The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, September 17, 1914, Image 3

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    T H E . DA I L Y N 1! B R A S K A N
A new course of. study in cohnec
lion with geographynd history is to
be taught in the , 'New York publio
schools during the, period or the jkju
Tnnoin war.
uyv"" '
1
0
University Jwler and
Optician
C. A. TUCKER
JEWELER
S. S. SHEAH
OPTICIAN
1123 O St. Yellow Frcat
Year PatrMg 3kdte4
Fall Styles Are
Now Ready
2
OMAHA
HAT FACTORY
YELLOWSTONE PARK.
An Ideal Place for a Student's
Vacation.
The .wonders of Yellowstone as
described by Nebraska students who
were working In the park the past
summer are, to say the least, very in
teresting. But their expression of the
beauties of the park are quite-different
from the detailed accounts one finds
in railroad folders, periodicals and the
like. The beauties as described by
these young men were the members
of the fair sex who like themselves,
were attempting to spend a pleasant
summer and also earn enough money
to purchase a few meal tickets upon
their return to school.
IPeasant work in a pleasant place
is how these students describe the
natural wonders and then the're off
again upon a tale of some midnight
picnic held on the banks of the Yel
lowstone river or of a particular pleas
ant evening of dancing, or a hike to
some exceptionally beautiful spot. The
memories of the pleasant times and
acquaintances made are uppermost in
the minds of the park employee and
little wonder is it for the employees
are largely college people all out for
the same purpose, namely, a good
time and a little cash.
Notice i
Our prices and val
ues. Compare them with
other stores if you
will-
we know that our
values will compel
you to purchase here
by merit alone.
Give us an opportun
ity to back this up.
KLINE'S
1132 O St.
Open Evenings
DISARMAMENT.
Christ once more,
Speaks, in the pauses of the cannon's
roar,
O'er Helds of corn by fiery sickles
reaped
And left dry ashes; over trenches
heaped
With nameless dead; o'er cities starv
ing slow
Under a rain of fire; through wards of
woe
Down which a groaning diapason runs
From tortured brothers, husbands,
lovers, sons
Of desolate women in their Jar-oft
homes, -
Waiting to hear the step that never
comes!
O, men and brothers! let that voice-
be heard,
War falls, try peace; put up the use
less sTVord I
Fear not the end. " There is a story
told
Tn eastern tents, when autumn nights
grow cold, '
And 'round the fire the Mongol shep
herds sit
With grave responses listening unto it;
Once, on the errands of his mercy bent,
Buddha, the holy and benevolent,.
Met a monster, huge and -fierce of look,
Whose awful voice the hills and forests
shook,
''O, son of peace!" the giant cried,
"thy fate
Is sealed at last, and love shall turn
to bate."
The unarmed Buddha looking' with no
trace
Of fear or anger, In the monster's
face.
In pity said: "Poor friend, even thee
I love."
To! as he spake the sky-tall 'terror
sank
To hand-breadth size; the huge abhor
rence shrank
Into the form and fashion of a dove;
And where the thunder of its rage was
heard.
Circling above him sweetly sang the
bird;
"Hate hath ho harm for love," so ran
the song;
"And peace anweaponed conquers
every wrong." "
John Greealeaf Wfclttier.
Chancellor Avery of the University
of Nebraska has teen selected by
PreeideHt Wjlsoa as one of the .dele
gates to the pun-American cosgrew
to meet at Saaf Jago, Chile, on Nova
her 29, and kui telegraphed Secretary
Bryan his acceptance.
States' Rights to the Air.
Just as In publio lav the English
view supports the sovereignty of the
state over the whole tdr spac and
treats the, right of passage of airships
as a favor, so in privAte law it is
likely to maintain the dominion of
the landowner over the superjacent
air and to regard the passage of air
craft as a privilege. The courts, in
deed; have hot yet been called upon
to express a considered judgment on
the question, nor la it likely that the
owners of land will press strictly their
rights of exclusive enjoyment against
pioneers of air travel who happen
to fly over their property.
But in England it is t be expect
ed that a private aerial law will be
developed, not by the laying down
of new and somewhat dangerous prin
ciples, but by the application of the
rules of the comomn law' ir the new
conditions. The law of nuisance and
the law of trespass are at present suf
ficient to protect owners of property;
the public interest in dying is ade
quate to secure fair slay for the
aviators. Law JournaL
Trade of Bottle Carter.
One of London's queer trades. Is that
of empty bottle sorting at the London
bottle exchange off Blackfrairs road.
These bottles have been salvaged from
dustbins, cellars, the holds of ships
and wherever bottles go astray.
Every year at least 2,000,000 bottles,
after many wanderings, find their way
to the bottle exchange. They are sort
ed and returned to their rightful own
ers, who pay an annual subscription
as well as a few shillings a gross for
returned bottles.
Readed on the bottle, as it were, a
sorter at the exchange must be a man
of keen eye and delicate touch. All
that he has to guide him in thousands
of oases Is the embossed name on the
glass, and swiftly, unerringly and with
almost uncanny deftness he picks ont
a bottle which has wandered from
Glasgow and puts it In tao case bound
for the North.
MARLEY
ARROW
COLLAR
OUETT PAB ODY6- CQ.THOYMY
ill
iiillllllililii!
Turn Your Shirt Tails
Into Drawers
What Good Is a Shirt Tail Anyway?
IN OLUS the outside shirt and underdrawers arc
one garment. This means that the shirt can't
work out of the trousers, that there are no
shirt tails to bunch in seat, that the drawers "stay
put", to say nothing of the comfort and economy
of savin? a garment. OLUS is coat cut.
opens all the way down closed crotch,
closed back. See illustration.
For golf, tennis and field wear, we recom
mend the special attached collar OLUS
with regular or short sleeves. Special sizes
tor very talt.or stout men. All shirt
fabrics, in smart designs, including
silks $1.50 to $10.00.
OLUS one-piece PAJAMAS for lounging,
retting and comfortable sleep. Made on the
some" principle s OLUS Shirts coat cut.
closed back, closed crotch. No string! to tighten
or come loote. $1.50 to $3.50.
Ask your dealer for OLUS.
Booklet on Request
PHILLIPS-JONES COMPANY, Makers
Dept. JV
1199 Broadway, New York
WIIHil
Evening Slippers
at BRYNES' 1307 O
Thursday Friday Saturday
$4.00-grade 3.25 $3.50 grade 2.75
We desire to clean up Early Fall Stock, as the "MAXIXE TANGO"
and "LOUIS XV" heeled evening slippers are due in stock next week.
HOSIERY SPECIALS
4 ftfn 5i-50 Sllk Hose values for
SloDU Gotham's Gold Stripe Quality.
Other makes at 50c, and 25c the pair.
$1.00
. ?? ,
r '
DEPARTMENT STORES
The place to get what you
want, when you want it, at
the price you want to pay.
Fall stocks are very complete
now.