The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, March 22, 1927, Page 3, Image 3

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    THE DAILY NEBRASKAN
CAPITOL
Now
Showing
You'll talk about thii long after it's gone.
If You Live Within Fifty Miles of Lincoln' Motor In
and Enjoy These Splendid Programs
LLE
MON.-TUES.-WED.
6-Big Vaudeville Acts-6
The Orpheum Circuit Headliner
jFmmie hussey
In Hit Latest Offering
"UNEASY STREET"
Assisted by EDDIE IIICKEY
MUSIC LAND
A Symphonic Melan. with
THE FRENCH SISTERS
Different, Distinctly., Delightful
Europe' Moet Versatll. Artists'
Four Bradnas
featurinf the
"Girl on the Flaminf Table"
Tabor & Green
Popular Colored Funster
"TWO DARK KNIGHTS"
HARRY MYNA
Seymour & Cunard
Hollywood Picture Favorite In
"HITS AND BITS OF 1927"
Wolgast & Girlie
The Different Duo of
Tropical Entertainer Supreme
Also Comedy and News Ficture
BABICH and the ORCHESTRA
SHOWS AT 2:30, 7:00, 8:00
MATS 25c, NITE 50c, GAL. 20c
n aier.au I La AAltitAttT
A RHIIIant PrsfrilB of
Screen and Stage Attractions
ON THE SCREEN
Pretty and Fascinating
LAURA
LA PLANTE
In a Fast Romantic Comedy
"THE
LOVE THRILL"
OTHER SCREEN NOVELTIES
' ON THE STAGE
The Joyou and Buoyant Artist
LYDIA HARRIS
America'
Daughter of Syncopation
Jacques Lafayette
Grace Delfino
Featured Dancer of
Hollywood Screen Productions
Spring Style Revue
Presented by
Lincoln's Leading Morrhant
Latest Creation Displayed by
Selerted Beauty Models
BEAVER and HIS GANG
Featuring
"When Twilight Comes"
(I'm Thinking of You)
SHOWS AT 2:45, 7:00, 9:00
MATS. 25c NITE 50c
MONDAY TUESDAY WEDNESDAY
A THRILLING ADVENTURE
COLONIAL
MILTON SILLS, IN "PUPPETS"
ALSO GOOD COMEDY. NEWS AND TOPICAL PICTURES
MATS. 10c NIGHT 20c
STARTING MONDAY
iir'fv, mmm
Change Made In
Pharmacy Date
(Continued froirf Page One.)
anxious to have a successful program
for this year," continued Mr. Reed.
The entire week of May 1 will .be
devoted to preparation for Pharmacy
Night. A general convocation will be
held on Wednesday of that week.
Thursday evening open house will be
held in Pharmacy Hall with the dif
ferent laboratories running. There
will be music, -and favors will be
given out. The Pharmacy banquet
will be held at the Cornhusker Friday
evening. 1 . .
RIALTO now
CONWAY TEARLE AND
Mae Murray, in
"ALTARS of
DESIRE"
ALL THIS
WEEK
LYRIC
THEATER
The Pierre Watkin Players
Present
"WHITE
COLLARS"
Mats. Tues. Thurs., Sat.
Next Werk Pierre Watkin in
"THE OLD SOAK"
Phone B-4575 For Ticket
AddpheMenjou and Greta Nissen
in the Paramount Picture
Blonde or Brunette
COMING THURSDAY
At The Theatres
Our old friend Laura LaPlante is
back at the Orpheum this week in
"The Love Thrill." This time she is
the daughter of her father, whose
business is 'nearly on the rocks. The
creditors will and the outiook is
simply rotten. Dad is about licked,
but not so with the beautiful heroine,
for sHo has an- idea. She must force
her way in to see a certain man to
land a big piece of business. He is
hard to reach, so terribly busy mak
ing love to other women. So the des
perate girl pretends to be the widow
of a man, who she thinks is dead,
but who really isn't. Of course the
dead man turns up and simply gums
up everything. But unlike Napoleon
who had an idea also, she meets no
Waterloo.
Ever wonder what vaudeville life
is like? If you have, then "Upstage"
at the Lincoln will give you a real
thrill, for what happens backstage
and on the stage is wound into a
clever little story. Norma Shearer is
the girl who lands in New York with
$10.C5 and a lot of determination to
go on as a stenographer, but lands
a position as adding class to a "hoof
ers" double. Her self conceit leads
her to believe that she is the winter
show, so her position goes to her
hear and she quits and decides to do
A HANDY PLACE
to get your mag., candies,
' toilet articles, stationery
and school supplies.
Walter Johnson's
Sugar Bowl
B-1319
1552 "O" St.
Greeting Cards
AND
Mottos
FOR EVERYDAY
IN THE YEAR
AND EVERY
OCCASION
LATSCH
BROTHERS
School Supplies 1118 O
A Glittering Fantaay of Vaudeville A Love
Story Yo Will Merer Forget!
11 lUra.ii43LC
NEW3
ALSO
FABLES
HARRY LANGDON
is
WHITE WINGS BRIDE"
On tb Stage
"The Southern Melody Trio"
?-' .ill
Your Ability
The ability to do your work well de
pend largely on clear viaion. Have
our optometrist test your eye today.
Classes, complete with reading or distance
lenses, frame of your choice and a thorough
y. examination iull guarantee included
$7.50 $9.50 $12.00
Kindy Optical Co.
1209 "O" St.
a
Open Saturday evening B-1153
eseJhihs
QCmtoumst
I 'kJF third cabin
MINNEKAHDA
MINNESOTA
WINIFREDIAN
DEVONIAN
The only exclusively Tourist
Third Cabin liners in the world.
No other passengers carried.
MAJESTIC World's largest ship.
BELGENLAND
LAPLAND
CEDRIC
CELTIC
Largest and finest ships to Ant
werp (Belgium).
Largest "Tourist Third" carriers
to Liverpool (convenient port for
Shakespeare country and English
Lake District).
DORIC RECINA Largest Tourist Third" carriers
MEG ANTIC over the she -nic St. Law
LAURENTIC rence River rou .
or other ol our ateamer which will provide many Tourist Third Cabin
(ailing to Europe thi year. Accommodation, oi course, are reserved
only ior college people, bucuvM and prolewional men end womeo and
imiiar congenial traveler.
.
a single, but teams up with another
(song and dance man, only to find that
life is not all a aeries of "slaeper
jumps," but just a few tanks. She
ends up in the chorus and is despised
because she is not a true trouper but
an "upstage." When she tries to
prove that she is really a true sport,
it nearly costs her life, but she fin
ally ends up where she started, but
not the way you think she will.
Added Pathe News pictures of the
Junior-Senior prom. These are the
best motion pictures of such an'event
to reach the stage in a news' reel.
The Liberty presents for your ap
proval, for the first half of the week
a comedy bill. Jimmy Hussey in "Un
easy Street," a comedy skit. "Music
Land," is a combination of girls, song
and dance. The Four Brands present
an European novelty act, "On the
Planning Table." Tabor and Grand
are two colored comedians with a line
of chatter and a few fancy steps.
Seymore and Cunard have a song act
with popular tunes of the past year.
Wilgust and Girlie are Hawaiian and
guitar entertainers.
"Altars of Desire," is' the picture
zation of the American Weekly's
story that the censors said that no
producer would dare put into motion
pictures, but which Mae Murray made
into an entertaining picture, with the
aid of Conway Tearle. "Altars of
Desire is featured at the Rialto the
first half, Mae kills a fellow and runs
off, but by accident flees to the home
of an old flame. The moth and candle
stuff is again reenacted, A la Murray,
and should thrill all the fans who
like such. But when the sheriff comes
to capture the criminal, things thick
en and the action begins.
Interesting Specimens of Unknown
Origin Are Displayed in Museum
Crudely carved on a little drab
stone in the museum of the Nebraska
State Historical Society is the meager
inscription, "Jno. B. Hill of 111., May
18th, 1850." Mr. ,E. E. Blackman,
the curator, likes to imagine the un
known and doubtlessly interesting
man whose prairie grave was thus
marked.
"Since this tombstone was found
near Diller, a 3hort distance from
where the Oregon trail passed, prob
ably this unfortunate pioneer was
one of the thousands whose wagons
made that famous highway across the
continent. Disease or a stray arrow
from a hostile Indian caused his un
timely end and," he continued, "the
Novel
Menus -and
Programs
""""
Graves Printing
Company
Three doors south of Uni.
Temple
Official
Phi Beta Kappa
Keys
All sizes can be had with
joint pin and catch
or charm style carried in
yellow gold only
white gold Aade to order
HALLETT
UNIVERSITY JEWELERS
Estab. 1871 117-19 So. 12th
Milton Sills in "Puppets," a story
of a puppet show in New York's east
side, of an Italian who leaves a
knife in the wall to warn all people
that he will return and if they have
tampered with the affections of his
wife, well, use your own judgment
He is supposedly killed and one of the
stage hands falls in love with his
wife, but the knife still stays in the
wall and finally the hero returns,
stone deaf, then in a fight hears his
betrayer pleading with his wife to
leave, they draw lots to see who shall
put the knife thru the other's heart,
and such a drawing! You'll have to
see the picture to find the conclusion.
The story of "White Collars,"
played by the Pierre Watkin Players
this week, is woven around the prob
lems of the great middle class, nei
ther presenting nor delving prob
lems. The daughter of a bookkeeper
herself a stenographer marries
her millionaire employer and intro
duces him into her home. His at
tempts to ease their material burdens
with his money causes them to take
refuge behind their pride, and they
refuse what "Cousin Henry" calls the
millionaire's "charity." It is pleasing
large audiences at the Lyric.
The play has a homely quality
which should appeal strongly to the
so-called "middle Class" whose know
ledge of life as it is here portrayed
is an actuality. Its lines and situa
tions are clean throughout. It con
tains nothing of the morbid, abnor
mal, unusual, weird or even strange,
and it is entirely lacking in either
"sex-appeal" or sex interest, so
called. The Pacific Coast Company of
"White Collars," which originally
produced the play in Los Angeles, is
now in its 108th week in that city
and still going strong. Adv.
rest of the train paused to place this
crude monument.
"Thousands of young men started
to the far west and were never heard
of again. Why, I remember when I
was young, people hated to have their
relatives start for California. So
often it meant disappearance and
lonely graves such as this," indicating
the little chunk of limestone.
Symbolic of the drama of pioneer
days was this Oregon Trail winding
over the plains and mountains from
Kansas City to Astoria on the Pacific
coast. Here were, birth and deaths,
hopes and despairs, jealousies and
jolly good times, with always the
patient creak of the wagon wheels
cutting into the hard ruts of the
trail:
Often burdened with supplies they
could no longer carry they abandoned
them along the way. Frequently they
buried valued household goods in
hopes of some day returning. Mr.
Blackman recalls the unearthing of
a cookstove which had been left in
this way.
"Ploughing on his farm one day a
Nebraska farmer discovered a mound
which he thought was a grave. When
they investigated it instead of pulling
out a coffin, an old barrel was taken
from the hole." Thus Mr. Blackman
reminisced, "When they tipped the
barrel they could hear a liquid mov
ing. It proved to be full of apple
jack. Merely another treasure left
along the trail."
'That's the funny side, but here
is the tragic one," returning to the
relic on the table. "This man was
lucky to have this much left to his
memory. Hundreds of graves were
marked with a stick or bunch of
flowers which have long ago disappeared."
One of the museum's most treas
ured curios is the term Mr. Blackman
applies to the tombstone. It was
found by William Green while he
was ploughing on his farm near Dil
ler in 1894. A few years later J. A.
Shugart presented it to the society.
"It's the only tombstone we have,"
remarked Mr. Blackman. Besides
that, its undoubted connection with
the romantic Oregon Trail make it
one of the best known of the mu
seum's relics.
Have Us Clean And
Press Your
Garments '
It is surprising how much
more wear you can get
from them if kept clean
and well pressed.
"22 Years in Lincoln"
Soukup & Westover
Modern Cleaners
21 & G Sts. Call F2377
MANY FORMER STUDENTS
VISIT DEAN FERGUSON
Former students in the College of
Engineering who have recently called
on Dean 0. J. Ferguson include:
Chas. A. N, Armstrong, '26, whr has
been with the General Electric Co. at
Lynn, Mass.; Oren II. McKenty, '85,
with the Northwestern Bell Telephone
Co. at Sioux Falls, S. D.; Lee M.
Nelson, '23, dealer in electrical sup
plies and contractor at Seward Nebr.;
Harry L. Unland, '10, of the Day &
Zimmerman Engineering and Con
struction Co. of Philadelphia, who
has been on a construction job in
Texas for a number of months; F. L.
Phillips, '26, Kansas City Power and
Light Co., Kansas City, Mo.; Carl B.
Gerber, '26, Concrete Engineering
Co. of Omaha; Fred C. Bussemer,
ex-'25, Wallace & Tiernan Chlorinat
ing Apparatus Co. of Kansas City;
Elton E. Caster, '25, Kansas City Gas
Co.; Otto Haman, '24, Northwestern
Bell Co., Omaha; and Fred A. Brooks,
'23, with the Bell Telephone Labor
atories, Inc., New York City.
R. C. YOUNG, fki b. Kpt. college instructor to store manager
I '""! '" I
I "k, j ;
1 5x '
I received my B. S. degree from
Colby In 1915. and my M. S. from
Wctleyan University in 1917. From
1915 until 1920 I taught physic and
c hem It try In Colby Weileyan and
Providence, R. I., excepting service
as a commltstonedomccrdurlng
the war.
The desire for a more active life In
duced me to leave academic lines and
become asiinsnt to the head chemist
of the G or! ism Manufacturing Co.
Opportunity for advancement here
aeemed too limited, so after two years
1 decided on another change. 1
wanted to settle Into a life occupa
tion where ambition, ability, and
hard work, would ba demanded and
rewarded.
The Kreage organization has answer'
ed every requirement. Promotions
have been made as rapidly as 1 have
bcenqualtnedtoreceivethem. Today
I find myself receiving a greater In
come than the teachers and industrial
acquaintances who sought to dis
courage me from maklna; aurh a
radical change in occupation. My
observation of men who have been
with this Company for many years
shows me that my future earning
power is going to be limited only by
my own ability.
R. C. Young, Phi Beta Kaf
How far can You
see into the Future ?
' The men we want to manage our stores are
men of vision men who are able to look into
the future, and who are willing to work hard
to attain what they see there.
, If you have the faculty of vision, combined
with perseverance and a willingness to improve
yourself through work and study, you are the
sort of man who goes far in the Kresge
organization.
And if you are this sort of man, you will not
choose a position that offers much today, and
little tomorrow. But you will be able to see into
. the future, and you will pick a Job that offers a
fitting reirn for the energy you put into it.
Study our organization. Perhaps you will find
it to your liking. At any rate, write now, to
our Personnel Department so that we may
send a 'graduate of your own college to tell
you how he found success in the Kresg
organization.
Personnel Dept
S;S -KRESGE CO
$ 10 03nOKJ ... 12ktf JT0il
E S O E B U I LP 1 NO; DETRO IT, MICHIGAN
Thursday Friday Saturday
ADOLPIIE MENJOU
"BLONDE OR BRUNETTE"
A Paramount Picture
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