The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, September 28, 1915, Image 3

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    GLiUER THEATRE
Every Night 8:15. Mat. Wed.
and Sat 2:30
BARROW-HOWARD PLAYERS
Week of Sept 27 to Oct. 2
"THE STRANGER"
Next Week "JERRY"
i Nights, 50c, 35c & 25c
Mat 25c A 15c
mmm
VIOLA ALLEN
In "The White Sister"
In Six Acts
By F. Marion Crawford
Every Man, Woman and
Child will be Thrilled
by Its Action.
MOZARTS
In "Snowed In"
GORDON & RICA
A Cycling Surprise
"Neal of the Navy"
That Butterfly's Lesson
"Hearst-Selig News"
Loeb's Orchestra
Phone B 3708 325 So. 17th
GEORGE BROS.
PRINTING
1313 N Street
The Dutch Mill
AT THE WINDSOR
Special 25c dlnneroJfC
for students, one
block from campus. iV
V
M RS. E. J. BEAM AN -
! Manager ' . . fTiS V
GOOD MUSIC
234 No. 11th St Lincoln, Nebr.
Ihccln Candy Kitchen
The Unl. Home of
Light Lunches.
Soft Drinks
Fresh Home Made Candies
You get service, quality and
quantity.
Come and see us Cor. 14 & O
LCSmith&Bro.
Typevmter Co.
BALL BEAEINCJ
, LONG WEARING
Hew, Rebuilt and Eentals
125 No. 13th St.
Efrrn
WHITUAM.S CLASSY CAXDT
r.lCJER DRUG CO.
13lh end O STREETS
I J
mm
GAY COLORS BANNED
UNIFORMS OP SOLDIERS ARE NO
LONGER CONSPICUOUS.
Elaborate .Costumes That Were Worn
by Combatants of the Last Two
Centuries Are No Longer Seen
on the Battlefield.
The soldier's dress has been simpli
fied to bare necessities. It was other
wise in the old times. The military
1 regulations of the eighteenth and the
greater part of the nineteenth centu
ries furnish one long record of altera
tions of costume, of solemn injunc
tions as to laces, loops, frogs, buttons,
facings, epaulets, "wings," and what
not
The dressing of the soldier's hair
was a special object of concern. Un
til the end of the eighteenth century
the hair was an elaborate arrange
ment of grease and powder. Three
shillings per man was the allowance
in 1794 for these two toilet adjuncts,
and the cost to the country four shil
lings four pence for pipe-clay and
whiting with which to furbleh up his
white breeches and leather appur
tenances. ' To make up for this out
lay he was expected to make shift
with the renewal of only half of his
waistcoat the fore part the hind
part having to be made out of that
of the preceding year I So ran the
regulations of 1783.
In 1795 powder was discontinued by
the non-coms and the rank and file,
but it was still the regulation - for
officers. When the Twenty-ninth now
the Worcestershire one of the trim
mest regiments in the army, was sta
tioned at Weymouth In 1797 an order
was issued directing that the hair was
to be dressed "with one curl on each
side; 'the toupee turned and not too
long; the club to be tied high and to
be more broad at the top than at the
bottom; the rosette to be all ribband
and not more than eight Inches in -diameter,
the ribband and rosette to be
perfectly black and put on after pow
dering." The Grenadiers and light infantry
officers were to have their hair dressed
'the same as the men, excepting their
side locks, which may come down so
as to cover the open part of the ear,
but never lower, and must be frizzed
so as not to blow about" Queues were
worn until 1808.
The soldier's hat has been the sub
ject of continual 'experiment and
change, from the picturesque bat of
1686, with its broad brim turned up
on one side and ornamented with
white ribbon, to the mean looking
Broderick cap. In 1751 the three
cornered cocked hat was in favor;
then came the imposing miter cap,
converting the wearer into a sort
of miniature pope; and this was fol
lowed by a bearskin of a similar
shape. In 1778 light infantry wore
leather caps almost as small as skull
caps, with a large round peak. The
officer's hat of 1798 was a most elabo
rate and expensive affair, ornamented
with the finest black ostrich feathers,
with a standup feather of red and
black.
The shako, the most hideous hat
ever contrived, commenced its long
reign in 1800, when it supplanted the
cocked hat Originally it was of
lacquered felt, with a peak, a large
brass p'ate In front and a red and
black tuft on the crown rising from a
small black cockade; and after many
variations it disappeared In 1878,
when the cork helmet became he
regulation bat, in Its turn to be -superseded
by the khaki cap. which, all
things considered, is about the best
headgear yet devised. LoLdon Globe.
Must Return Fallen Fruit.
if thm fruit from a person's tree
falls on to bis neighbor's land the
neighbor is not entitled to keep it, ac
cording to English law. He must
give it up on the owner demanding it
Haw Double Windows Save Coal.
Experiments show that when fitted
with double windows an equable tem
perature, of 70 degrees can be main
tained with the same amount of coal
formerly required to maintain a tem
perature of 60 degrees. It id estimated
that the cost of fitting the lower story
of a house with double windows can
be paid for In five inters by the sav
Id in coal.
THE. DAILY NEBE ASEAN
UNIVERSITY NOTICES
Ushers Wanted
The University can use a number of
ushers for the football games to be
held in Lincoln this season. All those
wishing to serve will sign the list in
the Daily Nebraskan office. The full
uniform of the University Cadets must
be worn for the occasion. For other
information, see, A. J. Covert.
A series of teas will be given for
the members of the faculty by the
Gamma Phi Beta sorority on Sun
day afternons, from 5 to 8 o'clock.
The first of these was given last
Sunday afternoon when Prof. Paul
Grumman gave a short talk on Art
Will the girl who took five dollars
from the dressing room in the gym
nasium return it to Nebraskan office?
109-10-12
The Union society will hold its
weekly meeting in Union Hall on the
third floor of the Temple on Sat
urday night, of this week Instead of
Friday.
Notice
Silver Serpent meeting tonight at
7:15 in Y. W. C. A. rooms. Important
business. Be prompt
Tryouts for Yell Leaders
All men wishing to try out for yell
leader, leave their names with U. S.
Harkson, Alumni Office, any day be
tween 10 and 11 o'clock. Tryouts Sat
urday. Printing that's better, at Boyd's, 125
North 12th.
PERSONAL
Cordelia Condra, '15, is back in
school.
Dale Lapp of Nelson is visiting Vin
da Hudson.
George Riley broke his arm yesvsr
day while cranking his Ford.
Julia C. Schulte, '15, is teaching
German in the Sidney high school.
Ray Crancer, Phi Gamma Delta, is
recovering from an operation for ap
pendicitis.
Phi Kappa Psi entertained at a
dancing party at the Lincoln hotel
Saturday evening.
Gerald Beck, '16, left this morning
for Gibbon to visit his parents. He
will return tomorrow.
Lynn S. Fossler, of Seattle, a for
mer student at the University, is
visiting his parents, Prof and Mrs
Laurance Fossler.
Alfred Munger, '11, of Omaha, a for
mer studnet and member of Delta
Upsilon, is visiting his parents, Judge
and Mrs. T. C. Munger. "
Donald Marcellus, '16, a member of
the Alpha Tau Omega fraternity and
prominent in dramatics year before
last, is back in school. -
Richard Koupal, '16, a member of
Sigma Phi Epsilon, arrived yesterday
from Lander, Wyo., where be is sec
retary of the commercial club.
Earle Taylor, '12, who has been
teaching in the high school at O'Neil,
is now head of the Agricultural de
partment of the York high school.
Phi Gamma . Delta gave a dancing
party of about fifty couples at the
Lindell Saturday night Prof. Lees,
Miss Jessie Beghtol. Mr. and Mrs.
Leonard Hurtz and Mr. and Mrs. Ches
ter Dudley chaperoned.
Mrs. George Fritz, nee Miss Lenore
Mulheis, '15, passed through Lincoln
yesterday and called on some of her
old friends In the German depart
ment Mr. and Mrs. Fritz are at pres
ent living at Wymore, Nebr.
Dr. Fred M. Fling, head of the de
partment of European History, spent
the summer at Nashville, Tenn., where
he introduced his famous source meth
od in the Vanderbilt institute. Dr.
Fling is in great demand as a teacher
of source history.
The Acacia fraternity gave a danc
ing party at Rosewilde Saturday eve
ning, at which about thirty-five
couples were present The pr rty was
chaperoned by Prof, and Mrs. E. H.
Barbour. Among the out-of-twon
guests were John and Joseph El
well of Springfield and Joseph and
Theodore Fillip! of Clarkson.
Mr. and Mrs. J. Frank Barr have
announced the engagement of their
daughter, Louise, to Lewis Robbins
Anderson, of Genoa. The marriage
will take place October 13. Miss Barr
was a member of Kappa Alpha Theta
and was graduated '12, and Mr. An
derson was a member of Phi Delta
Theta and was graduated in '12.
LHUSKER PROSPECTS
KEEP PERKINK UP
(Continued from page 1)
eral rival schools. There have been
diverse drawbacks which have kept
a goodly number of promising per
formers from registering, but the
coach is firm in his belief that in the
vmajority of instances these are not
sufficient barriers to keep future lumi
naries from getting into the game
and paving the way to a Varsity posi
tion. NEW LIBRARY BOOKS
j Large Number Added During the
Summer A -Weekly List Will
be Published
The University Library has received
during the last three months many
new books on varied subjects which
are published below. A new list will
appear in the Daily Nebraskan each
wek to keep the University public ad
vised of the last word in modern liter
ature and fiction.
The following is the list:
American Electric Railway Engineer
ing Association. Engineering manual.
Aristoteles. Aristotelis metaphysica
recognoirt.
Aristoteles. Aristotelis metaphysik.
Aristoteles. Aristotelis opera omnia
Graece et Latine.
Arizona corporation commission. Re
port, v. 1.
Bang, H. Haablse slaegter.
Bang, H. Ravnene.
Bang, H, Sommerglaeder,
-Benzinger, I. Hebrauche archaol-
ogie.
Bergen, Mrs. F. D. Current supersti
tions.
Bohme, F. M. Deutsches kinderlied
und kinderspiel.
Book, F. Romanens och prosaber-
attelsens historia i Sverge intill 1809.
Book, F. Stridsman och sangare.
Book, F. Studier och straftag i dik-
ten och historien.
Boyhood and lawlessness.
Charmatz, R. Geschichte der aus"
wartogen politik Oslerreichs im 19,
jahrhundert.
Collected diplomatic documents re
lating to the outbreak of the European
war.
Consumer's League of the City of
New York. Report. i
PONT MAKE A MISTAKE
Enroll In the BIG "O" STREET SCHOOL
Always popular with UnL Students, a great many of whom have
already enrolled for part time work with us. The cost is small in
struction and equipment the best.
Day and Night Classes. Corner O and 14 St, LINCOLN
Lincoln School of Business
Cornell. Union of Junior classes.
Cornellian.
Co'rnill, C. II. Rise of the people of
Israel.
Dejerine, J. J. (eTh) psychoneu
roses and their treatment by psycho
therapy. Dostoevsku, . F. M. Letters to his
family.
Exner, K. Uber die scintillation.
France, A. On life and letters.
Francke, K. Deutsche and Ameri
kanische ideale.
Gallichan, W. M. Women under
polygamy.
Geographical Society of Phil. Bull,
v. 6-8.
Gillin, J. L. (The) Dunkers.
Governors' Conference. Proceed
ings, 1913.
Hamsun, K. LIvets spil.
Harper's Weekly, v. 1-46.
Hauck, G. Vorlesungen uber dar
stellande geometrie.
Healy, W. (The) Individual delin
quent Herben, J. Maravske obrizky.
Holmes, E. G. A tragedy of educa
tion. Hoops, J. Reallexikon der german
ischen alter tumskunde.
Hopt, E. and Spafford, R. R. Labora
tory exercises in principles of agricul
ture. Iowa Agricultural College Experi
ment Station. Research bulletin 1-12.
Pastrow, J. Aspects of modern psy
chology. Kelso, A. P. Matthey Arnold on con
tinental life and literature.
GraYesPrintingCo.
Specialists
University Printing
"-o-.s.w.-.-. .. r4
if i.
i iinflh ..... .
"SPA"
Get your Lunches at the
City Y. M. C. A., Cafeteria Plan
13TH AND P
No
Danger
Of Appearing
Poorly Dressed If You Let Us
Care For Your Garments.
HIGBY
Cleaning and Dyeing
Service
1322 N ST.