The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, October 03, 1918, Image 3

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    Hill
SOCIAL EVENTS and
PERSONAL MENTION
By ADELAIDE ELAM
Thurdy.
Friday and Saturday,
October S. 4, S
?M5 Twlc Dally 8:15
OrDheum Circuit Vaudeville
In a Pepertolr of Excluive
Songa
FERN A DAVIS
in A Nightmare Revuw
-LEVITATION"
with Prcf. J. Edmund Magea
RALPH DUNBAR'S
WHITE HUSSARS
The Singing Band
HARRIS A WANION
-Uncle Jerry at tha Opery"
GORDON 6. KERN
The Calif6mla Duo
MAEI3 NORDSTROM
In "Let'i Pretend"
Travel Weekly Orpheum Con
cert Orchestra
Katineea 25c, 50c
NichU 25c, 50c, 75c, 11X0
THURSDAY OKLY
PEGGY HYLAND
in a romance of love
-BONNIE ANNIE LAURIE
Peggy Best Release
Also a Sunshine Comedy
"A MILK FED VAMP"
FRIDAY AND SATURDAY
MABEL NORMAND
in a comedy riot
"PECK'S BAD GIRL"
Vaudeville and Photoplaya
THUR. FRI. SAT.
JESSIE HOWARD &. CO.
In a comedy playlet
"Air Castle Kate" '
DE WITTE & GUNTHER
Baby Eyes and Baby Size
THREE THEODORS
European Entertainers
A swift Moving Picture droraa
of love and adventure
"A DIPLOMATIC MISSION"
Liberty News Weekly
Prof. Brader's Orchestra
Fshows Daily "at 2:30 7 and 9.
Mat. 15c; Night 25c; Gal'ry 15c
Big Shows and Good Music
THURS. FRI. SAT.
Here in a Fparklrng play, happily
blended with excitement
DOUGLAS FAIRBANKS
i nhis latest Artcraft pUy,
"HE COMES UP SMILING"
"Far Flung Battle Line"
AMies Official War Pictures
Hearst-Pathe World'o News
CONCERT ORCHESTRA
JeanL. Schaerer, Conductor
COMMUNITY SINGINO
Bhowi Start at 1, 3, 6. 77 P-m-JVIatt
All Seats 1Sc. Night 25c.
LYRICTHEATRE
SPECIAL STUDENTS'
MATINEE
Every Friday
WatinoeB ai0 Wednesday,
'Thursday and Saturday
OTIS
OLIVER
and his
PLAYERS
This Week
"SUCH IS LIFE"
2 Sh
every Saturday nignt
7 and g
PRICES
Nights
10c, 15c, 25e
-10c, 25c, 35c
SOCIAL CALENDAR
OCTOBER FOURTH
OCTOBER FIFTH
Sigma Nu dance
Delta Chi dance
Kappa Alpha Thcta.
Alpha Delta Pi
Kappa Sigma.,
.Chapter house
Chapter house
.Chapter house
.Chapter lions'.
.Chapter house
Sigma Alpha Epsilon. Chapter house
SOCIETY PERSONALS
Military casualty lists record the
death of Lieutenant Colonel Morris
ueominn, i?uu, oi me iumh infantry
in France. August. 191S. In I'M" he
invented a tremh periscope attach
ment for small arms which has been
used a great deal by the government.
He specialized at Nebraska in X-Hay
and wireless. 'Jf
Captain Sargent. 'OS, who was V
wounded in June. 193 S. is back at the1
front again.
Professor O. J. Ferguson received a
visit from Franz PauMisn. 1C. who is
home on furlough from Barron Field.
Texas. He has received his commis
sion as a second lieutenant in the avia
tion. Catherine Pierce. '18. came through
Lincoln Sunday on her way to Bos
ton to attend Cook's school of expres
sion. Union College at College View is
erecting an addition to their light
and power plant designed by Profes
sor V. L. Hollister.
J. V. Hoge, '10, who has been an
electrical engineer for the Continent
al gas and electric comporation, and
more recently general manager of the
Lee light and power company of
Clarinda, Iowa, has become an in
structor in the radio division.
A. J. Hartsook. formerly superintend
ent of schools at Fairmont, Nebraska,
is taking an advanced course in chem
istry and is teaching part time in the
radio division.
K. V. Evans, a graduate in forestry
at Nebraska University, has become
a member of the instructional staff of
the radio department.
Irene Smith is visiting her home
at Wahoo, Nebr.
Ruth Parker is spending the week
at Omaha, Nebr.
Lorene Hendricks is at" Wahoo,
Nebr.
Lydia Dawson of
spendine: the week
Omricon Fi house.
Eleanor Fogg, '19, is
Smith college this year.
Lieutenant Dan Claar, who has
been at San Antonio, Texas, is spend
ing his leave of absence at the Delta
Upsilon house.
Kathleen Hartigan or Fairbury i3
spending a few days at the Kappa
Kappa Gamma house.
Wallace E.- Spear, '18, left Wednes
day afternoon for Minneapolis, where
be will enter the ground school for
naval aviation. Spear was stationed
at the Great . Lakes training station
during the summer, and vas detailed
here before receiving his call for the
ground school.
MMm aw
Lynn wood is
at the Alpha
attending
PERSONALS
Professor Sarka B. Hrbkava, chair
man of the women's committee for the
council of defense, launched the
fourth liberty Loan campaign at
Kearney, Wednesday. "Hateing the
Hun" was her subject
Dorothy Col burn is substituting in
the Lincoln high school for the journ
alism teacher, who is ill. She expects
to resume her work In the University
next week.-
GOT BEST OF ARMY OFFICERS
"The Army and Navy will dig the Huns' grave, Ira
W e must fmnish the
A,
I
By REV. WILLIAM A; SUNDAY
Billy Sunday
T5
3D
JL
Uncle Sam's Liberty war chest needs
filling again!
We have the cash to fill it as many times
as he lifts the lid.
There are only two horns to this dilem
ma you are either a patriot or a traitor.
The men on the firing line and on the
battleships have turned from business,
home, mother, wife, children, and they
stand ready to give their lives and shield
with their bodies us w ho remain at home.
We are unworthy to be thus protected,
if we do not do our utmost to sustain them.
We must be one in our determination to
win this war. We are traitors to the cause
for which they are giving their lives, if we
do things here that make their efforts harder.
Life is not worth living unless there is
something to live for. Life would not be
worth living if that bunch of Heinies
should win.
That is why they cannot wi"- That is
why we cannot lose.
What a mountain of crime God has on
his books against that horde of Hellish
Huns. What grave is deep enough for thii
thousand-armed, thousand-footed, thous
.nfi.ka(iAH. thousand-homed, thousand-
fanged pirate of the air, assassin of the seas,
The army and navy will dig the grave,
but we must furnish the spade.
Our boys will soon hang crape on the
door of the Potsdam Palace, end the bands
will play Yankee-Doodle and Dixie along
the Rhine.
Uncle Sam is the cactus in the Kaiser's
pillow.
Our boys have gone over to clean up on
that fool bunch of Huns and it is up lo us to
supply them with whatever they need to
finish the job. It takes money to keep the
riveters riveting the sawyers sawing the
machine guns spitting bullets and the grub
wagon always on hand with the eats. There
is nothing too good for our brave defenders.
Our vocabulary contains no words
adequate to express our approval of the
achievements of our government since we
threw our hat in the ring. We are rich on
top of the ground; we are rich under the
ground and our rivers creep like silver
serpents to the seas, bearing our products.
The children or England, France, Italy
and Belgium are laughing once more be
cause they are being fed from Uncle Sam's
bakeshop. One carload of meat every two
minutes, one hog out of every four, nine
million pounds of meat a day all going
r,ve-r in feed our do vs. we are in mis
tancea pirate oi ujc mi, "t - - - - - , . . ,
desooiler of the earth and ambassador of scrap to the last dollar, the last grain ot
llCll I UllC2Uf
Wc will never stop until Germany dips her dirty blood-stained rag to the
Stars and Stripes.
It's a whale of a job we've tackled, but we can and must put it over.
But you must help.
Don't whine. Don't knock. You can't caw wood with a hammer. Don't
turn the hose on the fire ; add fuel.
Buy Bonds! Buy Bonds! Buy Bonds!
it 7777777777171 This Space Contributed to Winning the War by
rover
Bros.
G
Leader of Pickaninny Band Showed
Himself Fully Capable of Dealing
With Emergency
An itinerant pickaninny band hail
iner from an orphan asylum
south struck up lively airs in one oi
the Btreetn and attracted attention, ac
cordirg to a Saratoga Springe corr
rpouclent of the New York Evening
PoBt. The doughty little dram major,
drepsed in an impoKing collection of
colors, rested between aire and sug
gested to bystanders that they make
contributions for the good of the cause
Four array officers Etopped and ban
tred the leader until his Roul grew
vexed. Suddenly be had an inFr1--n.!r
in til dozen Jazz mu-
...,. raised m baton and pare' iwdHtuM an
the Eignal for the -Star-Spangled Ii'an-
. -kl..h t AarVift tllaved With
ELI SHIRE, Pres.
earnehtneBs and drew out as long a
in the j posfcible.
The officers, or ourse, immediately
came to salute and remained in that
pasture until the finning drum major
brought down his haton on the final
note The officen ippeared a bit red
in the face and pr needed along their
.. ;(V,mii ktten ling to "spoof the
hand any further
be miikii.g mi.a
They appeared
s solto voce.
to
Sunday D'W
The extei t to t !
lit--n carried is i'
o;i recipe fur a
lished In a German
VolkBstimme.
paper, Chemnitz
"Take the meat card, mix it well
with the egg card, and Lake it with
the butter card until a healthy brown
crust appears. The potato card and
the vegetable card bbould be eteamed
nniil they are tender, and tbn thick
ened with the meal card. After-dinner
coffee is prepared by boiling the cofiee
card and adding the sugar and milk
cards to the beverage. A very sue-
i . . , . i . i Ann TiwT inn l riniB nHn itt diih
r in uermany ..u,
h the rationing or j ping the bread card into the cofe so
t necessaries has I prepared and partaking of it In small
r:,-f.A in a humor-! pieces. At tie corrluf-ion cf the re-
viar dinner, pub-1 past, you warn your Lands, with the j
soap card and dry them upon the club
purchase permit.
FOR RENT One room with lep
ing porch attached, at 122 ti. tlO
per month.
LOST Email silver turquoise mat
rix ring in or around Bessie LalL Re
turn to Etodent Activities office.
Dancing at Artelope
night, :cept Sundays.
Park
every
29
WANTED Man to sell shoes cs
Saturdays. Fred Schmidt Brso,
$nn o." jm