The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, April 18, 1928, Page 3, Image 3

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    . THE DAILY NEBRASKAN
i Lobbying
By "AT
LINCOLN
"The Little Shepherd of Kingdom
Come" portrays Richard Barthelmess
in a role very similar to the one he
played in "Tol'able David." In fact,
the story and the setting are the
same. Among the peculiar people
of the Kentucky hills, a nameless lad,
enmeshed in the many threads of
fate, is led by chance to the door of
opportunity. Inspired by an ideal
that means more to him than moun
tain madness and blood feuds, he
stages a game fight to make a name
for himself. Only to discover at the
end that the greatest task remains,
choosing between two loves.
Mr. Barthelmess does some very
fine acting in a sympathetic role.
Molley O'Day plays the part of the
native duaghter of the hills and sup
plies most of the love interest.
The stage show features two very
pleasing revues. "The All Wrong
Co." and "The Nineteenth Hole Co."
Both have well balanced presenta
tions. You will probably like them.
Harry Rnppi is a very clever chap
who will do something else for your
approval if you don't like what he's
doing. He has a good line of music,
dances and comedy chatter.
LIBERTY
A corking good comedy farce is
about as good a way of explaining
"Here Comes The Bride" as anything
I can think of just now. Scream
ingly funny situations and comical
acting, topped off with humorous
lines, rounds out an enjoyable eve
ning of laughter.
The story concerns the marital
Dance Every Nite to
THE
COLLEGIANS
Playing Music
at you like it
STOMPS
DRAGS
COLLEGIATE
RHYTHM
Antelope Park
5c per Dance 5c
A Fast Frolicsome Farce Comedy
"Here Comes
The Bride"
Merriment built on (treat situations
Lauchs Romance Novelty
EVE. 25c, SOc, 75c MAT. 2Sc, 60c.
Next Wk.: The Love of Su Shone"
Returned By Public Demand for
3 DAYS ONLY 3
"THE BIG
PARADE"
At Regular Rial to Prices
MAT. 25c EVE. 35c
tmio
THUR- FRI. SAT.
George Bancroft in
"THE SHOWDOWN"
FIRST SHOWING
in the West!
Lon Chaney
LAUGH, CLOWN,
LAUGH" ,
An M-C-M Picture ;
BABICH AND ORCHESTRA
Harold Turner, Organist
nan Pinna Flies Atlantic and
Lands mm GreenJr Island
Path News Special.
6HOW8 ftpu&ms ""l
f hi. Wo.il4-- Tsnaa-nJ
Another BIG Show!!!
RICHARD
BARTHELMESS
"The
Little Shepherd
of Kingdom Come
ON THE STAGE
NINETEENTH HOLE
A Rapid Fire Musical farce
wlta
Kennedy Brenna, Re? Peck
and Babe Payno
Vaudeville's Musical Genial
HARRY RAPPI
WALMt CHARLAND
As-istrd (T
EUKf AND VAW
Beaver and Meiedy Maawrcaa
Chsswweth
LINCOLN THEATRE NEWS
FIRE DESTROYS
CITY AUDITORIUM
this
HOWS AT, I. , 7,
f I
troubles of a young man who marries
himself into a predicament that is
exceedingly difficult to explain when
the original prospective bride comes
upon the scene.
All members of the cast do excep
tionally well, every one coming in
for the honors with acting that is par
excellent. A new girl made her de
bute to Lincoln audiences Monday
night and by all appearances will be
another favorite. She is Miss Rita
Zane, of the Evanston Stock com
pany, Evanston, Illinois.
ORPHEUM
Lovers of good drama have a treat
in stor-5 for them at the Orcheum
this week. Appearing in a dramatic
role, Lon Chaney does some of the
best acting of his career in "Laugh,
Clown, Laugh." A truly remarkable
piece of work that approaches very
nearly the power of Manning's dra
matic interpretations.
The setting of the story is in Italy,
where two clowns with their travel
ing circus spread sunshine in the
hearts of the country folk. They
adopt a waif and when she grows to
womanhood, one of the clowns (Ti-
,to), played by Mr. Chaney, falls in
love with her. She is also loved by
another, a Count who is wealthy and
handsome. It becomes the duty of
the ugly old clown to sacrifice love,
for her.
Mils Asther and Loretta Young, a
new comer, do some good work. But
the picture is all Chaney's and it's
some picture.
RIALTO
To me, "The Big Parade" is the
greatest picture that the silver screen
has ever seen. A story of the ereat
world war, about as vividly and dra
matically portrayed as is possible to
do so. John Gilbert and Renee
Adoree in the roles of a rich man's
son and a French Peasant girl; Carl
Dane and Tom O'Brien in the im
mortal roles of 'Slim' and 'Bull' I
shall never forget them.
Ellen Smith hall. Plates will be seventy-five
cents and reservations
should be made with Professor Joseph
Alexis, University of Nebraska, on
or before April 19. Professor Lau
rence Fossler will serve as toastmas
ter. The dinner will be followed by an
informal program of speaking and
singing. A Spanish play will be pre
sented by students of the University
of Nebraska.
Plans for the Saturday morniilg
session, at 9:30 o'clock in the Fac
ulty room, Temple Building, follows:
Saturday Event
Election of officers.
"Experiences in Club Organiza
tion," Miss Bess Bozell, Omaha Cen
tral high school.
"My First Year of German Teach
ing," Mr. H. D. Epp, Henderson, Nebraska.
"Recent Observations, in Russia,"
Professor Orin Stepanek, University
of Nebraska.
Round Table Discussion.
Luncheon at 12 o'clock at the Lin
coln chamber of commerce. Plates
are fifty cents. Reservations will
not be necessary.
Student Engineers
Visit Many Plants
(Continued from Page 1)
Inland Steel company plant was in
teresting. The engineers had the opportunity
to follow the manufacture of steel
from the blast furnace tto finished
rails. They saw the castings and
maching of large turbines at the Al-
lis-Chalmers manufacturing com
pany plant.
Visit Nath Plant
The Nash Motors company plant
at Kenosha. Wisconsin, showed the
students the process of making Nash
motors and cars. Many other plants
were visited and their engineering
methods studied. The Art institute,
Grant park, Field museum, and Sol
diers' field were included in the tour.
The Chicago department of public
works gave the engineers a boat ride
up the Chicago river and a 170-foot
ride in the air on a vertical lift
bridge which was a product of a grad
uated engineers.
L. F. Rader of the civil engineer
ing department was the general chair
man of the trip. His assistants were
J. P. Colbert, architectural; P. A.
Cushman, mechanical; C. J. Frank-
forter, chemical; P. F. Keim, civil;
and G. S. Liebeck, electrical engi
neering department.
Elizabeth Dolan Tells
Of Morrill Murals
(Continued from Page 1)
the vision in her mind of how the
finished wall would look, and that is
the reason that people watching is so
disturbing.
As she was telling this Miss Dolan
put her hands up before her eyes as
there were a miniature picture there
and then she moved her hands away
as if she were projecting the picture
and greatly magnifying it and the
scene before us fairly grew as 6he
told about it.
"You know to really see murals
you should be at a distance away a-
bout eight times the size of the pic
ture, but that is impossible here so
we make the best of it," remarked
Miss Dolan.
"How long has it taken you to do
all this?" I asked, more and more im
pressed with what a stupenduous task
it really was.
"I have been working a little over
a year now," she explained. "I vis
ited each of the places where the im
portant fossils were found that are
to be here and sketched the surround
ing! and have made my painting from
them."
"You get a pretty good view of
that old boy from here," she said and
I turned to see a big elephant trum
peting at me. Along the east wall
the elephants are coming out of the
jungle to the water hole at mgbt to
drink and then go bade to tne jungie.
It was remarked that it must be a
great satisfaction to be able to do
snch beautiful painting and see
things grow under the brush. Miss
Dolan replied with a charmingly mod
est (-mil, "I lve my work."
Teachers Will Hold
Meetings at University
r Continued from Pag 1)
University of Nebraska.
Eonnd Table Discussion,
Dinner vnll be si eVWlt l
Dr. Niebuhr Gives
Address Tuesday
(Continued from Page 1)
your parents tell you. Then your
own experience begins to play a part.
Your experience must justiby author
ity. Religion must be tested by ex
perience all kinds, social, moral,
mystical.
A few people in every generation
make themselves the measure of all
things, Dr. Niebuhr pointed out. "It
is awful affrontery to make your
own experience the final test. The
experiences of others must enter in.
If you are going to be successful
you must take into consideration the
experiences of all generations which
have been boiled down into what is
called tradition, and which enters in
to all realms of life, notreligion a-
lone."
Progress Not Universal
Because we have made such me
chanical progress we are under the
illusion that we have made moral and
physical progress. Past ages had a
far deeper and more profound know
ledge in this line than we have. There
isn't a mistake that we can make
that hasn't been made before so it
is at our peril that we disregard the
experiences of past generations,
"Rebellion is mostly a matter of
age," the speaker continued. On the
one hand we have the conservatism
brought Wy age and experience and
on the other the rebellion of the
new generation, sincere in its belief
that tradition is superstition. If we
want a civilization that will make the
most progress with the least amount
of friction we must look toward the
past, assume that it holds some truth
and carry on our own experiments in
addition.
"If therj is no absolute authority,
the question arises: 'Where does
authority in religion come in?' The
LUNCHES
Tasty Sandwiches
Thick Malted Milks
Drop in at the
OWL DRUG
Style display
FLORSHEIM
SHOES
'SvrGollegeSMen
April 19th and 20th at
Magee's
(Ska Dep't.)
L.CGILMAN
Special CotUge kepraeutatir of At
FlonheimSkot Company
A special exhibit where
you ran make your indi
vidual selection from the
season' finest slicwing of
young meo's shoe styles.
Catholics accepted the authority of
the church. The Protestants subs
tituted the authority of the Bible.
There is now a tendency for youth
to substitute for both the life of Je
sus. Christianity at its best is not
an institution or a book but a person
ality. When authority is combined
experience it becomes inspiration.
"Do things as you want to prove
them. This is the only way to ar
rive at a vital religion. You must
make authority true through your
own experience. Reverence the ex
perience of your own soul."
Seventeen Students
Join Commercial Club
Mark of Prehistoric
Worm Resembles Tire
v- 'm a
Initiation Ceremonies and Banquet
Are Held Tuesday; Faculty
Member Give Talk
Seventeen Business Administra
tion students were initiated into the
Commercial club Tuesday evening in
the club rooms. Those taking the
oath of the organization were: Leon
Frankel, Bert Weber, Reinhold Hof
ferber, Walter Lundy, Irvin Grun
wald, R. H. Miller, Harold Morgan,
Kenneth Sandrock, Claude Pilger,
Merrill Johnsen, Vincent Eggston,
Walter Lehmkuhl, Willard Urbon,
Harry Pritchard, Fred Olney, Abe
Sadoff, and Morton Richards.
Following the initiation a dinner
was served at the Hotel Nebraskan.
Over forty students and faculty
members attended the dinner and the
Kappa Phi string sextette provided
the music for the evening. m Victor
Brink, instructor in the College of
Business Administration, was toast
master and was the center of the en
tertainment. Professor George M. Darlington,
professor of accounting, was the eve
ning's chief speaker. He was fol
lowed by Dean James LeRossignoL of
the College of Business Administra
tion; Arthur Croft, Douglas Timmer-
man, and Ralph Fell. The speakers
urged the cultivation of dependability
and boosted Biz-Ad Day.
Fossilized Imprint Six Hundred
Million Year Ago I Like
Goodrich Tread
Seattle, Wash., Automobiles 600,
000,000 years before the time of
man?
A visit to the geological labora
tory in Science hall at the Univer
sity of Washington would seem to
prove so, for a plaster cast taken
from an ancient fossil shows a per
fect imprint of a Goodrich Silver-
town cord.
Automobile firms will never get
to use this choice kit of valuable
advertising, however, because the
mark was made by a gigantic worm
ages ago. Professor Weaver of the
geology department explained that
the worm, which" must have been a
bout a foot in diameter, had left his
mark in the soft mud, then it had
been covered with rocks and water
until it had fossilized.
The fossil was discovered in the At
lantic ocean several years ago, and
the University received a plaster cast
off it. Its scientific title it "clinici
clichnites wilson."
High School Girl Athletes Will Havo
Part in K. U. Relays This Week
Lawrence, Kaiv, April 17. For
the first time in the history of the
Kansas Relays, women high school
athletes will take part in a series of
events which, though not actually
connected with the Relay program,
will nevertheless be of that nature
and will bring to Lawrence more
than seventy-five girl athletes from
the leading schools of this section,
including the Kansas City, Mo.
schools.
The attraction is the first Woman's
Play Day, given under the auspices
of the University Women's Athletic
association. Included on the pro
gram are field events, hockey and
volleyball games, and other major
and minor sports. The field events
and games will be run off Saturday,
April 21, the morning of the Kansas
Relays.
Saturday, after the games and
as
shall I do
with
that
B3367
VARSITY
CLEANERS AND LTERS
sv
SUMMER WORK
FOR MEN
$460
00 Guaranteed
for 75 Days
Earn twice this amount without carrying samples.
Not a Residential District selling job. Experience
not necessary, but some selling ability desirable.
Personal interview requird.
See R. P. Stearns room No. 820, Cornhus
ker hotel. Here Wednesday April 18th be
tween 10 a. m. and 5 p. m. ONLY. Men un
der 19 or of Semitic extraction need not
apply.
THE IDYL HOUR
Noonday Specials
and Evening Dinners
TOSTWICH SPECIAL I5e
Ham Toetwich
Wmldorf alad
Coffee. Milk: Tea.
SANDWICH FPEC1AL 40c
Three Deck Rot at Pork and
Peanat Butter Sandwich.
Malted Milk.
Cold Roast Pork with Potato Salad and Eoll , .. 45c
Cold Bam with Potato Salad and Koll 40c
Cold Liver 6auaK?e with Potato Salad and Rolls 40c
Cold Summer Sauaage with Potato Salad and Rolla 40c
ENTREE
THE FOLLOWING ORDERS INCLUDE llaished Potatoes,
Butter and Bread or Parkeihouae Bulla.
Roaat Lee of Veal, Creamed Carrota and Peai
Baked Individual Chicken Pot Pie I
Chicken Fried Hamburger Steak
Baked Meat Loaf with Cream Gravy .
Minced Ham and Scrambled Eeci-.
40c
1 5c
20e
80e
5c
Hot Roaat Veal Sandwich Potatoes Gravy Coffee
Hot Meat Loaf Sandwich Potato! Gravy Coffee-
ZSc
26c
Different Menus Every Day
Also a complete line of steaks, salads, relishes, fruits
and vegetables and Fountain Delicacies
Reasonably Priced
Students Eating Place
This is only a small part of our complete menu
field events have been completed, the
visitors will be given a luncheon in
the University cafeteria and the
group will then attend the Kansas
Relays in a body.
Bert Barber It Campus Viiitor
Bert Barber '12, now advertising
manager of the Montgomery-Ward
branch headquarters at Fort Worth,
Texas, visited some old friends and
professors on the campus Tuesday.
He was on leave from Kansas City
where he had been sent on an investigation.
Today at Rectors
WEDNESDAY, APRIL 18
Boiled Ham Toatatta
Fruit Sherbet
Any 5c Drink
25c
mwt r
z Chosen by Collegiates-
r
Spring Footwear
"VERNA" is the low-cut,
trim D'Orsay pump which
you have been seeing so
often lately. Round toe,
high-fitting arch, extra
long counter to hold heel
snugly. t
Black patent, 8.50 pair.
Blue, red or white kid, 10.00 pair.
"MISS MELBA' a "Snap
py Tie" from Stetson,
leaves nothing to be de
sired for general wear and
campus use.
Black kid or patent, 12.00 pair.
Brown kid, 13.00 pair.
"BIJOU" is an unusually
smart slipper for after
noon and informal even
ing wear. Suede and kid
combinations, with kid
dravn artistically across
vamp.
Rose beige combination, 11.00 pair.
Two-tone grey combination, 11.00 pair.
Shoes Second Floor.
TBJJMP
A New ARROW SHIRT
of Genuine Broadcloth
with an Arrow Collar attached
$195'
An outstanding value
offered by the world's
largest manufacturer
of shirts.
A
Ask for ykTRUM P at your dealer's
CLTJETT, rEABODT 4c CO., IV'C. j!
ARROW COLLARS CfKDlVAK ilAKCaXitCSilZTC