t .- .,-. --, Vi j. v .7c;nsp3?jr -rzr Gfoe Dailf tfUbtaeftan . &:" . 'A. La THE REIGN OF THE BOARDING HOUSE On the student's first arrival at the tfnlvorslty of Nebraska bo Is Im pressed with the peculiar and largo varlet of ways in which the two thousand students located here obtain their food. Since the question of satis fying the "Inner 'man" Js of prime im portance to all, and especially to thp student who must practice economy who has to eat where he can and what ho finds edible the Nebraskan pre sents an article on where, what and how the student oats, arid what he pays, together lth a brief .comparison of conditions at Nebraska with those of eastern institutions. Student Board at All Kind of Vlacea. The student boards almost any and everywhere. Nearly every place in tended tor his accommodation has & representation of students. Thero are the chop-houses for those who find it inconvenient to get around for meals before 8 o'clock in the morning, and for thoBo who Have to tako their meals irregularly. Other advantages in this kind of board ftre that the meals can be so 'gauged as to suit the pocket book, and -the blllrof-fare to suit the appetite. The fraternities have their homes, where the members have a voice in the make-up of the bill-of-fare, for board ing is conducted among thoso organiza tions oh the club plan of eastern col-, leges. Then there 1b a class which does n6t eat meat, and so boards down at the Hygienic, where foods of a light character can be secured. A large number have no regular place to board, while a few may be found who .prefer to cook their own food and enjoy the comforts connected with a bachelors or old maldlB hall. But the large majority of students board with private families, or at private' boarding houses -or clubs.where thoy find more of the conveniences of home, and have the opportunity of making a small circle of acquaintances. The board of course is made to accom modate every clasB of students and so varies in price among the different houses accordingly. They Kat Anything: and Everything. Students eat anything and every thing edible they can get They are alwayB hungry; they are even greedy. They are never satisfied. One may see them get away with soup, meat, tur nips, potatoes (sweet and IrlBh), beans, pudding and pie, and then fall to refuse a box of bon-bons. Never offer a stu- Pen Doctor I Van vca rnnnlr nnnR nnv make. f Does vour oen blot, flow too free ly, or not freely enough; is the f point uneven, or does it scratch, I or is tnero ony-oiner uuiueui w which pens are heir? Bring it In. Very likely it is only a mat ter of adjustment or some sim ple defest and wo can remedy same here. If not, we can have work, done elsewhere by experts. Prices reasonable. At Cbe CoOp dent anything to eat If you care for It yourself. That is one occasion when tho "Gaston" net won't work. But the question of what students eat may usually bo reduced to a matter of purse. Thero may be somo students who are able to frequent tho cafe a la modo and Indulge in something more than the "staff of life." But you may be sure, even then, thoy get their money's worth. Nobody can get moro out of a dollar than a university stu dent. Then there mny bo others, sad to relate, who, in counting the poor littlo pennies, need to patronlzo the little corner bakery, reducing their lunch or breakfast to tissue paper rolls or cookies. It is more often correct, however, to think of thorn as consum ing this frosted pastry at the mid night spread, not as a substitute for a day'B nourishment. The first thing we should expect to occupy the students' consideration would be the hygienic requirements of their diet, but it is safe to say this is the very last idea to enter their heads. Any noon you can see girls lunching on peanuts or slabs of candy, when perhaps the next day will find tho self- Lsame creatures tho victors over a seven course dinner and two pink teas. There was one boarding -house mistress, though, who said that she had made students' board a study for yearB, that she had found that they needed plain wholesome food, plenty of it and not too much of a change. She certainly could not help but feel repaid for her efforts, since many of her student boarders had been with hor for years. All of them were bright, healthy looking specimens, with good appetites. Perhaps thlB is the reason the students arc such romping good follows, always good-natured and capable of self-preservation because they eat so much. In short, tho food that the student eats depends upon where lie boards. If he desires a variety he- merely changes boarding places frequently. Mealn are Taken on the Fly. The way the Btudent eats depends largely on the kind of a boarding house he patronizes. In .Lincoln there are so many kinds of eating houses that It is almost impossible to pick out any one of them and say, "Here yoit can see how the average student eats.1' There are the cafes, restaurants, din ing halls, private boarding houses and the fraternity tables. All of them are as different from each other in their style of serving meals as they are in what they serve. The restaurants and cafeB probably feed tho majority of our male students. This, Is very likely due to the fact that students can eat there at any time and can vary the kind and. price of their meals. Tho student rushes Into a chop-house with a pack of books under his arm, and, without removing overcoat or hat, 'seats him self at a counter, glances at the blll-of-fare and then orders the same old course pork and beans, wheat bread and coffee. While the waiter is filling tho order the student looks over the headlines .in tho daily papers found scattered along on the counters. As soon as his' pork and beans arrives he drops everything and begins to eat as if his very life depended on devouring what was placed before him. At a private boarding house one finds a large number of young lady students and a few gentlemen. They gather shortly before meal time and wait in the front room till the'jneal Is served. Then there is a free tor all race to get tho best place at the tables. Some of the boarding holises assign chairs at tho table for each boarder and thus avoid tho -froo for all; Conversation is usually subordinated to the more im mediately Important task of "doing the meal." Sometimes, however, there is a student who is always trying to start a general conversation by asking others their opinion on somo debatablo ques tion in sociology or political economy, His persistence In arguing soon grows tiresome and is sometimes met by tho cutting sarcasm of a disgusted young lady or tho bold rebuke of a young gen tleman. Tho fraternity table Is moro home like. The students know each other and do not eat In such a hurry. They carry on a conversation at tho tablo Just as thoy would In tholr parlor. Tho reason for this may bo that tho crowd is always tho same and Is not continu ally changing as at tho other places. Tho studont necessarily eats rapidly because he sleeps so late In tho morn ing that he is obliged to take his break fast on the run to his first class; at noon ho may have a long ways to go and only have an hour in which to eat his dinner and get back to tho University again. In the evening ho must hurry back to the library to got the book he has been looking for all week. The Irregularity with which the average student eats Is noticeable, and to be regretted. He takes bis meals at all hours, and skips many altogether, not seeming to realize that Borne day his system will revolt and demand tho price of folly. Prices Vary, bat Vcyr nro High. Students as a class, are economical. Even those who aro well to do seem to prefer modest living. A large number carry economy too far and eat only two meals a day, missing usually their breakfast. A largo number take their breakfast at down town rostaurants, ordering up merely a "stack" of cakes at the phenomlnal price of five cents. Those who keep boarding houses quite strenuously oppose the two-meal plan because those students who insist on taking breakfast at the chop house or none at all demand a two-meal-a-day rate and expect to get threo meals in two. Boarding house women claim that a few such students can almost "eat one out of house and home," but ten say that they oven then get more than their money's worth would be su perfluous. The ten o'clock evening lunch is another Injurious practice In dulged in by a large number of stu dents, and it is a common saying among waiters who hold tho "dog watch" that every student must have his piece of pie and cup of coffee before' ho can go to sleep. Yet, for a student to order a "half fry" or smothered porterhouse is unheard of. Such lux uries cannot bo enjoyed by the ordi nary western student In spite of tho fact that students must practice econ omy, boarding houses and restaurants fall to bring down the price of board to a figure that compares with that of eastern cities. Board ranges from $2.50 per week to $4.00. The average stu dent pays not less than $3.00 for what he eats during the cycle pf a week. (Continued on page 8.) BUSINESS pIRECTOKY. The Nebraak n Advertlaera In thla Hit dcaorve the trade of nil loyal Univer sity people BAKERY Mrs. J. W. Potry. BANKS First National, Columbia Na tional, Farmers and Merchants, Lin coln Safo Deposit and TrUBt Co. BARBER SHOPS Palaco, Shannon's Pioneer, R. and O. BICYCLE8, ATHLETIC GOODS H. E. Sidles Cycle Co., A. G. Spalding & BroB., Chicago; Gldard Cycle Co., H. Wittmann ft Co., Samuol Hall. BOOKS AND STATIONERY Co-Op.. H. M. Brown Drug and Book Co., Harry Porter, Unl. Book Store, Sam uel Hall. BOWLING ALLBY-H. C. Thomn Crescent CIGARS, ETC. M. D. Clay, L L LJnd soy, Stevens & Novllle, F. A. Powell, Wohlenberg. CLOTHING Mageo ft Dcomer, B. L. Paine Clothing Co., Cottrelll ft Leon ard, Alban, N. Y.; Tho Toggery. COAL P. D. Smith Coal Co., C. B. -Gregory, Whltobreost Coal Co. CONFECTIONERY R. W. Maxwell Co., Lincoln" Candy Kitchen. DENTISTS C. E. Brown, Bentz. DRUGGI8T8 Riggs, Rector, Brown, Flegenbaum, Harloy, Steinor, Weom pener, Oliver Theatre Pharmacy. DRY GOODS Mlllor ft- Palno. ELECTRICAL GOOLJ Ross Electric Co. FURNITURE Hardy Furniture Co., Rudge ft Guenzel. GAS Lincoln Gas & Electric Co. GROCERS Farmers Grocery Co., Key stono Cash Grocery. HAIRDRE8SING, ETC. Tho Famous. HARDWARE Rudge ft Guenzel." HOTEL Lindell, Grand Windsor. JEWELERS E. E. Hallett. C. A. Tucker. LAUNDRIES Yulo Bros., Evans. LiyERIES W. O. Forbes. LUMBER Dierks Lumber & Coal' Co. MILLINERY Tho Famous. MUSIC Ross P. Curtice, Matthews Pi ano Co. NOVELTIES Capital Novelty Works. PAINT AND GLASS Westorn Glass & Paint Co. ' PHOTOGRAPHERS Townsend. OCULISTS M. B. Ketchum. ; PHYSICIANS J. R. Haggard, H. B. Aley. ' POOL AND BILLIARDS Powell ft Son. PRINTING Now Century, Ivy Press. RAILROADS Turlington, Union Pa- ciuv, xNorinwesiern. . M RESTAURANTS Merchants' -Cafe, Don Cameron, palace DlnJng Hall, Restaurant Unique, Francis Bros., Hendry. SADDLBRY-H. Wittmann ft Co, SHINES Lincoln Shining Parlor. " SHOES Sanderson, Perkins ft Shel don, Efcctrlc Bhbo Co. SUITORIUM Weber Bros., T.. A: Burt TAILOR 3umsi priland. .. TRANSFEfr-j3ncofn. Locaf Express, Lincoln Transfer ' Co.Globe Delivery. Co. HIGH GRADE EHnC0LATE5 BONBONS Sold only bu Harletj Drug Co.,. 11th 6 ;Sts vl r.'t M v i T .. - '" ss'.'C4G-? '-""?& '. i d M srzjgm 233Mi .v'' -- V ,f . ' f IfXJl vtf-y i .- t ' V ' f-y - -.-: u H ' .... JF w 'rf Lrf'W " H . . V..,' "W.'" v: -.- - ' --A ' ' , "L 1 "1 -''s .. t Ji ti& . , v ,.; KlpQslQ