wage of
thousands of workers, is it strange
that the three sons made breathing
hard for the father. For one plenty
EAT
at
The Little Sunshine Cafe
Meals, Sandwiches and
Lunches
QUICK SERVICE
First Door Ea.t of Temple
Laaaati&uJ;?.: I
Write it
Latsch Bros., Tucker & Shean,
fully equipped with money and minus
the average amount of "horse-sense,"
college is certainly tho wrong place
but what spot on earth would not
be for such a person? To argue that
the thousand and one other advan
tages of college association and edu
cation must be thrown asido or dis
continued because of the indulgence
of parents is to be guilty of false
ideas that might lead to the denial
of an education to some boy whose
entire life would suffer thereby.
Oxford Against Communist.
Oxford students are required to
sign a pledge on entering that they
will have no communication or con
nection with any communist or
ganization.
Dean Would Abolish Collegiate Idea.
A dean of Syracuse University
hopes to rid the campus of collegiate
ideas such as "slouchy swaggering,
put-on slang and rough-neck atti
tude" by a button campaign.
Pullman Robes
for women.
BLACK SATIN ROBES, in two different model, which are
admirably suited to tho needs of the- college mrl.
One model is of Murk "sport satin" or Haronet s.tin. a ravon
mixture, with embroidered appllqued floral pattern, in red.
yellow, or purple. The other is of blaek -.tin with '
sleeve handing of rose. red. peach or turquoise blue, and nana
painted pocket in harmoniiing colors.
Priced
12.50
Second
L 1 Have you seen our displays of sprint; Jfm
'"W, millinery T A complete line of colors,
new straws and smart styles awaits
' your choice. '
Golf Clubs and
Golf Balls
We Have
LATSCH
1118
don't sin&
The ckances are that youll clo a better job with
a "Lifetime" pen. And youll have the satisfac
tion of knowing, when you write to her, that
you are working with the "niftiest" instrument
procurable. Of fcreen, jade-&reen radite, a hand-
some ana inaestxuciiDie maienui, i me
you'll love to hold. Its nib is guaranteed for a
lifetime. But what is more important, it is an in
fallible performer. At better stores everywhere.
Price, $8.75 Student' special, $70 Other lower
"Lifetime" Titan oversize pencil to match, $4.25
Sheaffer Strip nuxettar to mknaka all Dent wriuhttur
QHEAFFEIS
V- PENS PENCILS'SKRIP
V.K SHEAFFEK PEN COMPANY
aoST HAOBOM. tOVh
FOR SALE BY
College Book Store, C. Edson
Degrees Given To Eskimo.
The degree of Bachelor of Herders
is offered to Eskimo college boys,
'the candidate must spend four years
in the open learning how to manage a
herd of reindeer.
Dissention Over Prayer Week
Denver university holds an annual
'prayer week." Considerable dis
sention was aroused during its 66th
observance juct over, acclaiming that
the tradition lost caste because of
the name and likening it to "eat more
beans week."
TEACHERS needed now.
BOOMERS TEACHERS AGENCY.
PR-INTERS wmuiuqufMi v
II
KCL )P.VI ST.
LINCOLN. NEB.
Floor.
Your Favorite
BROTHERS
"O" Street
Lifetime
Miller Co., Meier Drug Co.