The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, November 07, 1918, Image 3

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    I
THE DAILY NEBRASKAN
HOT DC All VllCl'll
IIUI IlLHLLI IILII
DAILY DIARY RHYMES
By
Qsyle Vincent Grubb
r"! ARMY SHOE
Lync
Theater
TONIGHT .t8:30.nd A.I Week
Matt. Wed., Thu.f Frl., 8at.
OT.S OLIVER
"FRECKLES"
PR,CES Matinees 10a, 15c, 25c;
Nights 10c. 25c, 35c '
2 Show. et. Night, 7 and 9
A Fresh Suit
adds a Wouderful
Amount of Pep
Let us clean your suit.
We call for and deliver.
LINCOLN GLEANING
& DYE WORKS
326 So. 11th'
LEO SOUKUP, Mgr. .
On 11th at P Street
SARATOGA
RECREATION
FLOORS CHAS. N. MOON
B-1392 B-8708
LOEB'S ORCHESTRA
MUSIC FOR ALL OCCASIONS
ORCHESTRA FROM FIVE TO
TWENTY-FIVE PIECES
Jazz Band or Boiler Shop Effects
on Request Only
BEST PLACE TO EAT
ORPHEUM CAFE
1418 O
Special Attention to University
Students
LUNCHEONETTS
SERVED
ILLE R 9 &
RESCRIPTION
H A R M A C Y
C. H. FREY
Florist
1133 O St. Phones B 6741-6742
CLUB R00M3
For
FRATERNITIES
137 So. 11th Street
Brownell Building Call B4249
GARMENT CLEANING
SERVICE
LINCOLN CLEANING AND
DYE WORKS
326 South 11th
Leo Soukup, Mgr., B 6575
In the forenoon the wheat crop la
"e largest ever; later in the day
Washington advises that there is a
Mortage. A sugar famine, is immi
nent the fir8t part of the mTek. aiong
boa Thursday wci'i.ft6a
tnere i8 n0 famlne ln Bight where.
feller said, are we at?
ne man about whose right to be
considered an essential worker there
Ctn le 110 question is the coal miner.
N. S. CAFE
139 South Eleventh
IP
"THE MAD HOUSE"
Hark, I heard the walling of a woman
In despair,
The agonizing groans of one ln pain;
I could seem to see her pulling out
hrr strands of auburn hair,
The hair that once departs, comer
not again.
I clccnched my fists and pondered on
the course that I should take,
And chills of fear ran races up my
spine;
My adam'B apple rose and foil like
ripples on a wave.
But what caused all this grief came
not a sign.
I dashed In thru the open door und up
three flights of stairs,
Puffing like a fat man at a race,
Tho I'd' been around considerable,
seen all the county fairs,
My hopes seemed dead and bravery
out of place.
I burst Into the room from which the
agony had come
And halted like a wagon mired in
sand:
For a woman stood before me, eyes
distended, knocked clean dumb,
While she held a piece of music in
her hand.
When both of us recovered, why I beg
ged to be excused,
And I sneaked down stairs and out
into the air;
But yet I could not help a grin, could
not but be amused .
At the way that I'd been fooled In
the affair
And yet who hasn't walked beside this
mad house 'cross the way
Where squeaks are heard like axles
needing grease;
Who hasn't wondered why they seem
to thrive on, day by day?
Speak up or forever hold your
peace.
UNDERCLASSMEN ARE
GIVEN APPOINTMENTS
(Continued from page 1)
Freshman Hop
Floyd Paynter, Chairman.
Kenneth Hawkins, Master tf Cere
monies. Bruce McCulldugh.
Dorothy Pierce.
Vivian Hansen.
Elizabeth Riddel.
Munson Dale. 1
Social
John Fike, Chairman.
Leland Potter.
Marguerite Morrlsey.
Clark Johnson.
Marian Youngblut.
Margaret McNerney.
Lawrence Ortman.
SUPERIOR BOYS TO
HAVE NOVEL AFFAIR
(Continued from page 1)
that the weiner roast will be an im
possibility, the party will be hold in
the club rooms, where a huge fire
place waits to be used to toast marsh
mallows and weiners.
This is t-he first party of the sort
to be given at the Army and Navy
club 6ince the rooms have been open
ed for social affairs. Dr. Carter, who
is at the head of the War Camp Com
munity Service here, says that he is
glad to see that the students of the
university are taking such Interest in
the plans to entertain the boys in
training. Small dances may be held
any night In the week if reservation
is made. There will always be a
proper chaperone and the good times
that all have been longing for are now
a certainty.
There is reason to believe that at
least some of the reports of the for
mer czar's death are greatly exag
gerated. Its victims would like to see hay
fever also classed among the non
eAeat!al9 and brrpd for the duration
of the war. .
That $250,000 worth of chewing
gum ordered for the British soldiers
w!U interfere somewhat with tne cig
arette habit.
Modern Comforts Well Known to
the Ancients.
Running Water In Houses, for In
stance, Wat a Lvxury Enjoyed by
Both the Roman and Early
Egyptian Civilizations.
Many of the so-called "modern Im
provements" of civilization, which so
largely contribute to the comfort of
living, are by no inouns so recent in
origin 09 we ore disposed to Imuglne.
An eminent archeologlst has recent
ly declared, for example, thut Nero's
pnlacu ln Rome had three elevators.
It Is true that those elevators must
have been hoisting machines of very
primitive pattern operated presum
ubly by man power, with the help of
rope and counter weight and It la
more than doubtful that they were
ever used to carry human freight. Few
palaces or other buildings ln ancient
Rome were more thaii two stories In
height, and pnssenger "lifts" were for
Hint reason not needed.
We are accustomed to think of run
ning water in houses as a modern lux
ury. New York city did not have it
until 1770, when a reservoir was con
structed east of Broadway, Into which
water was raised by pumping It from
wells dug for the purpose. But that
was a very primitive arrangement
compared with the system of oncient
Rome, by which water was brought
from great distances In aqueducts that
were marvels of engineering and that
emptied through lead pipes into thou
sands of tanks of hewn stone.
Erected at Intervals along the streets
of Pompeii were pillars of masonry,
up which ran lead pipes; and on top
of each pillar was a tank, from which
water was distributed by pipes to the
houses. All dwellings, except those of
the very poor, were thus supplied, and
some had nearly a score of faucets,
controlled by stopcocks that were
much like those that are in use today.
At many street corners there were
fountains with stone basins, the edges
of which even now show depressions
worn by the hands of the people who
leaned over to drink. Those fountains
were fed by tLt city water, which was
brought by an aqueduct from a distant
place so elevated that the "head" was
very powerful. That kind of engineer
ing was highly developed In those
times. When Julius Caesar first vis
ited Alexandria in Egypt he found
there so complete an underground
water supply system that the city
seemed "hollow underneath."
In the year 73 B. Julius Caesar
organized the fire department of Rome.
It had a force of 600-men. At that
time a primitive flre engine had al
ready come Into use; it was a pair of
pumps worked by a beam, and the two
streams united ln a common discharge
pipe and passed out through a nozzle
that could be turned ln any direction.
"Siphons" emergency flre extinguish
ers were commonly kept ln houses.
Frequent mention Is made of them In
ancient literature, but we do not know
what they were like. Youth's Com
panion. World's Biggest Wireless Station.
Japan is to have the greatest wire
less station In the world, according to
a report to the Japan Advertiser. It
will be built in Fukushlma prefecture,
says the department of communica
tions, and will cost 860,000 yen ($480,
000). The dispatch station will be at
Hibarigahara, near Harlamachi, and
the receiving station will be. at Hoso-ya-cho.
Survey work has been start
ed by engineers of the department
The direct distance between the new
office and San Francisco is 4,600 mllea,
while that between the Fnnabashi of
fice and Honolulu Is 8,250 miles. Serv
ice will not be opened for two years.
The new office will communicate direct
with San Francisco without relay 1ft
Hawaii.
Aid to Transplanting.
Transplanting flowering and vege
table plants is now greatly facilitated
by the use of paper flowerpots which
are nothing more or less than the fa
miliar paper drinking cups. For use
in the farm and garden these cupe
are perforated ana tne seeaungs ro
grown in tbem ln the nursery. When
it comes time to put the delicate plants
out in the open they are transferred
bodily, pots and all, and placed in the
ground. The transfer is attended by
no shock whatever, which Is rarely
the case when the roots are disturbed
during the operation as when removing
tbem from the little pots of clay which
are generally used for this purpose.
The perforations enable the rootlets
to find their way beyond the limits of
the pot, and so the paper does not In
terfere with their growth.
The Drummer Say. every time I
rome to this town I see old man Shift
less occupying an easy chair in front
ef his store.
His Customer Wall, you know Tv
allers teld you the old feller wna tor
rthl,, cci In his ways.
OUR ARMY STYLE SHOES
The Army Sleeve Is being worn this fall by men ln every walk of life,
it Is a splendid wearing, comfortable sleeve for civilian as well
as for soldiers.
The Munson Last is the Shoe shown. This excellent shoe follows
. the Government specifications.
We are showing, also, several other popular shoes built along
Military lines.
THE BOOTERY
Shoes
Learn to Play Band and
0chest?allnstttments
BAND AND STRING
DEPARTMENT
UNIVERSITY SCHOOL OF MUSIC
SSeTSECOND EERMfOFENSlNCVEMEER ISth
REGULATION
Mtflason Last
SHOE
You need them this kind of weather
wet feel Ere a pretty god sign of
unpleasant things to follow.
We've two special numbers to which we call your attention
we consider them exceptional values.
Brown calf skin half
double sole a popular
price shoe
Lotus calf skin, light tan
shade, heavy sole a
shoe for service ........
All military goods delivered
Military
SR.50
of Quality
at the barracks at any time.
Outfitters