THE DAILY NEBRASKAN RESULTS OF RECENT DEBATESOUPILED "wfcgTvi'ew (A) dele.! A.h- land 8 to 0. Syracuse (N) defeated Brock, 3 LYRIC ALL THIS WEEK THEATER The Pierre Watkin Players Prevent "THE GORILLA" Tk. Thrillinf, Chilling, Killing ' Myetery : NO ADVANCE IN PRICES u.tlnMS. Tue., Thura., end Sat. M ST. offic. phone. B-4575 . 2MREVKYB0WiOEs WHERE THOUSANDS If You Are Looking For An Evening Of Real Enjoy ment Make Arrange ments Now To See This Splendid Program COMING THUR. FRI. SAT. LYLE LA PINE & COMPANY In a Funny Farce with Music "Oh Min" ( BOBBY VAIL 4 CIRLS And an Excellent Surprising Bill SHOWS 2:30, 7:00, 9:00 3 Days, You a. WOMEN ft - I- 1 Fables SHOWS START AT 1, 3, 5, 7, AND 9 COMING to 0. CereBco (A) defeated Plattsmouth by default. Stromsberg (N) defeated St. Paul, 2 to 1. Ponca (N) defeated Wakefield, 2 to 1. Wayne (N) defeated Wakefield, 8 to 0. Bratton Union (A) defeated Te cumseh, 2 to 1. Peru (A) defeated Pawnee City, 3 to 0. University Place (N) defeated Raymond, 3 to 0. Wayne (N) defeated Bloomfield, 3 to 0. Ponca (N) defeated Bloomfield, 2 to 1. Wymore (A) defeated Endicott, 3 to 0. Hartington (N) defeated Ponca, 2 to 1. Brock (A) defeated Peru, 2 to 1. St Paul (N) defeated Aurora, 2 to 1, Havelock (A) defeated College View, 3 to 0. St. Paul (N) defeated St. Paul, 2 to 1. MON.-TUES. WED. MEET THOUSANDS DAILY Charles Ethel O'DONNELL & BLAIR and their associate players In "THE PLASTERERS" A Comedy Classic WALLY JAMES Takes HELKM aiWCLAIR "Taxicabbing" FORBES, PROUT & CO. In the Beautiful Offering "DANCE FASHIONS" Shapely girls Clever Songs Novel Dances Tha Versatile Comedienne MISS PRIMROSE SEMON Gentlemen Prefer Reds Juet a Little Different GERTRUDE & BOYS A Fast Moving Sextette in "A LITTLE OF EVERYTHING" ALSO NEWS AND COMEDY PICTURES BABICH and his ORCHESTRA MATS 25c NITE 50c Starting Monday GIRLS! BOYS! Never Laughed so Hearty You Will When You See ESTHER RALSTON IN FASHIONS for WITH RAYMOND HATTON Overture: "Hula-Hula" A. L. Bonner, Conducting News "Fight Night" A Sennett Comedy Wilbur Chenoweth At the Mighty Wurlltoer U (Ml V THURSDAY EDDIE CANTOR la ,f.pcil Delivery GLEE CLUB HOME FROU ROAD TRIP (Continued from Pare One.) home concert the Club expects to work on several special serenade numbers. All members of the Club are requested to meet for the re hearsals during the remainder of the season. Mrs. Herman Decker, who accom panied the Club on the sprint: tour as pianist, will serve in that capacity i or the remainder of the year. Sev eral new numbers are being planned and will be added to the repertoire of the organization. PROFESSORS NAMED IN 1927 WHO'S WHO (Continued from Page One.) gree in 1905. For four summers, he studied at the University of Missouri. He received his Ph. D. at Columbia in 1914. Dean Sealock held the position of superintendent of schools in Circle ville, Ohio, from 1906 to 1912. Then he served as supervisor of high schools in the State Department of Education in Ohio in 1914. The fol lowing year, he became associate pro fessor of vocational education at Iowa State College at Ames, Iowa from 1915 to 1918. From 1918 to 1921, he headed the department of C&PHEUM ALL THIS WEEK A corking story, a peppy cast, a screen tonic de luxe. Every fan will enjoy this delightful comedy. MARIE, ON THE STACE Gus Bartrama and Vertner Saxton The Kentucklane !n Cycle of Songs EARL MOSSMAN & CO. A Clever Quartette In "REVUE UNIQUE" BEAVER and the BOYS Showat 2:45, 7. 9, Mata-2S NlteSO RIALTO - Mon. - Tues. - Wed. She'll dance with you at so much per dance r n with JOAN CRAWFORD and OWEN MOORE COMING THURSDAY JACK HOLT "SEA HORSES" A Paramount Picture history and principles of education, and since 1921 has held the position of Dean of Education at the Univer sity of Nebraska. Dean Sealock is a member of the National Educational Association, the National Society for the Study of Education, National Society College Teachers of Education, History of Science Society and the Nebraska State Teacher's Association. Dean Sealock is also .the author of "Evolu tion of the Free Public School in Ohio." Goodwin Deloas Swezey Goodwin Deloss Swezey, astrono- mer, was born at Rockford, Illinois, on January 10, 1851. He received an A. B, at Beloit (Wisconsin) College in 1873 and an A. M. in 1876. Then he attended Yale Divinity School from 1873 to 1876. The B. D. degree was conferred upon him at Andover (Mass.) Theological Seminary in 1880. He also studied at the summer schools of the University of Illinois and Indiana. Professor Swezey was a natural science instructor at Beloit College from 1874 to 1875 and from 1876 to 1879. Doane College at Crete, Ne braska, next claimed him and he served in the capacity of professor from 1890 to 1894. He was meteorol ogist on the Nebraska State Board of Agriculture from 1891 to 1900. Since 1896, he has been a professor of as tronomy and meteorology at the Uni versity of Nebraska. Professor Swezey was director of the Nebraska Weather Service from 1884 to 1896. From 1884 to 1906, he held the position of meteorologist at the United States Experiment Sta tion at Lincoln, Nebraska. He is a member of the Astronomical and Astrophysical Society of America, the Nebraska Academy of Sciences, (president 1899), Sigma Xi (presi dent 1895-95), and Phi Beta Kappa. He is the author of "New Elementary Agriculture (with others)," and "Practical Exercises in Astronomy." (To be Concluded) GOVERNMENT TESTS WILL BE GIVEN SOON Civil Service Offers Opportunity Fur SluUeuU to Become Patent Examiners Competitive examinations for the position of junior patent examiner at Washington, D. C, and positions requiring similar qualifications have been announced by the United States Civil Service Commission. Applica tions must be filed with the commis sion not later than May 14, and the time and place of the examinations will be announced soon after. Those entering the competition will be allowed to choose an optional phase of engineering or chemical work and will be graded on this and their knowledge of physics, mechan ical drawing, technics, mathematics, and foreign language. A probationary period of six months is required of the successful applicants. The duties of the position are to perform scientific and technical work in the examination of applications for patents. Investigation of previous patents along the same lines in the United States and various foreign countries will also be part of the work. The entrance salary is $1,860 a year and advancement beyond that depends on the efficiency of the man and the occurrence of vacancies in the higher offices in the patent div ision of the civil service. XOE 301 Q Davis Coffee Shop o 108 N. 13 o Q Doubled Decked Sand- g wiches, Home made pastry. Unexcelled Coffee Day & Night D o OK IOC roraoi A Metro Goldwyn Picture ! Ik f. if! i fmt Chemist Declares That Most New Discoveries Aro Results Of Faith "The chemist makes most of his new discoveries by a splendid exhi bition of a most practical sort of faith," declared Prof. B. Clifford Hendricks in a radio address broad cast from the University Studio last Friday. "A chemist is not usually associa ted with such ideas as faith, yet he is a great believer in faith, faith in the invisible, too. "Some one has said that faith is that characteristic of our thinking which will prompt him to use truth to its utmost," said Hendricks. "The chemist believes in four Borts of in visible constituents of materials. Their existence and qualities are to him truths. And even though he has never seen, with his eyes, any one of these constituents, he daily stakes his reputation as a scientist upon their existence and the dependable ness of their behavior. "No one has ever seen the small fat droplets in milkuntil after it stands, yet the chemist has even measured them and found that it would take over two million of them, placed side by side, to make an inch. One of these drops would have to be twenty thousand times as large as it is if we might see it with our naked eye," asserted Mr. Hendricks. "Again no one would ever have thought that petroleum contained water particles had the chemist not had faith in the invisible: Doctor F. D. Cottrell urged a chemist to friend to pat "a high electrostatic stress on the oil" and as a result the oil was freed from the water and a million barrels of un merchantable California oil was made fit for refining and for fuel. "But one may ask what practicable value all uf this knowledge has. Some years ago it was discovered that elec tric light bulbs which used metallic filaments became clouded after use and failed to give their best light. It was also known that the filament wasted away and presently the lamp was dead. The chemist reasoned that there must have been molecules pres ent as in water when heated, so he ar gued that the filament wasted away because of these vaporizing mole cules which are leaving it. "Then the chemist set about to remedy this defect in the bulbs. He knew that there were invisible mole cules in the air and that oxygen would burn up the filament," Mr. Hendricks said. "So after experiment ing, his theory proved very success ful and today we buy nitrogen -filled mazda. The chemist, through his faith in the invisible molecules, has been able to give us better lights. "The chemist thinks of every mole cule as built up of smaller constitu ents called atoms. Each water mole cule is thought to contain two atoms of hydrogen and one of oxygen. Now, if the molecule of water is invisible, certainly the atoms constituting it could not be seen. Yet the chemist m- , mm oiW I 4rT 1 1 I on ijvuri t - L 1 Except its convenient biscuit form, its taste inviting crispness, its Nature given, refreshing, tonic benefits. y considers these atoms as his building units. And only through absolute faith is he able to accomplish the things that he has in the rast. "The atom was the least conceiv able portion of a material a few years ago. But recently Madame Curie showed how this could be made into even on m i piw.i.3 . ... aw - known as electrons, being only about 1-2000 as heavy as the lightest known atom, hydrogen. Chemists now be lieve that all atoms of all kinds are aggregates of these electrons built around a center made up of what is called protons. "It has been estimated that it would require five trillions of these electrons to cover the distance of one inch, if the chemist has faith in the unseen which is, if anything, practi cal, considering the many uses now made of these small particles in our everyday life. It is faith followed by works; it is not a dead faith. "If the chemist must so constantly find his guidance through faith in un seen entities, should such habits, such training, make him less able to find help in a faith in the unseen supreme in his religious world of thought. The student who chooses chemistry for hb major work in college cannot hope to get very far in its perusal unless he realizes that faith is one of the most important demands in a realm beyond his senses, peopled by col loids, molecules, atoms, and elec trons. "To the chemist these invisible par ticles are truths, realities; he uses them. The faith of a chemist is not a dead faith." Dr. J. E. Weaver of the department leoenlly made a trip to Peru o check the research work on the distribution of forest types in southeastern Ne braska which is being carried on by Prof. A. E. Holch, head of the depart ment of biology at Peru. Dr. E. M. Cramb. U. of N., '99. Osteopath. Burlington Blk. 13th & O St Adv. AT RECTOR'S Sunday, April 10 This evening we will serve chocolate pie made with real chocolate choco-, late, not cocoa Monday, April 11 25c Pimento Cheese Tostette Banana Salad Any Sc drink L13BANDI LINCOLN. NEB.; C. E. BUCHHOLZ, Mgr. Not a chance of that lead-like, loggy feeling even during early Spring if you make a daily habit of Shredded Wheat. That's one reason why this prince of whole wheat cereals graces the training tables of so many colleges and schools. 1 1 Carefully separated, com pletely cleaned, perfectly shredded, and thoroughly cooked whole wheat grains that' 8 all there is to f " , - iMimt'fii 1 Jetcn We may be on tht last lap of the school year, but it is not the least of all. In fact, as the point system so ably puts it, the entire time might be called ont major activity ofter anoth er. But don't let a little thing like that bother you. Just follow the col umn and you'll poll through. Complete Your Wardrobe Tomorrow Because- Orkin's Smart Shop for Wo men has just received the next summer release in Irene Castlt and Nikro models in drtsses and coats.' And when the college girl slips into an Irene Castle dress sht know that she is well dressed. So take tomorrow afternoon off to set their smart coats and frocks. Coats range from twenty-five to fifty dollars in priie and dresses from thirty-five to sixty-five dollass. The psedom inating material and shade for the balanoe of the stason and mid-summer wear is navy blue georgtttes. Just one more thing that you need for spring is here and the out-of-doors is calling. Orkin's carry a complete line of riding breeches and boots. Thinking of You Every Day Mother and Dad! Your brother and your Swettheart! Of courst thty are thinking of you everyday. And so? Well sometime during the day you usually find a roirmfrp t.n cram in a tiny thought about the folks at home, too. And the folks at nome sort of take it for granted that you are thinking of them when the whirl of college life gets so much so that you haven't even a minute to write home and let them know that yoo are thinking. Don't make them take you for granted this Easter time. You can't go home, but yoh can send a thoughtful little messenger a greeting card that will please the folks you left behind a lot. It takes so little of your time, and it means so much to them, if you drop in at George Bros, to make your selection. Good News For Collegiate Legs There is, in town, a most goot looking type of hose that seems to hi.ve every advantage. They are made in three weights, chif fon, service chiffon, and service. The chiffons are both silk throughout. Now in many hose the heel is reinforced with lisle, and when they are washed the lisle shows through. But these hose are reinforced with silk, and when THEY are washed why there isn't any lisle to show through. And then, they are long in the leg with very short tops an extremely desirable item in thi4 day of very short skirts. Laal, but not least, they are sold at the uniform price of $1.95 or a box of three pair for $5.50. You'll find the mat Magee's in all the new shades. Get Ready For The Easter Parade Miss Breen, buyer for Orkin's Smart Shop, is going east today and will return with many pret ty things for the dollege maid. And who would feel right on Easter day without a brand aew Easter bonnet? I wouldn't I know. And you wouldn't either. No, of course not So go down to Orkin't Millinery department now and pick out YOUR Easter hat. . Tor girls, as usual, you cau always find the smartest things at Orkin's. Faeb. hot 1b selected witha personal touch that ma' en its posRession all the more c!a lifrhtful. There pre no two hufi .like, end not a factory mo;! . 1 in the house. So, don't forget! CtopttC.-- Ji