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About The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current | View Entire Issue (Nov. 13, 1908)
upkJ '. ' " "V l WK ii THE DAILY NEBRASKAN OUVER THEATRE TONIGHT, 8AT. & 8AT. MATINEE Two Merry Tramps Mat. 50c & 25c. Eve. 75 c to 25c TUESDAY NIGHT, NOV. 17 The Man of The Hour Prices $1.50 to 50c. THUR8DAY NIGHT, NOV. 19. The Right of Way r ADVANCED VAUDEVILLE THE FIVE COLUMBIANS In "A Bit of Dresden China." HALLEN AND FULLER In "My Wife's Hero." HAWAIIAN QUINTETTE Vocalists and Instrumentalists. MI88 BE88IE BROWNING Tho Charming Entertainer- (3LAPIU8- AND 8CARLET The Musical Rast and Present. 8EARLE8 AND GEORGE ALONZO COX Matinees TuesThur. and 8at. PrlcB5p.an5c. whmz4 ( " i vnn-t"" t THE HOU8E COZY Night, November 9th . ,(i A'GnUt'&cehlc Production The Power of Truth n', !u', '"' ' :'! '' Will Be Presented by the I i'-jLI STOCK CO. Matmeea Wed. and, ,8at. Prices 15c and 25c. 07 "?!'' ELITE 1829 'O" 'Street. ELITE II i If.jilj'". I m r nti. ,7f. n . ,.,' r . LATE8T AND BEST INHTtfE CITY. The Management extends a cordial Invitation 0 every. University m "Nebraska sdJnt, ADMI8SION 5 CENT8. Change of Program Mon. and Thur. ilL. J. IfeRZOG THE UNlVEBSltY HAM'S TAILOR The finest WorVdoheatTd prices rfght Call at our nevr $to? 1330 o St. L.tnooln mmm Moving Pictures wSSm kfc, s1rc? p6 1) li M ,V AllBv;. mil Campus I Gleanings W C. H. Prey, florist, 1133 O 8t. t "Clilng-n-lxto" will bo at the Cquuty Fair. Eat at Eleventh. John Wright's, 114 South IJo you want to lnugh? See "Chlng- a-Loo." - Ueckman BruB. Fine shoes. 1107 0 street. have you Been "Chlng-n-Loo?" sure and Hoe "IT." lie Have your clothes pressed at Weber'B Sultorium. Cor. 11th and 0. The game with Kansas tomorrow will begin at 2:30 o'clock, "Chlng-a-Loo" What is It? Guobb! Find out at the County Fair No. 21. w c Green's barber shops, The Club house and Cole-McKenon, 1132 O. That's all. 1 11 bet you don't know what "phlng-a-Lpo" 1h. Better come- find pee at the County Fair, Students aro urged to carry mega- .phonos npd get In the. rooting; septlon on tne north bleachers. i Mother's Dlnlijg Hal). Goqd homo cookipg. . Brlcos from onp cent up. 808 Sp. Eleventh SL i t Dr. F. C. French will address, the Divinity club in the Temple this, even ing at. 8 o clock on tho subject, ''Tho Problqm of Christian Theplpgy To day." . 0 ' ProparaJlonB are being piaflp f9r the sUe bar assoclatlRn meetjng tp be hpl in Lincoln Npypmber 3 and 24. LaSy cpjiege Btufjents are urged to at tend these meetings, qspepjally Tuqs lay seBhjns, and tp bear a. paper to be reMl befprc tho asspciatiqn by Dr. IpBcpe Pound, fprmer deap of f.hp NqbraBka cplege of law. jtj- l Mi BLACK before your eyes nrfe psualy of n purely norvouB origin, while the 'cause is found in uncorrected vistihl defecta which proper' glaBsps only will remedy. Pleased to fn)k wtyh you Bljouf. your bjacj? spots, H A L L E T T, Registered Optometrist. m'8 -, ,TTr. TT-! JEANNE P'ARp TO BE QVEN. Professor Howell Wllf Present Well Known Poetic Drama. - -. t -I ProfcsBor Alice Howell, head of tfio elocution department of this institut ion, wl again present Porcy ackay's well Jtnpwn -poetio- dfama, ''Jeanne d'Arc," heforp a university nudienpe next Wednesday ovenlnjj, November 18, 8 p. m., at tho Temple theatef. Miss Howejl interpreted tjB jelectipp last March under the management of the elocution department, but thjs time it will be given under the-uk-pces pj t)w lajllRs of the Holy Trinity church. Jeanne d'Arc is a dramatic poem prpscmtlng. fjio fiyp prpclpal scenes )jt the herpipo'B life in as many aets. It ocglns with the command at the ''Ia dies' Tree In Domromy: "Jeanne d'Arp, t)iy Lord hath chosep tli'ee To save the land of France. The 'Voice of his archangel jcajleth iron; uiu uuiliu: . Vfy.e la'l'f-hpce.r v"Ictorle! Ia Pranpe sahveeV " Daughter of God, go forth!" I And ends with the victory at. the stake: ' " T' "Surely she has some . voice )! Is she Rir so 11?" "Loolc down, St. Micahel; Once again I wear , WI Thine armour; Lord, I dread No mprp tne, fiaroea." . , - "Cornhysker Pictures." All juniors hrjdeillb'lVshpJild qiye their pIpiiroB Jaljqn' ftfc' W "Corp hpsker? rit ppyrpi$S. TPfg slttlpg heforo Thanksgiving will haye thJr photographs finished in time fpj Christmas. Attend to this as. sopn.as mpfo- $BMi -JSSPJff tiffi BLACK PLAGUE COMES HAS OBTAINED FOOTHOLD SAN FRANCI8CO. IN .O ENERGETIC ACTION IS NEEDED Plague Has Played a Large Part in Destroying the Human Race Was a Menace Before the "Dawn of History." At convocation yeuterduy-niornlng Dean Ward of the medical Bchool spoke on tho bubonic plague and gave a brief history of the ravages of this plague In" paBt times. Dean Ward described the .recent nppearance of this plague in America and related what it 1b necessary to do In order that It may be stumped out. His talk is In part as follows: "Today 1 wish to call attention to i number of factB which have been deliberately suppressed from the newspapers. - I shall discuss the plague properly called the bubonic plague, which linn played such a large part in history. It has been preva lent over the whole earth at certain periods of its exibtenco. It aoeinB to come suddenly at rather long inter vals and tins a very large degree of fatality. Japanese Discovers Cause. "It was as late aB 1894 that, a Jap anese discovered the caiiBe of tho bubonic' plague, u Is a form of bac teria which multiplies very rapidly. Epidemics of this plague devastated the human race before the coming of history. "The earliest case of the plague or which anything Is known was report ed by pne of the historians of ancient Egypt and is described as running thrpugh the Nile valloy. The plague of Athens, which occurred about 43ft B. C. 1b recounted by Thucidldes, and may possibly not have been the bu bonic plague, complicated by a num ber of other diseases. "Several great periods can bo dis tinguished In tho history of the plague. The first occurred during Uip reigrt of Marcus Aurellus. The sec ond pecurred during the reign, of .Tub- S P Q T S X. tinlnn. In 542 A. D. the plngue ap peared In Egypt and followed the routes of commerce to other coun tries, arriving at Constantinople in C43. Tho plague reached such propor tions in Constantinople that it was leported that 10,000 periBhed In ono liny. One-hnlf of the population of the entire eastern epiplre perished and nearfy a lorge a part of the populatlon-of the western empire was swppt fron) ljp earth. After haying run ftp out the plague suddenly ds- "In thp fp,irtepn century the d)s pase cnjpe Ip(p J5HrP?e from the ea.t, prpppbly frpm India, apfj was kpown ns the ftlagk Qeajh. pprng ,thp tfmp that It ran It swop); off 25,000,00P pep- pie from the earth. "In the seventeenth century It camo again and parried off a great part of the population of London. From this time until the end of the nineteenth century it was absent from the west ern world. " "he present epidemic began In China In 1892.. In 1894 It was in Hongkong, by 1899 it had spread through Europe,, Egypt, Brazil and Japan. In 1900 it got a foolhold in J3an Francisco and the corruption of, the city' government and, the timidity. o the state, .goyernmppt gavp Jt ,a chance, tp fasten Itself flrmy upon the disease upon the Pacific coaBtlia lleeii k?ep a' secret, but it' has nov fastened Itself ,iher& and still has Uilrty-five years to run before it dls: Apppars, jjpless-in this,, ttapt p ,of exertion iij, Uiis platter, they 'wH) $3.50 AND $4.00 SHOES FOR MEN mmmmmmmTMmmFmmmmmmmmmmmIImWr''K iLLLLLf At these prices a, pair of Men's or Women's, Mayer Bros. Superior Quality, will give you as much service as a" regular $4.50 and $5 Shoe. We guarantee a perfect fit in every case, the lasts, the most stylish on fhe mar ket and the Quality to be Superior. Ask to see the Men's Winter Oxfords, something novel. MAYER BROS. HEAD TO FOOT CLOTHIERS. At The Play Houses w The Five Columbians, In a "Bit of Dresden China" are making n Jilg hit at .the tyajeiiMp (hits wepk., Tlftdr. costumes are pxpeptlonaljy brilliant. Tho Hnwaiiun quartet Ih pJenBlpg tho large number of putronn of the popu lar vaifdeville hpuee. Other good rumbers on (he progrum are Hallon and Fuller In "My ' Wlfp'p Heroj" Miss Bp?se Browning, the charming entortaluer; CladtuK and Scnrjet In "Musical Past nnd Proaont;" SearJOH und Oeorge. and AJonzo Cox. "Honeymoon Trail,'" the successful musical comedy whcft scored for oyer 200 njghts last year at the La, Salle Theater, Chicago, is making hew records on the road, with Harry Stone, the well known comedlanr in' tho featuro jroo. As Ferkna, in that musical play, Mr. Stono is duplicating the succcbb he madp while . playjpg the leading part in tixo newspaper play, "A Stoien Story," under t)fp i-, rection of Henry W, Ravage, and later as comcdlun wltl the "Soul KIbb," with AJIe. Qeneo, under the management of JClaw & Erlangor,. Homer B. Mason, the jolly leading mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmrmmammmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm iOQOQOWQOQOQOQOQOQO&O&OQ&Si 75c Let kan Includes Football Number. SUBSCRIBE N5W s FOR WOMEN V lli'l' j7TT I comedlun of "A Stubborp clndel)!''. cuiuiiuu. it) a gruaiuuo or mo class of 190.1 pr thp iiropktyn Polyiechnic IiiBtltute. Ife Js also a ipombor of N the Aloha Chi Sigma fratprnlfy. In every rbspect Sir. Majion )s today Just as onthusjnstlc rcgnrd'jng college iffo ns' any frcBhnmn. ' Mr. Mufiop lH ,qutp Rn afhletp .apd while at college played uliback on his teapi for j four y.eprs, earning, an enviable reputation "fpr himself, not only In that game, but In field and truck athYotlcs bb wdli. "While ht school Mr. Mason- established an'lii terscholastlc JiammeMiiroW fecord' 5'u Long'lBlahd, tKat'f'Has ndver boefe broken, when ho hurled thov'16-perina hammer 142 tchV ": '- 'rA Mr. MaBon still follows the game of footbal, ygry cjoselynd.grgwB efl: UiuBlajtp yhen njoptlojj $ jjnjr of thp big games Is made. 'It 1b no Jringer jx aupstlpppwelgtft 8pya, Mr Magqp. ,'JIt. ahpjmplB: .and trickiest eleven that goes off the, nowadays' " -- "FootbalJ Ta a )ne gamp; i- thh Jn- thpJr vojns." s a fgHlt 'pnis work on tggrdlrop Mr; asonliaj' cberjBbeB a 8puyepr ji 9mifsd .Jef phpulder, whfph, pypn -ppvf hp s compelled jo keep bandaged most pf 'jijlp 'Ipie, a dislppatjpn Te repelyl when, he was eafnlng laurpls on tbo p 9 o Us Send Ydii y r,, - jtill Feb. for the hi. 11 p- M