THE DAILY NEBRASKAN Company C Mascot is Unique Addition to S. A. T. C. Family ,0ood corning. Mr. Zip. Zip. Zip. 7 your hair cut Just a abort m Mine!" Mr "Zip" i"ay be found ,n the S" . T" c barracks at all hours of the L ' Contrary to most Important .rmy personage, he H very easily in Llewed. The party In question. Is Lt a sergeant major, a lieutenant or tn .djutant. but. Quite to the con. trry. i nought but a very handsome ,nd well behaved member of the Cnlne Bpccies-a large, husky bull L the official mascot of "C" Com p,Dy.S. A. T. C. Section "A." By vlM0 of the enu,ne Pn dl8" played by this distinguished mascot, ha has been christened "Zip." He Is a -regular gentleman," too. or at least tht is the concensus of opinion among the Company C boys. Ordinarily, Zip Is an amiable gen tleman, but like most bulldogs Is very easily aroused at the slighter provo cation. Trouble is brewing at the present time between the Company IT mascot and (his bnve and war like gladiator. Incidentally. members of Company C are contemplating Issuing a challenge for a battle to be staged with the Company n mascot in the near future. , Zip Is also a favorite at the mess hall, and after each mess formation, Is fed by the corps of cooks at the Tem ple. So proud are the owners of this mascot, that a collection has been taken for the purpose of purchasing a collar with the company designation upon It. A Military Laboratory is Open To Search for a New Formula Among all the laboratories of the University of Nebraska that are lock ed against the storm of the influenza, one is still open thj greatest "lab" of them all. It Is the laboratory for studying military science. It is open from the first moment the morning bugle breaks on the dawn until the last note of "taps" dies out in the quiet night. Many are the students in this great experiment station, each one seeking the formula that will prepare him for France with the quickest amount of speed. While they work at this most complexing problem of trying to gath er together the necessary material with which to make out of themselves officers of the American army, they are at the same time unconsciously dis playing human characteristics, human nature, Americanism. A visitor in this huge laboratory would notice first of all a sportsman like spirit among the experimentors. When one man has no towel, his com rade Bhares one with him; when straw for bed-ticks runs low each man goes fifty-fifty; in. fact the motto of "do to the other fellow as you would be done by" Is getting to be the spirit Ball While they last we are giv ing away absolutely FREE the official D. & M. Football and Basketball Rules for 1918-19. . Ask the Hardware Department 4 uenzel Gj of the camp. A stranger in this mil itary school would also notice thor oughness, the essence of success In any laboratory. When a job Is assign ed to a private he does not rush through it -in any fashion Just to get It done; he sees it through to the end, executing every detail of his task. Mixed with it all is humor of the rihest kind. Always some one is see ing the funny side of the experiment and expressing it to some willing listener. But keen, fair competition is the thing that most impresses itself on the observer. When army and navy men are both put in the same laboratory, each one in view of the other, both full of pride of his own branch, there could not help but pre vail a strong tendency to beat the other. But it is the best kind of com petition minus malice. Every specialist that has lectured to the students in this interesting lab oratory, helping them all to find the longed-for formula that makes a man a better man, an officer, holds out the hope that every man who really works on this great military experi ment, will have a chance to put the result of his work which is himself Into actual use over on the fields of France or in the streets of Berlin. When the formula is found, and when it completes its work, the old world which is only a big laboratory full of co-workers after all, will be a better, a safer, a more happy place to live in. REV. N. R. MILES WRITES OF YISIT WITH J. F. LAHGER The indomitable spirit of Ameri can soldiers who have been wounded on the battle fields of France is fur ther emphasized by the following let ter from Rev. N. R. Miles, 00. to the alumni headquarters. Reverend Miles recently visited Captain Jerome F. Langer, '01, a prominent graduate of the engineering college in a London hospital. Captain Langer, covered with seventeen wounds of a serious nature and suffering from shell shock, was anxious to return to active ser vice at the front. Tho letter follows: Ramsey Hauts, England, September 28, 1918. To the Editor of the University Journ al. Dear Sir: As an item of interest the following may be worth -while. Rev. N. R. Miles recently visited Captain Jerome Langer and found hira in a hospital in London where he had been ten weeks nvar(n? from the effects of wounas and shell shock received in the first battles of the July drive The shell burst and gave him seventeen wounas, ,aciTir a sliKht fracture of the skull that has partially affected his hearing and one has injured his knee joint so that his leg is temporarily Btiff. He is anxious to get back to the front again but perhaps he will not be given permission. At his bed side was a beautiful bouquet of roses, the gift of Mr. and Mrs. Whitelaw Reed, and on being carried from the boat his stretcher, with others was strewn with roses. REV. N. R. MILES. FORREST ESTES, EX-20 WRITES ON ARMY LIFE (Continued from page 1) rain outside. The ram, I didn't no tice, because this so-called dry state of Colorado, where it is supposed to be a veritable desert, has Just such things from every afternoon to once In three or four days, f peaking of rain - for the first month that I was here, Inst summer, we missed about two days without our sundown-shower that interferred with the evening baseball game over cast of the Y hut. It's a pretty nice place out here at Fort Logan, particularly because Den ver Is not very far away, unless one tries to walk it, and the authorities have been pretty good about giving us passes. It seems as though the Den ver folks cannot do enough for us, the way they are always hunting up something new and exciting. Since I enme here, early in July, there have been several times, when three or four hundred automobiles would come out and load up with fellows and then go for a big hike over into the moun tains and have an all-day picnic. Those events occur on Sundays, and it beats laying around the fort about forty miles. One Sunday when there was a trip of that sort, my folks were out here, and we had gone over to Golden and up Lookout Mountain. There was quite a stream of cars that passed us, coming In, and apparently the men from the fort had been taken clear over the mountain park road, and were being brought In by way of Denver. I have been quite fortunate, myself in meeting some nice Denver people, too. The war camp community ser vice in Denver has organized what Is called the "Soldiers' and Sailors' Club," and we can go there and al ways find friends. For quite a while the rooms have been located over on Curtis, street, and every Saturday night a dance is given, at which dif ferent organizations in Denver take turns in showing us a good time. Just this last week the club changed its quarters to the rooms of the Denver Woman's club. I haven't had oppor tunity to go there yet, and I'm afraid none of us will, for a while. Just to night an order was Issued, that has quarantined the post, and we can't go away well, I don't know how long it will be, but it seems quite certain that the order will hold good until the dan ger of Spanish Influenza has become at least materially less; it came after a number of cases had broken out downin Denver, and while lt isn't particularly popular, it is understood and every body seems to be taking it in the right spirit. Well, we'll save C. H. FREY Florist 1133 O St. Phones B 6741-6742 Home cf the "Homestyle" fttn ILLER'S SRESCRIPTION U HARMACY N. S. CAFE 139 South Eleventh BEST PLACE TO EAT ORPHEUM CAFE 1418 O Special Attention to University Students B-1392 B"3708 LOEB'S ORCHESTRA MUSIC FOR ALL OCCASIONS ORCHESTRA FROM FIVE TO TWENTY-FIVE PIECES ,azz Band or Boiler Shop Effects on Request Only On 11th at P Street SARATOGA RECREATION FLOORS CHAS. N. MOON part of our pay now for the great day when quarantine is lifted. Today the Liberty Loan was pre sented to the men, and It seems to be quite a popular thing. I dov.'t know how much was subscribed, but quite a percentage of the fellows took out bonds here, and some more I know personally are going to take them out, through their home banks. This is surely a fine place, Leonard, for a vacation, but it's no place to go to war. 'I think the hardest luck that can be wished onto a fellow, Is to put him on here, permanent, for that means that France in about 15,000 miles away, and he's got to walk lt, If . he's going to get there. This idea of limited service men is certainly great for now things look more hope ful than they did. It's getting rater late and I'll have to be hitting for my downy cot but I surely was glad to all you fellows the other day and here's hoping It won't be too long before I can get back on tho Job at N. U. Bgaln They've changed my address since I saw you. I'm In the medical depart ment now. Sincerely, FORREST. Forrest Estes. Medical Department, Fort Logan, Coloralo. NEBRASKA WILL HAVE WHEAT FOR SOLDIERS Lincoln, Neb.. Oct. 22. Never did western Nebraska wheat look better for this time of the year, according to R. K. Holladn, state county agent leader, who has Just returned from a tour of Keith. Deuel, Cheyenne and Kimball counties. This section has hnd plenty of moisture to give the wheat an excellent start and prob ably enough to put it through the win ter In good shape. With a reason able amount of rain next spring an other large crop will be assured west ern Nebraska. No matter what you say SAY IT WITH FLOWERS" CHAPIN BROS., 127 S. 13th B2234 5. A. T. C. See Us When you write home use our University Stationery We have things you need University Book Store 340 N. 11th Street ORPHEUM DRUG STORE OPEN TILL MIDNIGHT A Good Place for Soda Fountain Refreshments after the Theatre and after the Rosewijde Dance CARSON H1LDRETH, '95 and '96 The Elgin Military Wrist Watches for gentlemen are the finest practical timepiece in the world. Whether today or fifty years njro, the Ekin owner is typically the leading citizen, the man of affairs, the man who is putting the thing across in the war, industry, business, commerce, finance or the professions. Elgin Military watches in nickel, . silver, gold filled and solid gold cases. Your inspection solicited. TUCKER-SHEAN Jewelers, Diamond Merchants and Opticians ' Eleven and Twenty-three O Street J