The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, December 11, 1918, Image 5

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I II E DAILY NEBRASKAN -
DAILY DIARY RHYMES
By
Gayl Vincent Qrubb
vances regardless of
Rem.
our own dan-
IS IT WORTH THE RISK?
I'm not the man to orate on
The death plague of the Flu:
Them's a thousand things I'd like to
tell.
Yet I'll only name a few;
Hut i aunt tn snv some Plain, eold
facts
That stun and catch the breath,
And ak you right out. man to man.
Why court the hand of death? ,
i I ask you. as I've asked myself.
And the question's fair and square.
To explain why I and likewise you
Are forced in disease's lair,
To flirt with he who swings his pole
Willi a line of a thousand hooks,
For the sake of the musty knowledge
of old
That is (stored away in books?
my
life is worth ten
We are ignorant as to whether the
grrni is a bird, an animal or a microbe.
We must fight blindly persistency
wins bear that in mind.
First Flu Germ "Look at that
swell class room full of helpless, un
suspecting students! ! !"
Second Flu lierm "K-e-e e e yah! !
It'a light on 'em ! ! !"
That haphazard spirit of the little
animal-bird microbe is very, very dan
gerous! PUBLIC GATHERINGS must
be suspended absolutely done away
with until the pest has been complete
ly routed and sent scurrying in humili
ating; retreat!
The very conservative estimate of
350.000 deaths in the United States,
due directly to the current" epidemic,
is sufficient argument in itself on
which to base the closing of all PUB
LIC ASSEMBLING PLACES, includ-l
ing our own university.
Can one death be rated, conscien
tiously, as insufficient reason for a
radical closing order? Indeed, not.
A careless cough might bring havoc
to an entire community it is, highly
possible that it could kill a hundred
persons; it certainly would initiate a
a nation-wide epidemic.
Lot every possible means of encour
agement prompting the spread of dis
ease bp looked Into, and the most se
rious measures conceivable be taken
toward positive suppression.
Place the Jirt on everything and then
hit on it! ! !
Keep your coughs to yourself. Be
Jnrd to retail prices of commodities
hAKMurr to the wage earners nor-
I
nial living. 1
2. How can the mercnnm- -given
community best advance the
material Interest of ta..t community .
3 What part can the average cit
izen take in the readjustment and re
construction that is following the
great war?
A similar scholarship is offered
thruout all the states of the union.
In one of the state's representative
colleges. The scholarship is open to
the following students:
1. To a regularly matriculated stu
dent of cither sex in the senior year,
who has successfully accomplished
the work of the preceding years and
who shall be recommended to the fac
ulty by the professor of economics.
2. A student who is able to speak
convincingly in public.
3. A student who has taken
full
courses containing economics as a ma
jor study.
4. a student who will agree, with
out cost to the c iety, beyond expense-,
to deliver Ave times a lecture
on a subject in allied economics dur
ing his or her senior year or during
the year following his or her senior
year at the election of the society.
The manuscript of the lecture to be
submitted to the society, if desired
by the directors.
6. The subject for the lectures will
be announced by the society at the
beginning of each scholastic year.
Trofessor J. E. Le Rossignol will
have charge of the granting of the
scholarship. He will select some mem
ber of this year's senior class, and
recommend the name of the student to
the society. Everyone who Is inter
ested In the scholarship should speak
to Professor Le Rossignol about the
matter.
INFLUENZA STILL
RAGES ON CAMPUS
(Continued from pa go i)
L. Hlnman yesterday to secure a list
of volunteer nurses. it ,Va-, a.
riounced that few people realize the
seriousness of the situation, m
were not ready tp sauldce their own
efforts in order to improve cond.
tions.
The death rate during the first vis
itation of Spanish influenza one month
ago among members of the university
S. A. T. C. was comparatively itK,(
there being but twenty deaihs out of
a total of 1,400 cases. The present
epidemic eeems much more severe be
cause of the prevalence of'pneumonia
with the influenza, twenty per cent
of the patients in the army hospitals
having contracted both diseases.
Why. friends
times
The wealth of all the globe.
I'd lather have lire and fifteen cents
Than a college prexy's robe.
And you? I reckon, the hide you own
Is worth far more than a song.
What I want right now is a word from
you
To bolster the cause along.
To dose these musty volumes of books
And Rive us duffers 'a chance
To fmht this disease with both hands j disgracefully selfish with them. Don't
tree j shout them in the. next person's un
And tc laugh at circumstance, j protected face.
To ship us out of this death-like pall, I "
r.rrrrrr.Lvr...i educational society to
For e ,Mk too nn.ch ot Iff,. i GIVE Si 00 SCHOLARSHIP
A scholarship fund has been estab
lished at the University of Nebraska
by the National Society for Broader
Educational Scholarship in applied
economics. Professor J. E. Le Rossig-
nol has already received a check for
Spanish Influenza is bad enough to . $100, so the scholarship is assured,
w arrant cur saying we wouldn't even ! The following subjects have been
have wished it on the German army at! sejected for the essay or lecture:
the time of their most menacing ad-1 1. The relation of the wage stan-
NOTHHT P 'TICKLER
By Jeff Machamer
l ' ill Ml
IH.'PaS!W! It! i I -II I' ' IlilHl !
n' '.r; iiiYnl" !H in mm;:' ti! fit Lfi TT I iTH i ni n I f m LLLi U 1 LLLUU 1 1 ILL I LLiLLi LiililLL ( LLL1 1 ( t ::l
life
Mil
: 1 1 1 1
1 1 1 &
:;riivi:iiMi
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',iK i'I I I t
!tk-t, xsv
toil? TOlii;!
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; . ' r -,he cutide b:rt end underdravers hkl'IMil'llir i11.;
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Jil !&
car t work out of trie trov.f-rs, t -.at there are no tu rt tai
to b-Ji.ch in sect, that tie i!r?.wers "i-tay put," t fv UftW.ng of
the romf irt aid ccon'imv cf savir? a r"irmerit. OLUS Uc o.-it cut
c'TeT!S all the way down closed croti'h, c!.se-.l lack. S e i!!i!strr:!ion.
For po!f, tennis and field wear, wc rccor.iir.crid the r;cci::l yt'arhd'
collar OLUS with regular or shor; sleeves, r.xfra s"zcr, for vfir f.ll '-r ;:
men. All shirt falutcs, in smart desis includinf; si ks $1.55 to $10.00.
CLUS one-piece PAJAMAS for lo-npitip-, re--:ing ar.J corr.fortaMe sleep.
Made on the same principle as O.LI ! bli.rt.; coat cut, c!'r.e.1 b" k,
closed crotch. No strings to lighten or ccn-.e loose. $10 to $3.50.
Afck your 3caler for OLUS. Cook'ct on rcqueftt.
phiilipt-Jocel Company, Malrrt, DrptN 11S9 CroaJwsy.N.Y.
i i i ! 1 1 1 i i i I'
i
a
sivA Mwm4 km 1 s$M-
"KKi--;jsJ-x??V;:jmm..i Txr t in-w.
ill ! ' :&.
i
SOLD BY
HAYER BROS. COMPANY
''Quality is Economy"
When You Come
To Armstrong's
You Will Find
THAT we practice the qual
ity we preach.
THAT we put your satis
faction ahead of making a
sale.
THAT we regard a sales
slip as an obligation, not
as a scrap of paper.
THAT we want to sell you
not alone for cash, but for
keeps.
THAT you look just as
good to us, whether you
spend one dollar or a hun
dred. THAT this is a store
where every man fits and
where every man can be
fitted.
AND THAT you can spend
your money here in the
confidence that there is no
inflation in our prices, nor
CON in our business
methods.
m
Silk
The Mens
Christmas Store
L sO, r ..'? T
CSU : ...vi .-:o'f
C,;-a. .--.,-.vXsi;:t. I ::i
i ? Jlh 'S & f
f i A A ' 'y j J
H " $ ' '
BEAUTIFUL SILK
That fully please a man's vanity
50c, 75c, $1, $2
SPECIAL
$1.50 Four-in-Hands, big open
ends; slip easv 13 "fl G
bands P JIb
Men's Thread Silk
Hosiery
Reinforced foot, high spliced heel
colors Black, Navy. Grey,
Palm Beach and Russian Calf
Armstrong Clothing Co.
Nebraska's Largest Exclusive Men's and Boys' Store
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